Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 11-10-19

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 11-10-19

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 17:37,

YEREVAN, 11 OCTOBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 11 October, USD exchange rate up by 0.03 drams to 476.73 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 0.44 drams to 525.36 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.06 drams to 7.42 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 11.82 drams to 596.06 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 189.37 drams to 22911.13 drams. Silver price down by 0.44 drams to 272.06 drams. Platinum price up by 123.47 drams to 13656.56 drams.

American Armenian actor Sid Haig dies aged 80

News.am, Armenia
Sept 24 2019
American Armenian actor Sid Haig dies aged 80 American Armenian actor Sid Haig dies aged 80

14:16, 24.09.2019
                  

Sid Haig, a Hollywood character actor who for more than 50 years played thugs, villains and, most famously, a psychotic clown named Captain Spaulding, died on September 21. He was 80, The New York Times reported.

His wife, Susan L. Oberg, announced his death on the actor’s Instagram account on Monday, writing, “He adored his family, his friends and his fans. This came as a shock to all of us.”

Haig, who lived in Los Angeles, played bit parts in more than 350 television shows and 70 movies, notably “Jackie Brown” and the James Bond thriller “Diamonds Are Forever.”

He had become a cult figure among horror fans, who reveled in his portrayal of the murderous clown who terrorized people in the 2003 Rob Zombie film “House of 1000 Corpses.” He would go on to play Captain Spaulding in two other films from the director.

He was born Sidney Eddie Mosesian on July 14, 1939, in Fresno, California, according to his official website. His parents were Armenian.

Artsakh comments on statements of Georgian and Ukrainian foreign ministries

Artsakh comments on statements of Georgian and Ukrainian foreign ministries

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 16:05,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. The foreign ministry of Artsakh commented on the statements made by foreign ministries of Georgia and Ukraine over the recent elections of local self-government bodies in Artsakh.

Armenpress presents the full text of the comment:

“On September 8, elections to local self-government bodies were held in the Republic of Artsakh, which became another achievement of Artsakh authorities and society in the process of the consistent development and strengthening of democratic institutions in the republic.

Azerbaijan’s nervous reaction to the elections was predictable and became another manifestation of not only the denial of the fundamental rights of Artsakh citizens, but also the rejection of democratic values in general.

The statements of the Foreign Ministries of Georgia and Ukraine, which associated themselves with the anti-democratic regime of Azerbaijan were perplexed. Such statements not only contradict the declared commitment by Georgia and Ukraine to democratic values, but also constitute interference in the internal affairs of the Artsakh Republic and violate the principles of equal rights of peoples and sovereign equality of states.

Statements by the Foreign Ministries of Georgia and Ukraine also contain provisions that distort the essence of the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict with the aim to reduce it to a territorial dispute and express support for the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan.

In this regard, we would like to remind the Georgian and Ukrainian sides that Azerbaijan does not have internationally recognized borders, except for its Russian-Azerbaijani section. Moreover, a significant segment of the Georgian-Azerbaijani border has not yet been finalized. The borders of Azerbaijan are not defined, not only with Georgia, but also with other neighboring countries. With some of them, the delimitation and demarcation of borders has not even begun.

We call upon the authorities of Georgia and Ukraine to remain committed to the declared system of values based on democratic principles and respect for human rights and freedoms and in the future refrain from the statements regarding the realization by the citizens of the Republic of Artsakh of their fundamental rights, which are enshrined in fundamental international documents”.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/09/2019

                                        Monday, 

Pashinian Urges End To Mine Site Blockade


Armenia - Gold mining facilities constructed by Lydian International company at 
Amulsar deposit, 18 May 2018.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Monday called on protesters to unblock roads 
leading to a massive gold deposit in southeastern Armenia, saying that his 
government has no “legal grounds” to ban its development by a Western mining 
company.

Pashinian said that failure to allow the company, Lydian International, to mine 
gold at the Amulsar deposit would have severe consequences for Armenia’s 
economy and even national security. He also argued that Lydian has given the 
Armenian government more guarantees that mining operations there would not 
contaminate water, soil and air.

“As it stands, we have no legal grounds to prohibit the exploitation of the 
Amulsar mine,” Pashinian declared in a 40-minute video message aired on 
Facebook and primarily addressed to residents of Jermuk, a resort town close to 
the would-be gold mine.

