En images : une très conviviale fête du sport à Sainte-Anne

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Dernièrement, dans le cadre de la journée nationale du sport scolaire, la communauté scolaire du collège Isidore-Pélage était mobilisée autour de multiples activités proposées par les professeurs de sport.

Une journée du sport scolaire a été organisée au collège Isidore-Pélage, à Sainte-Anne. Aux côtés des élèves volontaires et du principal, les professeurs, parents, agents techniques et vie scolaire qui le désiraient ont pris part aux divers tournois : basket-ball, foot-ball, handball, tennis de table… Une matinée nécessaire qui a permis aux jeunes d’échanger autrement avec les adultes.√ À retrouver aussi dans l’édition du week-end (7-8-9…


France-Antilles Martinique

95 mots – 07.10.2022

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Le transport des passagers, au temps de la colonie

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

Souvenez-vous du film « Rue Cases-Nègres » d’Euzhan Palcy, adapté du roman de Joseph Zobel. On y voit le transport des passagers par la mer, notamment entre Rivière-Salée et Fort-de-France. C’était au début des années 1930. Mais bien avant, au temps de Saint-Pierre, des « vapeurs » assuraient un transport régulier de passagers entre la ville et le chef lieu Fort-de-France. Prendre la route relevait de l’« expédition ». Les moyens de locomotion étaient quasi inexistants. Les voies, en mauvais état.

« Vers une 1h30 de l’après-midi, est signalé le petit vapeur “Rubis” qui revient. Il stoppe près de nous, et de sa passerelle un officier lance ces mots sinistres : ”Saint-Pierre est en feu, les bateaux qui sont sur la rade même brûlent”. Nous nous regardons, atterrés. Cette nouvelle parait tellement inouïe. »

C’est un officier dénommé de Kermoison qui témoigne de son périple improbable (1) en milieu de journée du 8 mai 1902. Il est sur le croiseur « Le Suchet » qui, sur ordre des…


France-Antilles Martinique

1652 mots – 07.10.2022

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Cops save intended murder victim, arrest three and seize two guns Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

There was a major success for Operation Relentless II on Thursday, the police are reporting.

In a release, the constabulary said a police team saved an intended murder victim, arrested three would-be killers and seized two firearms in a high-stakes incident that unfolded at a primary school in Spanish Town, St Catherine.

Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of Crime, Fitz Bailey, explained that the three men now in custody are allegedly aligned to a particular faction of the Clansman Gang.

Bailey also said one of the men was out on bail, having been charged with murder in relation to an incident in Clarendon some years ago.

In commenting on the incident on Thursday, Bailey said: “These types of crimes cannot be seen as normal, routine criminal activities… this is organised crime. This is crime to cause the population to retreat and surrender.”

He added that the intended perpetrators were focussed not only on committing murder, but also creating mayhem and instil fear and panic among bystanders.

“They were not concerned about the psychological impact on the students that their actions would have created,” the senior cop said.

Bailey gave an assurance that the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF) will remain steadfast in its duty to keep the people of Jamaica safe.

“The JCF is committed to pursuing these types of individuals who are willing to hurt and harm our children and law-abiding citizens,” he said.

A Glock 9mm pistol, a Taurus pistol and 23 rounds of ammunition were seized in the incident.

The crime chief said the identities of the men who were arrested are being withheld while detectives conduct additional investigation.

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Aftermath of tropical wave – Flash floods, water levels high in rivers

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

MAROONED: Rhadica Jagroop in her house in St Helena which was surrounded by flood waters on Thursday. PHOTO BY ANGELO MARCELLE –

EVEN as the tropical wave known as Invest #91L left TT, both islands were still suffering the after effects on Thursday, with widespread reports of flash-flooding both in Trinidad and in Tobago, as well as rising water levels in all of the major rivers in Trinidad.

While the adverse weather yellow alert is set to end at 12 pm on Friday, as of Thursday evening, the riverine flood orange alert was very much still in effect. Rural Development and Local Government Minister Faris Al-Rawi confirmed at his press conference on Thursday that the soil is water-saturated.

