Tag Archive | "el salvador"

Chile: Piñera and Obama Discuss Trans-Pacific Free Trade


Leaders of TPP member states and prospective member states at a TPP summit (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

Leaders of TPP member states and prospective member states at a TPP summit (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

Chilean President Sebastián Piñera and US President Barack Obama discussed pending trans-Pacific free trade agreements yesterday at the White House.

In the hour-long meeting, the leaders touched on the topics of education and energy but focused on their alignment to push forward negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership (TPP), which could become the world’s most expansive free trade zone.

Both presidents reiterated their governments’ plans to encourage trade liberalisation in the Asia-Pacific region and agreed to focus on moving negotiations forward in relation to the free trade block.

Piñera reiterated that Chile is “fully committed” to the TPP negotiations and to the agreement’s potential as discussions continue.

He added that the current 11 member states of the free trade zone hope to reach an agreement by the end of this year that would put the renegotiated project in place. Before that time, the governments of the US and Chile hope that Japan will sign on to the agreement, a bid that would allegedly set up the trading block to generate some US$26.4 trillion annually.

Following the meeting, Obama called Piñera an “outstanding leader” and expressed his contentment with the “strong relationship” between Chile and the US.

Piñera said: “We have confirmed once again that the US and Chile have the same values of democracy, the rule of law, respect for human rights, integration with the world, free trade, and commitment to peace.”

After leaving the US yesterday, Piñera continued his tour of North and Central America, including El Salvador – where he signed an agreement on cooperative strategies for clean energy generation, technology, and tourism with Mauricio Funes.

In San Salvador he cited Chile’s recent economic growth, commenting, “We have substantially increased our ability to grow. During the previous government we grew 3%, during this government we are growing at a rate of 6% and we have been able to double our capacity to generate employment…”

Piñera largely attributed this growth to the free trade agreements the country has implemented over the past several years.

Currently, Chile recognises bilateral free trade agreements with 62 countries, including the US and El Salvador. It is also part of the Pacific Alliance, a regional free trade group with Colombia, Mexico, and Peru.

TPP negotiations have sparked criticism and protests around the world since the 2005 proposal of the free trade agreement. Outcry heightened after the emergence of an expanded 2010 model. Critics claim that discussions have been unnecessarily secretive and that the few segments that have been released to the public are controversial at best.

 

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El Salvador: ‘Beatriz’ Undergoes C-Section and Loses Baby


A seriously ill woman who was denied an abortion by El Salvdor’s Supreme Court last week has undergone an emergency caesarean section.

Health Minister Maria Isabel Rodriguez has confirmed to the media that the baby, which was diagnosed with a cephalic disorder and was missing part of its brain, died five hours after the birth.

(Photo: Beatrice Murch)

Rodriguez added that doctors said the procedure was necessary as the woman began premature contractions late on Sunday night, and stressed that the operation did not contravene the court ruling.

The 22-year-old, who is referred to as Beatriz in the media, was in danger of losing her life from the onset of the pregnancy due to medical complications, according to experts. The baby was also given no chance of survival after the birth.

Beatriz took the case to the Supreme Court at the beginning of May to appeal for a termination, although the decision to overrule this was made last week.

The Supreme Court said that “the rights of the mother cannot be privileged over those of the unborn child”, citing the national law’s “absolute impediment to authorise the practice of abortion”.

However, last week José Miguel Fortín Magaña, director of the Institute of Legal Medicine (Instituto de Medicina Legal), said that doctors may induce premature labor if the mother is facing an imminent risk in order to “save both lives”.

The pregnancy is believed to have been between 24 – 27 weeks. Beatriz is in a stable condition and remains in intensive care.

Her fight garnered international support after the Court denied the abortion, and medical committees, the Ministry of Health and human rights groups all supported her request to end the pregnancy.

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El Salvador: Supreme Court Denies ‘Beatriz’ Abortion


(Photo: Beatrice Murch)

(Photo: Beatrice Murch)

El Salvador’s Supreme Court of Justice (CSJ) has refused to allow a seriously sick pregnant woman to have an abortion, even though her unborn child has almost no chance of survival and is also endangering the mother’s life. The doctors were ordered to continue with the pregnancy.