“I am asking residents of Jermuk to unblock all roads leading to Amulsar 
because you don’t need to block the roads, because if your government sees a 
legitimate need to block those roads it will do that with its levers, legal 
powers vested in it,” he said.

“I am convinced that on this issue we will adopt a common position and will not 
make mistakes that will create complications for our country,” he added.


Armenia -- Protesters block a road leading to Amulsar mine, July 2, 2018.

Pashinian appealed to the protesters, who disrupted the construction of a gold 
mine and smelter at Amulsar more than a year ago, after a series of emergency 
meetings with government and law-enforcement officials, Lydian’s top executives 
and environmental activists held in recent days.

The meetings followed the release of ambiguous findings of an independent 
environmental audit of the Amulsar project conducted by ELARD, a Lebanese 
consulting firm hired by the Armenian government.

ELARD sent a 200-page written report to Armenia’s Investigative Committee a 
month ago. According to the law-enforcement body, the report concluded that 
Lydian’s operations would pose only “manageable” risks to the environment. It 
said that toxic waste from the Amulsar mine is extremely unlikely to 
contaminate mineral water sources in Jermuk or rivers and canals flowing into 
Lake Sevan.

But at an August 24 video conference with Armenian officials moderated by 
Pashinian, ELARD experts said they cannot definitively evaluate environmental 
dangers of the project. They claimed that Lydian had submitted flawed and 
incomplete information to regulatory authorities before obtaining its mining 
license in April 2016. The British-American company responded by accusing the 
Lebanese consultants of misleading the government.

Lydian’s interim chairman, Edward Sellers, and top Armenian executive, Hayk 
Aloyan, met with Pashinian on Friday. They also attended on Saturday a meeting 
with senior government officials chaired by Pashinian.

The prime minister said on Monday that they made fresh assurances to the effect 
that “not a single liter of toxic water” would be leaked during gold production 
at Amulsar. He said his government will not hesitate to stop mining operations 
and even revoke Lydian’s license if the company fails to honor these 
commitments.

Pashinian also stressed in that context that he has instructed the 
Investigative Committee and the government’s Inspectorate Body on Environment 
Protection and Natural Resources to look into the “questions” raised by the 
ELARD experts.


Armenia -- Edward Sellers (L), interim chief executive of the British-American 
company Lydian International, at a meeting with Armenian officials chaired by 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, September 7, 2019.

A government decision to pull the plug on the multi-million project now, he 
went on, would seriously undermine Armenia’s credibility with foreign investors 
and broader “economic security.” He specifically warned of downward revisions 
of the country’s international credit ratings, saying that this would push up 
the cost of borrowing in the country. The Amulsar blockade is already “creating 
very serious problems” for Armenia,” he added.

Pashinian also implicitly mentioned Lydian’s threats to take international 
legal action against Yerevan. The company headquartered in Colorado and listed 
on the Toronto Stock Exchange claims to have invested $400 million in Amulsar.

Lydian planned to produce 210,000 ounces of gold, worth over $315 million at 
current international prices, annually. It pledged to create about 800 
permanent jobs and pay $50 million in annual taxes.

The company was due to start mining gold at Amulsar in late 2018. The blockade, 
which began in June 2018, delayed those plans indefinitely.

Pashinian cited Lydian’s top executives as telling him that their company will 
not be able to launch the mining operations before the beginning of 2021 if it 
regains access to Amulsar now. He said Lydian will also need several months of 
preparation to resume the construction of its gold mining and smelting 
facilities, which began in August 2016.




Prosecutors, Kocharian Lawyers Disagree On High Court Ruling

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian (C) and two other prosecutors at 
the opening session of former President Robert Kocharian's trial in Yerevan, 
May 13, 2019.

Prosecutors and lawyers for Robert Kocharian have offered differing 
interpretations of the Constitutional Court’s decision to partly accept an 
appeal filed by Armenia’s jailed former president.

Kocharian’s lawyers had challenged the legality of two articles of the Armenian 
Code of Procedural Justice invoked by investigators accusing him of taking 
bribes and overthrowing the constitutional order shortly before the end of his 
decade-long rule in 2008.