Truckloads of material had to be brought in to help contain weakened areas of the Caroni River embankment on Thursday as water threatened to overspill at New Street Extension, Caroni.

Shortly before 6 pm, workers and contractors from the Tunapuna/Piarco Regional Corporation began to pile material to stop the flow of water .

Earlier, residents and other volunteers used sandbags to temporarily block the flow water.

Officials from the Ministry of Rural Development and Local Government as well as from the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management were on hand to monitor the work and rising level of the river.

Residents said the embankment needed urgent repair since 2018 but their pleas for help from authorities fell on deaf ears.

Persistent showers on Wednesday and overnight rain from a tropical wave dumped significant rainfall over the last 48 hours.

Parts of El Carmen Village, St Helena and other districts were affected by rising floods on Thursday.

PATCHWORK: A backhoe fills dirt to patch a breach in the embankment of the Caroni River in New Street Extension, Caroni on Thursday evening. PHOTO BY DARREN BAHAW – Darren Bahaw

Flooding was still reported in various parts of East Trinidad including in Sangre Grande, Mayaro, Arouca, Lopinot and other areas.

Over in Tobago, workers from the Tobago Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) and other co-ordinating agencies were busy in the field attending to reports throughout the island.

These ranged from flash and residential flooding to landslides and fallen trees. TEMA director Allan Stewart said the agency had received over 188 reports.

“There has been a gross increase in the number if reports we have had so far,” Stewart said. Of that figure, he added, more than 50 involved landslides and damage to residential properties. Stewart said the agency responded to several reports of road blockages in Betsy’s Hope and some north side villages.

He added in some instances, Defence Force Reserves were mobilised to assist in situations which required manpower.

Fallen trees were reported at Cinnamon Hill Road and Signal Hill near the Happy Haven School.

TEMA also got reports of an unknown substance on the roadway at Bacolet Extension Road and at Mason Hall. This resulted in several accidents taking place. Stewart said damage assessments are ongoing.

(Reporting by DARREN BAHAW and COREY CONNELLY)

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Al-Rawi: We could not have closed schools sooner

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

Local Government and Rural Development Minister Faris Al-Rawi. – Photo by Angelo Marcelle

RURAL Development and Local Government Minister Faris Al-Rawi said there could be no anticipation of the effects of the tropical wave which would have necessitated an earlier notice of schools closing on Thursday.

Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly was severely criticised on social media for being insensitive and uncaring when she posted on social media about 7 am, that schools would be closed for the day owing to the major flooding and heavy showers.

Many parents said this notice was too late as some children were already dropped off at school. Both Gadsby-Dolly and Al-Rawi have confirmed that school operations in Trinidad will resume on Friday.

A release from the THA’s Division of Education on Thursday evening, said that all schools on the island will remain closed on Friday and reopen on Monday.

At a virtual media conference, Al-Rawi said the situation was fluid and that decisions taken were done with consultation with relevant stakeholders.

“Relative to the position about schools being closed and the notice coming in this morning (from Gadsby-Dolly) as opposed to last night; I want to remind you that we were not dealing with a weather system that was organised.

“What we’re dealing with, there’s a lot of rain that hit portions of Trinidad, and therefore we could not anticipate what was going to happen. We have to prepare, but you can’t just cancel school just like that.”

Al-Rawi said schools can’t be cancelled at every yellow alert, as TT is in the annual hurricane season and the government had to be “really careful” about its decisions since parts of Trinidad may not have been affected.

“We have to be careful how we monitor our response to schools and other issues, the normalcy of business and schooling operations. The issue of school information, we discussed it this morning at Cabinet.

“Right now, the information is that we’re going to continue with schools being in gear tomorrow. We’re monitoring, we’re managing in the event that reports come back to us as we’re constantly feeding back reports.”

He added that the Education Ministry will consult with the Prime Minister if further actions regarding schools are to be taken.