The 22-year-old, referred to as Beatriz in the media, requested the abortion, because she is suffering from lupus, an autoimmune disease, and her foetus has been diagnosed with a cephalic disorder. Moreover, her unborn baby is missing a part of its brain.

The ruling comes as a blow to human rights groups and observers world-wide who have been expressing their support for Beatriz for weeks. Over 70,000 people had signed Amnesty International’s petition.

Medical staff of the hospital where they are taking care of Beatriz, as well as Ministry of Health, supported the young Salvadorian’s request, but the Supreme Court voted four-to-one in rejecting Beatriz’s appeal.

The CSJ posted their ruling on Twitter. In it, the judges wrote: “This court determines that the rights of the mother cannot take precedence over those of the unborn child or vice versa, and that there is an absolute bar to authorising an abortion as contrary to the constitutional protection accorded to human persons ‘from the moment of conception’.”

According to the judges, Beatriz’s health is “stable”. But the doctors who have been supporting the interruption of pregnancy have stated that “the risk to the expected mother’s health is only growing as pregnancy progresses”.

Although the therapeutic abortion plea was denied, doctors may induce premature labor, if the mother is facing an imminent risk, with the aim to “save both lives – of the mother and child at the same time”, according to José Miguel Fortín Magaña, director of the Institute of Legal Medicine (Instituto de Medicina Legal), who advises the court on medical issues.

Abortion is completely banned in seven Latin American countries, including El Salvador.

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El Salvador: Court Requests More Time To Consider “Urgent” Abortion Case


(Photo: Beatrice Murch)

(Photo: Beatrice Murch)

A pregnant Salvadoran, whose life is at risk due to her unborn baby, may not be able to abort due to the country’s ban on therapeutic abortion.

Doctors have told 21-year-old Name Beatriz, who is 23 weeks pregnant, that her life is in danger because she is suffering from Lupus, an autoimmune disease. Her child has also been diagnosed with anencephaly, a cephalic disorder, and experts have said it is likely to die shortly after birth.

Abortion is prohibited under all circumstance in El Salvador meaning that if her child is aborted, Beatriz and those responsible will be prosecuted and could be jailed for up to 50 years. Beatriz first requested an abortion in March but two days ago the Salvadoran High Court released a statement saying that they needed an additional 15 days to review the suit.

The case has sparked strong controversy in the mostly Roman Catholic countries of Central America. The Catholic and Evangelical Church have suggested that the case is promoting abortion in a bid to make it legal.

“It is important to act urgently in accordance with what medical science has established. We have made the recommendation that aborting the pregnancy is a justified act,” said attorney Georgina de Villalta, who is defending the rights of the unborn child.

Beatriz, who lives in Jiquilisco, a rural area of El Salvador, also has a one-year-old child who experienced a premature birth, at seven months, and was subsequently kept in the hospital’s intensive care unit for 38 days.

Lawyer Dennis Muñoz, of the Agrupación Ciudadana para la Despenalización del Aborto Terapéutico de El Salvador, has made a request to the country’s Supreme Court that they pass an injunction allowing the doctors to induce labour.

The case is currently being debated by the court’s Constitutional Chamber who has asked for the opinions of the Attorney-General’s Office, the Ministry of Health, and human rights leaders. The government’s Health Ministry has said it supports Beatriz’s request for an abortion on health grounds.

Human Rights groups have also called on President Maurico Funes with a letter urging him to ensure that the woman be allowed to abort her child without facing criminal charges

“President Funes should take immediate steps to allow Beatriz to terminate this pregnancy, which puts her life at serious risk,” said Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch. Beatriz is said to be in a fragile condition. “She is pretty bad,” said her mother, Delmy, who is by her bedside.

The case continues.

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El Salvador: Government Announces Violence Prevention Plan


Mauricio Funes, current president of El Salvador. (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

Mauricio Funes, current president of El Salvador. (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

Yesterday, 14th May, President Mauricio Funes announced a new plan for prevention of gang violence to be implemented in six municipalities in El Salvador’s capital, San Salvador.