The Constitutional Court ruled that one of those articles is unconstitutional 
because it does not take account of current and former senior Armenian 
officials’ immunity from prosecution guaranteed by the country’s constitution. 
But it upheld the other clause that spells out legal grounds for arresting 
criminal suspects.

The defense lawyers portrayed the ruling as a confirmation of their claims that 
Kocharian’s arrest and prosecution is illegal. They petitioned a district court 
in Yerevan on Saturday to free their client and clear him of the charges.

The court has not yet reacted to the petition yet. It is scheduled to resume on 
Thursday Kocharian’s high-profile trial interrupted nearly four months ago.

Meanwhile, Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General insisted on Monday that 
the Constitutional Court did not declare the criminal case against Kocharian 
null and void. According to its interpretation of the ruling, it is up to 
investigators and the judge presiding over the trial to determine whether the 
ex-president’s legal immunity extends to the accusations leveled against him.

Article 140 of the Armenian constitution says: “During the term of his or her 
powers and thereafter, the President of the Republic may not be prosecuted and 
subjected to liability for actions deriving from his or her status.”

In a statement, the prosecutors stood by their position that this 
constitutional provision does not apply to Kocharian’s decision to use army 
units against opposition protesters in Yerevan in the wake of a disputed 2008 
presidential election.

The statement also accused the ex-president’s lawyers of distorting the essence 
of the Constitutional Court’s decision.

One of the lawyers, Hovannes Khudoyan, countered that the prosecutors 
themselves are misinterpreting the ruling. “I would advise the Office of the 
Prosecutor-General to again familiarize itself with that judicial act in order 
to finally understand what it is all about,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.




Yerevan Hails ‘Free Elections’ In Karabakh

        • Artak Khulian

Nagorno-Karabakh - The main government buildings in Stepanakert, September 7, 
2019.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian praised on Monday local elections held in 
Nagorno-Karabakh at the weekend, saying that they were “free, fair and 
competitive.”

Voters in Karabakh elected the mayors of the capital Stepanakert and other 
Karabakh towns and villages as well as local councils. The mayoral race in 
Stepanakert was tight, with five candidates participating in it.

One of them, Davit Sargsian, was elected mayor with 36.4 percent of the vote, 
according to official results. The city’s incumbent mayor, Suren Grigorian, did 
not seek reelection.

“I congratulate the heroic people of Artsakh on the holding of free, fair and 
competitive elections of local government bodies,” Pashinian wrote on Facebook. 
“I also congratulate all elected candidates and wish them fruitful work for the 
benefit of the homeland and the people.”

Pashinian also commended election observers from Karabakh and Armenia, saying 
that they contributed to the proper conduct of the polls.

Two of those vote monitoring missions were deployed by the Yerevan-based Union 
of Informed Citizens (UIC) and Transparency International’s affiliate 
organization in Armenia. At Pashinian’s urging, the Armenian government 
allocated 33.7 million drams ($70,000) to them for that purpose on August 22. 
The premier said the funding is part of his government’s efforts to “create 
additional safeguards” for democracy in Karabakh.

Observers representing the two non-governmental organizations did not report 
serious irregularities.

“Our monitoring team did not witness obvious and deliberate violations that 
could influence the course of the elections or cast shadow on their results,” 
said Vahram Tokmajian, head of the UIC’s Stepanakert office. He also said 
Karabakh election officials cooperated with the monitors and swiftly responded 
to “issues” in some polling stations reported by them.

Karabakh’s Central Election Commission said, for its part, that it has received 
no reports of serious fraud during and after Sunday’s voting. It reported that 
nearly two-thirds of Karabakh’s 103,000 eligible voters participated in the 
polls.

Karabakh will hold presidential and parliamentary elections early next year. 
Its incumbent president, Bako Sahakian, is not eligible for another term in 
office. He has been in power since 2007.

Neither Sahakian nor Pashinian has endorsed any potential presidential 
candidates so far. Speaking at an August 5 rally in Stepanakert, Pashinian said 
the Armenian government will act as a “guarantor” of the freedom and fairness 
of the 2020 polls.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org



Sports: Head coach comments on Armenian team’s performance at Italy clash

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 6 2019

Head coach of the Armenian national football team Armen Gyulbudaghyants says he has thanked the footballers after the Euro 2020 qualifying match against Italy on Thursday.