Asked whether the Prime Minister has visited or will be visiting some of the flood-affected areas, Al-Rawi said no.

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Maraval man pleads guilty to 2009 chopping death of friend

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo

A MARAVAL man who pleaded guilty to playing a part in the chopping death of one of his friends in 2009 was urged to “walk on the right side” now that he has been released from prison.

On Thursday, Justice Hayden St Clair-Douglas sentenced Kareem Edwards to 12 years after accepting the terms of a plea deal with the State for him to plead guilty to manslaughter.

Edwards was before the judge charged with the October 3, 2009, murder of his friend Kurt Blaize of Boissiere No 1, Maraval.

Because the facts of the case demonstrated there was an altercation between the two and another man over a hat with Blaize responding to a lash on the back with a piece of wood “in a belligerent manner” to exact revenge, Edwards was allowed to plead guilty to the lesser charge on the basis of provocation.

After St Clair-Douglas calculated a discount for the element of aggression on Blaize’s part, Edwards’s guilty plea, and the 12 years and ten months he has spent in prison, he said his sentence had already been served.

The judge wished Edwards good luck and offered him some advice, “I would like to suggest to you to walk on the right side, You have learned a lesson that trouble is easy to find you and you can find yourself in a situation as quick as that. Learn from your mistake and understand what has happened.

“Best of luck to you sir.”

Edwards was represented by attorneys Ulric Skerritt and public defender Michelle Gonzalez.

Prosecutor Maria Lyons-Edwards, in presenting the facts of the case, said after Blaize was hit on the back with a piece of wood by another man identified as Mustapha, he went to his girlfriend’s home to vent, telling her he “was not taking that.”

“Them attack me, I going and kill Mustapha tonight, I going and chop him up”, yuh see me, I gonna stab up Mustapha before I go home, I don’t care what happen.”

He searched for a cutlass, eventually getting one from a neighbour, before telling his girlfriend, “Brittany take my hat eh, Britney take my hat and doh want to geh me it back. And just so Mustapha hit me a piece of wood in my back. Just the other day I watch him get slap up.”

“…When my driver come I gonna pack my bag in he car and ah gonna run up in he house. Watch and yuh go see something. I could dead tonight I doh care. I swear on my daughter I gonna chop up Mustapha.”

Lyon-Edwards said when his driver came, Blaize left and when his girlfriend and another woman were walking out the road, they saw him running with a bloody jersey, and running behind him were Edwards, Mustapha, and another man. Edwards had a knife and the other two, cutlasses.

Blaize ran past the women, telling the men “I goh kill yuh tonight.” When he got to the corner of Harold and Vallot Street, Edwards ran up to him and stabbed him while telling him, “Yuh m—– c— yuh dead tonight.”

Blaize was stabbed four times and his lungs were punctured and some of his teeth were broken or fractured. He was found lying on the road close to the drain by the Boissiere RC School, bleeding and fighting to breathe. He died before the ambulance arrived.

Edwards was first arrested on November 30, 2009, interviewed by police, and released after telling them he had nothing to say and knew nothing about the murder.

On December 7, 2007, he was re-arrested and charged with Blaize’s murder the next day.

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Ministry Of Education Invites More to Participate In Second Day Of PRESENT – St. Lucia Times News

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: St. Lucia Times News

– Advertisement –

The Ministry of Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology andVocational Training wishes to thank everyone who made the extra effort to participate inits PRESENT (Proudly Representing Each School Exalting our Nation’s Teachers) initiative,paying homage to our nation’s teachers and the incredible role they play in shaping livesand careers on the island.

Ministry officials were heartened by the outpouring support within the Ministry itself andthe wider education sector, the Cabinet of Ministers, various sections of government andwithin the private sector.

The many who turned out to work in the school uniform of their alma mater show great appreciation during this year’s Teacher’s Week.

The Ministry reminds all that there still is another opportunity on Friday October 7th, 2022to take part in PRESENT and show appreciation to your former teachers by “putting onyour school clothes – Mètè had lekòl ou” to represent your former school and teachers tosay thanks in a special way.