The violence prevention plan allots US$33.3m from the government’s annual budget for investment in four key areas: productive social reinsertion of former gang members and affiliates, reinsertion of at-risk youth in education, integral health care for residents of the communities in question, and development of violence prevention programmes.

President Funes stated: “With these initiatives we are starting a new phase of the politics of prevention of violence and crime in our country.”

The plan is to be implemented in municipalities recognised by the government as “free of violence”, and measures are meant to maintain a state of peace in areas once rampant with gang violence.

Mayors and local authorities from the department of San Salvador attended the president’s announcement yesterday, all of which have experienced a recent reduction in gang related violence in their municipalities. The decline in violence is largely due to a truce between the country’s largest gangs, ‘Mara Salvatrucha’ (MS-13) and ‘Barrio 18′, both with thousands of members across the country, which was settled in March of last year. The truce has reportedly spared the lives of about 2,500 young people in El Salvador since.

President Funes praised the diminishment of violence in the department over the past year, citing a reduction in homicides by 52% and the success of effective police strategies.

The government’s violence prevention plan aims to link local authorities with the central government and civil society to keep the municipalities violence free. “It is a new alliance aimed at establishing the bases of a new process of prevention in order to reach what we all long for: definitive peace in our country,” said Funes.

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El Salvador: Pacific Rim Mining Corporation Lawsuit Proceeds


EL SALVADOR – Canadian mining company, Pacific Rim Mining Corporation has been allowed to proceed under El Salvador’s investment law but not under the provisions of the Central America Free Trade Agreement according to a World Bank panel ruling.

Pacific Rim initially filed a case against the government of El Salvador in 2009.  The Canadian company was denied mining permits after activists from the country persuaded the government to bar the company from operating there.

National Roundtable on Metallic Mining of El Salvador (La Mesa) persuaded the Salvadoran government to halt gold extraction by denying mining permits to Pacific Rim, US-based Commerce Group, and Sebastian Gold Mines. They bolstered the cases by illustrating the lack of environmental impact assessments and poor environmental records.

La Mesa is a large organization of community groups and human rights NGOs working to prevent gold extraction in El Salvador.

In response Pacific Rim used rules from the ‘free trade’ agreement between the US and six other countries in the region.  In 2010 the Canadian company won the first stage of proceedings on these grounds.

The mining companies pursued the case at the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) demanding US$100 million each in damages on the grounds declared in the investment chapter of the Central America-Dominican Republic -US Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR) that came into effect in 2005.

According to La Mesa representative Vidalina Morales, “Pacific Rim has assailed our country, breaching environmental requirements, undermining laws, provoking environmental damage, economic losses, social conflict and corruption, and it should be judged for that.  But the roles have been inverted, and it is the company that sues the country and the perpetrator who sues the victim.”

The ICSID will make a binding decision on whether El Salvador unfairly failed to license the mine proposed by the Pacific Rim Mining Corporation or had the sovereign right to reject it after the company had already made investments.

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Victims of Geography: The Failure of the War on Drugs in Central America


Juan Manuel Santos, President of Colombia and María Angela Holguín, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Colombia at the Sixth Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia (Photo: OAS)

Last week the largest meeting between Latin American heads of state took place in Cartagena, Colombia. In anticipation of this meeting, there was one major topic on everyone’s minds – the apparent failure of the war on drugs. From this meeting, a rather disappointing brush aside ‘concluded’ the conversation.

As a conclusion of The Summit of the Americas, the Organisation of American States (OAS) ordered an investigation into the war on drugs, declaring that “in confronting the vast resources and violent and corrupting effects of drug trafficking, simply combining uncoordinated efforts—even those that have been successful—has only had a limited impact on the world drug problem, and therefore it is necessary to identify effective measures on the basis of an integrated and balanced approach.”

No more, no less, just that it will be looked at. But for the countries most affected by drug problems, this may not be enough. Extremely serious problems call for radical solutions, and Central America is now demanding that the continent hears its plea.