Armenia were defeated by Italy 1-3 in the Group j match played at Yerevan’s Vazgen Sargsyan Republican Stadium. Aleksandre Karapetian gave Armenia a lead in the 11th minute, but Andrea Belotti eventually equalised for Italy in the 28th minute. Italy wrapped up the match in the last 15 minutes with Lorenzo Pellegrini’s first goal for his country and another strike from Belotti.

“We played well during the first 20 minutes, but then Italy started attacking intensely and pressing us and we missed a goal. We tried to play well for some 25 minutes of the second half, but we lost eventually,” the head coach said in a post-match news conference.

Asked to comment on the performance of midfielder Kamo Hovhannisyan, who seemed to be tired at the end of the game, the coach said the footballer refused to be replaced.

“As you know Kamo is a fighter, he fights till the end. In the end he showed that he was able to fight,” he said.

The head coach expressed confidence the team will recover before the Bosnia and Herzegovina clash on 8 September. 

New kindergarten in Armenian border village opens its doors

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

A newly-built kindergarten in the border village of Baghanis in Armenia’s Tavush Province opened its doors to children on Monday.

Speaking to a Panorama.am correspondent, Baghanis Mayor Narek Sahakyan said the kindergarten has been constructed in a safe area far from the border with Azerbaijan.

“And from now on, the children of Baghanis will attend a safe and comfortable kindergarten,” he said, adding that the new building is located along a riverbank and has a heating system, an outdoor playground and a summer theater.

The construction of the kindergarten was made possible due to US-based Paros Foundation. The construction works started in September 2018 and completed in June this year.

The mayor says the kindergarten was inaugurated in June but didn’t function during the holidays.

Narek Sahakyan says Baghanis had no kindergarten from 1991 to 2013. Following the constant Azerbaijani shelling, the building of the Soviet-era kindergarten was severely damaged and left in a precarious condition. In 2013 a first-floor room of the municipality building was renovated to serve as a kindergarten for six years.  

Photos from Narek Sahakyan's Facebook page

Playground Gear at Center of Glendale City Council Race

The old playground equipment at Glendle’s Maple Park

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

The Glendale City Council on Tuesday voted to discard playground equipment, which Councilmember Paula Devine had hoped the city would donate to a school in Artsakh.

Devine and Councilmember Frank Quintero opposed the motion to destroy the playground equipment, while councilmembers Vartan Gharpetian and Vrej Aghajanian were joined by Mayor Ara Najarian in support of destroying the playground gear.

Glendale resident, attorney Garo Ghazarian, spoke during public comments announcing that the Tufenkian Foundation had submitted an official letter requesting the playground equipment for a school in a village in Kashatagh, Artsakh, where the foundation is refurbishing a high school in its continued efforts to repopulate the liberated territories in Artsakh.

Ghazarian explained that during a fundraiser he hosted at his residence in April for the Tufenkian Foundation, Devine proposed donating the playground equipment at Maple Park, which was slated for replacement due to a provision in Glendale that requires replacing such gear every 12 years. The new Maple Part All Inclusive Playground Project was unveiled last week and funded by Development Impact Fee funds and designed by Shane’s Inspiration.

During Tuesday’s Council meeting, Devine said that per city staff reports, the playground equipment, which she wants donated, has been deemed safe and can be used for another five years. Najarian and Gharpetian contended that giving old and what they called dilapidated equipment to Armenia would put children there at risk and would not be appropriate, proposing instead to raise funds and acquire similar gear that is made in Armenia, which they said would benefit the local economy and not be cost prohibitive due to transportation and assembly costs. Devine announced that another charity had pledged to cover all costs of the transportation and assembly.

GLENDALE CITY COUNCIL DEBATES PLAYGROUND

A similar vote was held in the spring, when Devine was joined by then Councilmember Zareh Sinanyan to support the effort to send the playground equipment to Artsakh, while the other councilmembers opposed the measure, based on similar concerns.

“Armenians might be poor but they are not beggars,” said Gharpetian at the council meeting to emphasize that donating second-hand gear might be frowned upon in Armenia, and in a way look bad for Glendale.

It was Aghajanian’s motion to discard the equipment that was put to vote and it passed 3 to 2.