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SOURCE: Ministry of Education, Sustainable Development, Innovation, Science, Technology and Vocational Training. Headline photo: Government MPs wearing uniforms of their alma maters. 

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Santokhi: ‘Herstelprogramma met IMF moet socialer gezicht krijgen’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Wilfred Leeuwin PARAMARIBO — Het herstelprogramma dat de regering heeft afgesproken met het Internationale Monetaire Fonds (IMF), zal hoe

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La Corée du Nord tire deux missiles et fait…

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Martinique FranceAntilles

La Corée du Nord a lancé jeudi deux nouveaux missiles balistiques et fait voler en formation 12 avions de combat, affirmant que les essais d’armes sont de “justes mesures de rétorsion” contre Washington et Séoul et leurs exercices militaires dans la région.

Les nouveaux tirs sont intervenus au moment où, à New York, le Conseil de sécurité de l’ONU se réunissait pour évoquer le lancement d’un autre missile nord-coréen qui avait survolé le Japon deux jours plus tôt.

Selon l’armée sud-coréenne, deux missiles à courte portée ont été lancés jeudi matin depuis les environs de Pyongyang en direction de la mer du Japon. Les garde-côtes japonais ont confirmé avoir détecté ces projectiles.

Le premier missile a parcouru 350 kilomètres à une altitude maximale d’environ 80 kilomètres, selon l’analyse de l’armée sud-coréenne. Le deuxième a volé sur une distance de 800 kilomètres à une altitude de 60 kilomètres.

Le même jour, 12 avions de combat nord-coréens –huit avions de chasse et quatre bombardiers– “ont effectué un vol en formation au nord de la frontière aérienne intercoréenne (et) sont estimés avoir effectué des exercices de tir air-sol”, a annoncé jeudi soir l’état-major interarmées de Séoul.

Le sixième lancement de missiles en moins de deux semaines est “absolument inacceptable”, a réagi le Premier ministre japonais Fumio Kishida.

Mardi, un missile de type Hwasong-12 avait survolé le Japon et parcouru environ 4.600 km, soit probablement la distance la plus longue jamais atteinte par Pyongyang dans le cadre de ses essais, selon Séoul et Washington.

C’était la première fois en cinq ans qu’un projectile nord-coréen passait au-dessus du territoire japonais.

La Corée du Nord, qui a adopté en septembre une nouvelle doctrine rendant “irréversible” son statut de puissance nucléaire, a intensifié cette année ses tirs et lancé un missile balistique intercontinental (ICBM) pour la première fois depuis 2017.

– “Justes mesures de rétorsion” –

Ces tirs constituent “les justes mesures de rétorsion de l’Armée populaire coréenne contre les manoeuvres militaires conjointes entre la Corée du Sud et les Etats-Unis qui provoquent une escalade des tensions militaires dans la Péninsule coréenne”, a déclaré jeudi le ministère nord-coréen dans un communiqué.

A la suite du lancement de mardi, Washington avait appelé à une réunion d’urgence du Conseil de sécurité des Nations unies. Mais la Chine, alliée et partenaire économique de la Corée du Nord, y a blâmé elle aussi les Etats-Unis.

Les essais de missiles par Pyongyang sont “étroitement liés” aux exercices militaires américano-sud-coréens, a déclaré devant le Conseil l’ambassadeur chinois adjoint auprès des Nations unies, Geng Shuang.

Il a accusé Washington d’”empoisonner l’environnement de sécurité régional”.

Séoul, Tokyo et Washington ont multiplié les manoeuvres militaires conjointes ces dernières semaines, notamment des exercices de lutte anti-sous-marine et des manoeuvres navales à grande échelle.

Les alliés ont effectué jeudi un exercice conjoint de “défense antimissile” dans les eaux situées au large de la péninsule, auquel a participé un destroyer de la marine américaine appartenant au groupe d’attaque du porte-avions USS Ronald Reagan, selon l’armée sud-coréenne.