A Serious Debate

In the lead up to, and in anticipation of the Summit, the Guatemalan President Otto Pérez Molina expected slightly more. In an article he wrote in Britain’s Observer newspaper, the right-wing president, who is in charge of one of the most drug-affected countries in the world, came forward and controversially proposed the regulated legalisation of drugs.

“Isn’t it true that we have been fighting the war on drugs these past two decades?” he asked. “Then, how on earth is drug consumption higher and production greater and why is trafficking so widespread?”

His answer? The war on drugs is not working.

This is not a new concept, far from it. But the difference is that leaders and powerful figures all around the world are beginning to take the debate about finding an alternative method to the ‘war on drugs’ seriously. Particularly vocal are those who are experiencing the drug wars first-hand. And at the moment, Central American countries are doing the experiencing more than most.

“[Central America is] just a small territory that happens to find itself geographically between the largest drug consumption markets and the largest drug producers,” said Pérez Molina summing up their predicament.

As victims of geography, other Central American governments are also arguing against global policy, which remains the same, as their countries are crumbling. Maurico Funes, the president of El Salvador in recent weeks declared he shares Pérez Molina’s position, adding, “it is not just an initiative for Guatemala.” Laura Chinchilla, President of Costa Rica also agreed that Central American leaders “have the right to discuss [legalisation] as we are paying a very high price.”

Central America and the ‘Balloon Effect”

Central American states are feeling an urgency of survival, pushing them to come forward in this debate.

Mexico is the 12th largest economy in the word, yet everyday there are reports of people being killed from the drug violence. The effect is even stronger on much smaller Honduras – which has the largest homicide rate in the world, with prisons that are virtually lawless. Or Guatemala, which aside from now having a murder rate higher than during their civil war, is dealing with the Mexican Zeta and Sinaloa drug gangs, preferring to pay locals in drugs rather than cash, bringing on a whole new dimension of problems. In all, a UN 2011 Global Study found that Central American countries are near “breaking point” with their levels of homicide.

Another UN report from the Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) warned that in 2010 Central American countries had for the first time become major transit countries for drug trafficking. But it has been a long road of squeezing to fit into that place.

US Coast Guard proudly displays a drug bust haul in the war on drugs. (Photo: Coast Guard News)

In 1971, US President Richard Nixon decided put an end to “public enemy number #1” and declared a war on drugs. Since then, the United States, the world’s largest consumer of drugs, has spent over US$1 trillion on fighting this war at the root, instead of focusing on treatment at home. In 2010 alone, the bill was US$51bn, yet according to the UNODC, the number of drug users has risen from 18 millions to some 210 millions in the last 10 years.

In 1989 the problem was Colombia. There, drug gangs were so strong they were running alongside the state as a parallel economy. Along came the United States with ‘Plan Colombia’, and a full on assault ensued. Aerial spraying crops and the army ‘taking on’ the drug gangs ended with lower levels of coca cultivation (the leaf which cocaine is extracted from) and a much less powerful drug-gang network. It also left thousands of locals injured and even dead from the chemicals sprayed in the air, heightened cultivation levels in neighbouring Peru and Bolivia, and countless murdered and displaced by army atrocities.

Closing the trafficking routes through the Caribbean by the United States coastguard just drove traffickers overland and through Central America. It is no coincidence that since Colombia has improved, Mexico’s drug situation has declined. And again, no big coincidence that since Felipe Calderón’s government started to fight back against the drug gangs in 2006, levels of drug related violence have increased in Guatemala and other Central American countries.

Danny Kushlick, from UK-based international NGO Transform Drug Policy Foundation, explains that “any victories against the cartels in one area only serve to squeeze the gangs into new territory.” It is a metamorphosing organ, like trapped air, just looking for the next space to move into, in what is aptly named ‘the balloon effect’.

“Many of the states [in Central America] are not robust enough to withstand the onslaught and their very existence is brought into question. This threat to security, and ultimately to the viability of nation states, has brought the crisis in the region to a crescendo,” says Kushlick.

'No al narcotrafico' leads the Global Marijuana March for the legalization of marijuana that was held in Buenos Aires in May 2011. (Photo: Joe Rondone)

Legalisation or Decriminalisation?

The topic of legalising of drugs is for many an extremely controversial one. But experts argue that different forms should be considered, from legalisation, to regulation, to decriminalisation.

Pérez Molina’s view is that “to suggest liberalisation – allowing consumption, production and trafficking of drugs without any restriction whatsoever – would be, in my opinion, profoundly irresponsible.”

He attests that it is important “to abandon any ideological position (whether prohibition or liberalisation) and to foster a global intergovernmental dialogue based on a realistic approach – drug regulation. Drug consumption, production and trafficking should be subject to global regulations, which means that consumption and production should be legalised but within certain limits and conditions.”

Kushlick, who investigates options of drug legalisation, agrees, stating that “a shift in the global regime from prohibition to one of management of production, supply, and use would bring numerous wide-ranging benefits to Central America.”

He explains that “first, with the reduction in price following legalisation and regulation, the narcos would leave the trade, as there would no longer be the huge untaxed profits to be made. This would have the knock on effect of reducing violence as gangs stop fighting over turf.”

“It would also reduce corruption amongst law enforcement officers and government officials as the need to corrupt reduces, and the money to bribe officials disappears. It would also reduce militarisation in the region.”

Kushlick has his concerns too, especially concerning legalisation without a global shift. He strongly feels that it should be a multilateral, global concern. “There are many countries around the world that do have the infrastructure to regulate drugs perfectly well – in fact many of them already do.  For instance, half of the world’s opium poppies are grown for the legal market.”

Victoria Donda Peréz talks at the open debate held at UBA (Photo: Beatrice Murch)

From a different perspective, Victoria Donda, an Argentine politician from the Libres del Sur party who supports a move to decriminalisation instead of legalisation, agrees something has to be done. “There has been no change in statistics or in actual facts regarding the fight against drug trafficking. In fact, in most Latin American countries [traffic] has increased,” she replies, when asked on the subject.

“We think that the laws at the moment are encouraging the security forces and police to chase the consumer rather than the dealers,” she says. “The addict is a sick person and not a criminal – the law should change [to decriminalisation] and include prevention and policies in education.”

This said, she remains sceptical over whether a regulated legalisation could work, as “legalisation involves other issues like regulation of quantities and substances.” But, as part of a political party which has been looking into this issue for a while, Donda strongly points out that “this is not an option we are considering for Argentina.”

“If we eliminate the persecution against consumers, then the state and police only have to worry about chasing the drug dealers.”

And, in the Other Corner…

Prior to, and at the Summit of the Americas, amongst all the press about legalisation, US President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden clearly outlined their opposition to any form of regional law against prohibition. It could be argued that, as mid-term elections are coming up, it would be simply political suicide to say anything else.

“I think it warrants a discussion,” Biden told reporters before the Summit, but confidently declaring that looking into the issue “you will only realise there are more problems with legalisation than non-legalisation.” Admitting that although drug legalisation could have positive effects – like reducing prison populations – he believes it would also lead to more drug use, health problems, and even more bureaucracies.

Small step as it is, the US is talking about drugs prevention in a way that has not been done before on top of the OAS’s mandate to look into ‘alternative methods’. And as any recovering addict knows too well, the first step is to admit you have a policy problem.

“The OAS is a US-dominated organisation and the policy review could be seen as throwing the issue into the long grass.” Kushlick warns against seeing too much in the US’s words, or the mandate. “It is crucial that we do not rely on it to deliver.” He sees the US agreement to open up a debate is more of a hope to diffuse the argument for legalisation and make it calmly go away, rather than light fire under it.

The US has to remember that large powers are looming south of the border, and its hegemonic influence in the region is waning. Many strong political figures from Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia are stepping forward offering a voice of change – the US may miss the boat to be a part of these talks. Latin American countries can, and if they gain a big enough consensus will, take action themselves.