Séoul a affirmé que cet exercice vise à “renforcer les capacités opérationnelles et à en position pour répondre aux provocations de la Corée du Nord (via l’envoi) de missiles”.

Washington a redéployé le porte-avions à propulsion nucléaire USS Ronald Reagan dans les eaux situées à l’est de la Corée après le tir nord-coréen de mardi. Il avait effectué en septembre des exercices avec la marine sud-coréenne.

– “Cycle de provocation armée” –

Le ministère nord-coréen des Affaires étrangères a déclaré que cela constitue “une menace sérieuse pour la stabilité de la situation dans la péninsule coréenne”.

Mercredi, la Corée du Sud et les Etats-Unis avaient tiré cinq missiles balistiques -dont un s’est écrasé après son lancement- vers des cibles fictives en mer du Japon. Et la veille, les aviations des deux pays avaient mené des exercices de tir en mer Jaune.

La réunion du Conseil de sécurité a été soutenue par la France, le Royaume-Uni, l’Albanie, la Norvège et l’Irlande.

L’ambassadrice américaine auprès de l’ONU Linda Thomas-Greenfield y a dénoncé “un effort clair de la Chine et la Russie pour récompenser (la Corée du Nord) pour ses mauvaises actions”, et appelé à un renforcement des sanctions contre Pyongyang.

En mai, Pékin et Moscou avaient opposé leur veto à une résolution du Conseil de sécurité imposant de nouvelles sanctions à la Corée du Nord, alors que l’instance avait adopté à l’unanimité de lourdes sanctions en 2017.

Selon les analystes, le régime du dirigeant nord-coréen Kim Jong Un saisit l’occasion de l’impasse à l’ONU pour pousser toujours plus loin ses essais d’armes.

Séoul et Washington s’attendent à ce que la Corée du Nord reprenne ses essais nucléaires, interrompus depuis 2017, probablement après le congrès du Parti communiste chinois qui débute le 16 octobre.

“A ce stade, pour Kim, faire marche arrière et arrêter les provocations paraîtrait contre-productif pour ses intérêts. Sans parler de la quantité de ressources gaspillées pour mener ces essais d’armes”, a expliqué à l’AFP Soo Kim, analyste à la RAND Corporation.

“Nous sommes assurément dans un cycle de provocation armée”, a-t-elle estimé.

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Did Rankin okay Fahie sting in VI?

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: The BVI Beacon

Nearly six months after then-Premier Andrew Fahie was arrested in Miami, new questions are arising about whether United Kingdom officials knew of the sting operation here that led to his arrest.

In a recent audio clip that the Governor’s Office apparently shared by accident with a UK media house, Governor John Rankin appears to say he is responsible for authorising United States Drug Enforcement Administration operations in the Virgin Islands, according to a podcast published by UK-based Tortoise Media on Sept. 26.

This would mean that Mr. Rankin should have been aware of the DEA-led sting operation conducted here in the months before Mr. Fahie’s arrest, during which a DEA source allegedly recorded meetings with Mr. Fahie in early April. However, in an interview with Tortoise Media shortly before his office sent the audio clip, Mr. Rankin stuck by his longstanding story that he had no prior knowledge of the arrest — a position he repeated on Oct. 5 to the Beacon.

The Tortoise Media report made much of the potential contradiction. “The islands [Mr. Fahie] left behind are bewildered,” Tortoise Media Deputy Editor Giles Whittell states in the podcast. “The government in London that still claims them in 2022 as a British overseas territory says it knew nothing at all about the American operation to arrest their leader until after it happened. Almost no one in the BVI believes that. They see, instead, a long-running experiment in post-colonial government — an experiment that went belly-up under the arm’s-length supervision of Britain’s last foreign secretary: its new prime minister, Liz Truss. Either she knew what was going on, or she didn’t. Neither scenario is what you might call a good look.”

‘Head of state’

Despite the UK’s denials, UK officials have acknowledged hearing allegations of VI leaders’ involvement in the drug trade long before Mr. Fahie’s arrest.