As Kushlick points out, “the chances are that the initial moves will be taken despite, rather than because, of the US. However, it is difficult to envisage a fundamental global shift without the US coming along.”

The time for a debate is not coming. It is already here.

To know what locals think about the ‘war on drugs’ click here.

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El Salvador: Marks Murder-Free Day


The central American country, ravaged by gang violence and organised crime, has marked an unprecedented murder-free day.

El Salvador has seen a sharp decline in its murder rate over the last three years, according to a statement issued by president Mauricio Funes on Sunday.

The curb in violence comes in the wake of the announcement made between the gangs, known as maras, last March to reduce the escalating level of crime in the country. The pact was backed by the Catholic church.

At the beginning of Funes’s term, El Salvador registered an average of 12 murders per day. But according to government data, that figure was up to 18 murders a day in the first quarter of 2012.

“Only yesterday (Saturday), after years of murder figures reaching alarming levels of 18 per day, we had not a single homicide in all the country,” stated the president during his visit to the Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia.

Funes, who took office in June 2009, has appointed 8,300 military security personnel across the country. Soldiers and police patrol high risk cities, border points and prison vicinities.

Since a truce was called between gang Mara 18 and rival Mara Salvatrucha (MS), bloodshed has abated. Oscar Armando Reyes and Carlos Alberto Rivas, two ringleaders of Mara 18, have contributed to maintaing the truce from their prison in Western El Salvador.

“Just as we have done bad things, we can do good things. I invite my hommies, my race, with hundred percent dedication, to advance this process,” said Armando Reyes during Mass in Izalco, 70km west of San Salvador.

Congregated in a basketball court inside the prison, the members of Mara 18 declared that this truce is part of a “process of mediation,” encouraged by the vicar Fabio Colindres and former guerrilla commander Raul Mijando.

The death toll has reduced to five per day, according to government data.

According to statistics from the UN, El Salvador has previously registered a crime rate of 66 per 100,000 people. Violence has been fuelled by the presence of Mexican drug cartels who use the country as a trafficking portal.

 

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Central America: Heavy Rains and Flooding


There are strong rains in Costa Rica, El Salvador and Guatemala. Authorities have issued red warning alerts.

The western coasts of the countries have been most affected as the rains are due to a tropical depression formed in the Pacific Ocean.

Six people died today due to the tropical storms in Guatemala. There has been one death in Costa Rica due to landslides, and approximately 130 people have since been evacuated. Hundreds of families have also been evacuated out of the Ahuachapán region of El Salvador.

The health authorities now fear that the flooding may lead to the spread of water borne diseases such as diarrhoea and dengue.

It is expected that the tropical rains will continue until the low pressure subsides on Saturday.

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El Salvador: Protests Against Obama and US


Various civil society organisations have mobilised themselves to reject the visit of US president, Barack Obama, to El Salvador. The president is on a tour of Latin America, during which he is visiting Chile, El Salvador and Brazil.

Organisations that protested were the Coordination of Salvadoran Solidarity with Cuba and the Syndical Front of Workers of the Salvadoran Social Security Institute, among others.

In addition, Honduran organisations came to denounce the intention to reinsert their country into the Organisation of American States (OAS), alongside the repression which has been carried out against various sectors of society.

Some of the main arguments made against the US leader are the recent intervention in Libya, the end of the embargo against Cuba and denouncing the participation of the North American country in the internal conflict of El Salvador during the 1980s.

During the mobilisation of the organisations, a banner was raised calling for “respect to the self-determination of people, no further intervention in Libya”.

The president of the Coordination of Salvadoran Solidarity with Cuba, Raúl Martínez, said that “the US embargo against the Caribbean nation is a grave violation of human rights against the people of the island.

Obama is undertaking his first tour of Latin America since becoming US president in 2009. He held meetings with the president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, and the president of Chile, Sebastián Piñera.

In a press conference held in Santiago, the capital of Chile, Obama defended the intervention in Chile. He justified military action by claiming that it was to stop the “the threat of Gaddafi against his people.”

Story courtesy of Agencia Púlsar, the news agency of AMARC-ALC.

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