Last year in the Commission of Inquiry hearings, former governor Gus Jaspert said he decided to launch the COI in January 2021 in part because of allegations linking some of the “highest holders of office” to cocaine trafficking and other organised crime in the territory.

The Tortoise Media podcast also raised questions about how many United States officials were in the loop on the sting involving Mr. Fahie, and what responsibility they had to inform UK higher-ups.

Dick Gregory, a former lead prosecutor with the US Department of Justice in Miami, told the reporters that by current department rules a head of state cannot be prosecuted without the approval of the US attorney general. Mr. Gregory compared the VI case to the arrests of former Turks and Caicos Islands Chief Minister Norman Saunders in the 1980s and former military leader of Panama Manuel Noriega in the 1990s.

At that time, he said, he had a “certain amount of independence that I don’t think they’ll ever allow again” when it came to getting clearance from leaders in Washington DC to arrest political leaders.

However, the situation becomes more complicated when considering whether an OT leader is regarded as a “head of state” or whether that title falls to the UK monarch, he said.

Nevertheless, Mr. Gregory said current US Attorney General Merrick Garland is “very much a man of the rules” who would expect to be made aware of the pending arrest of a prime minister “of even a small country.” He added that he assumes the US did alert senior UK officials, “unless this happened on very short notice.”

Governor’s timeline

Here, official confirmation of Mr. Fahie’s arrest came in the form of a press release from the Governor’s Office on April 28, which detailed the charges put to Mr. Fahie earlier that morning in Miami.

“As this concerns the arrest of a British citizen, the [United States] government has informed the [United Kingdom] government of this arrest, as part of the usual process followed when a British citizen is arrested abroad,” Mr. Rankin said at the time. “The UK government has subsequently informed me as governor.”

He also described the arrest as a “US operation” led by the US DEA, which he said was unrelated to the UK-led COI report which he released the following day instead of in June as initially planned.

In an April 29 press conference, Mr. Rankin reiterated that he was made aware of Mr. Fahie’s arrest the day it happened.

“Let me assure you that the first I heard of the arrest that took place yesterday was yesterday,” he said in response to a question about the timeline of calling the press conference and releasing the report. “I had no prior information on it whatsoever. This was a US-led operation in which neither my office nor the UK had any involvement. … This was in no way pre-planned. I had no knowledge of this arrest which was due to take place, and I was as shocked as anybody else.”

Mr. Rankin reiterated these claims on the podcast, saying he was not made aware of the pending events. He described calling then-Acting Premier Dr. Natalio “Sowande” Wheatley to his office the morning of April 28 to inform him of the arrest immediately after finding out himself.

The governor subsequently made the information public, he explained.

“It was London who informed me, because they had been informed by the US authorities that morning of the arrest of Premier Fahie,” the governor said on the podcast. “This was not a joint UK-US operation.”

Mr. Whittell, however, said he received additional information shortly after interviewing the governor.

“A short piece of audio sent to us inadvertently by the Governor’s Office, recorded in the moments following our interview, suggests that the governor does usually sign off on DEA investigations on the islands and that he did know investigations were under way,” he claimed.

Though the audio is muffled, the governor can be heard saying, “I do give the authorisations for DEA operations here. I was aware of the investigations [inaudible].”

Mr. Whittell said he asked the Governor’s Office about the audio clip, but Mr. Rankin maintained that he had no foreknowledge of the arrest and said the clip supported his stance.

Guv’s response

Asked on Oct. 5 if the governor typically authorises DEA operations in the VI and if he authorised the sting that led to Mr. Fahie’s arrest, the Governor’s Office reiterated that position: “As the governor has previously made clear, he had no prior knowledge of the operation to arrest former Premier Fahie on serious charges of drug trafficking and money laundering. It was a US operation on US soil.”

The office declined to provide further information.

“We cannot comment further on operational security issues or ongoing legal proceedings,” the office noted.

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