Devine and Gharpetian are running for reelection in March and this issue seemed to kick-start a campaign season, which promises to be eventful, to say the least.

In a telephone interview with Asbarez on Wednesday Devine said she “was stymied” by the Tuesday’s vote. “I was making an effort to help and was turned down by my Armenian colleagues and was saddened by that.”

Calling the council decision “an insult,” Devine asserted that the equipment was safe and only had cosmetic issues, which could be fixed right away, that the Tufenkian Foundation, a reputable organization, wanted the gear for one of its projects.

“There are places in Armenia—there are villages—that are not getting the equipment and we are here for them. This is the Diaspora and I am supporting the Diaspora,” Devine told Asbarez adding that as a city councilmember she serves the entire community, with the Armenian population being an important part of it.

“I know what the Armenian community does for [its] homeland. I respect that and I want to be a part of that,” said Devine.

“I am sorry that it ended up that way,” said Devine. “I had high hopes. It deeply saddened me. I truly regret that.”

Gharpetian believes the issue is “one hundred percent politicized.” In a telephone interview with Asbarez Gharpetian said with this move, Devine was attempting to compensate for not supporting other efforts such as the renaming of a portion of Maryland Avenue to Artsakh Street and the approval of the Armenian American Museum.

“With all due respect, this is all political,” said Gharpetian. “She [Devine] is trying to compensate and make up for the votes she made against Artsakh Street and the museum.”

“If they want to make a playground a campaign issue so be it. I don’t want dilapidate equipment to go to Artsakh,” added Gharpetian.

“At the end that is still going to be Glendale’s equipment, I think we can do better. And we will,” Mayor Najarian told Asbarez in a telephone interview when asked whether donating the equipment now and raising funds in the future for another playground should have been considered. “Someone somewhere would be getting that old equipment. I would rather get them new equipment.”

Najarian was confident that within “30 to 60 days” enough funds would be raised to acquire the new equipment, which would be manufactured in Armenia and “boost the local economy.” He said he anticipated Gharpetian to make a relevant announcement in the coming weeks.

“Three Armenian want the best equipment for the kids out there,” said Najarian of his two fellow Armenian councilmembers.

“Paula has an election coming up and she is motivated to be very ‘hayaser’ to the community. I don’t fault her for that. There is better ways for that. We will invite her to take part in the fundraising. Let her brag about that,” added Najarian, inserting the political slant into the conversation.

“It is always sad to see politics taking precedent over pupils, and in yesterday’s case, politics seemed to trump the opportunity to help the Armenian students of Artsakh,” Ghazarian, who spoke at Tuesday’s City Council meeting, told Asbarez in an email.

“The Maple Park playground was not being replaced because it was old or dangerous. As stated by city staff and in the reports to council, the playground was replaced because the city had received a new Shane’s Inspiration playground. If it was dangerous and/or futile, it would not be up for discussion or be requested from the Tufenkian Foundation, as claimed by some councilmembers,” stated Elen Asatryan, former Chair of the Glendale Parks, Recreation, and Community Services Commission

“It is unfortunate and unacceptable that councilmembers decided to play political football and based their final vote on who is giving and receiving credit. It certainly looks like election season has officially begun in Glendale and the ones left to lose here are not just the children of Artsakh and Armenia, but the residents of our jewel city led by council members who have turned the political process into their own personal playgrounds,” added Asatryan.

Mkhitar Hayrapetyan: Working students in Armenia will have the opportunity to pay of tuition fees by income tax

Arminfo, Armenia
Aug 28 2019
Ani Mshetsyan

ArmInfo.. In the coming days, the National Assembly will receive a bill providing for the repayment of tuition fees for working students by  income tax. Head of the  parliamentary commission on education, science, culture, Diaspora and  sports Mkhitar Hayrapetyan wrote about this on his Facebook page.

He said that the bill was prepared by the head of the "My Step"  faction Lilit Makunts and MP Sisak Gabrielyan, and was introduced  several months ago. "We expect that the law will be adopted this  year, and students will be able to pay income tax as tuition fees  already in the academic year 2020-2021," Hayrapetyan noted. 

Music: Listen to a new single from Armenian pop singer Brunette

The Fader
Aug 22 2019
 
 
Listen to a new single from Armenian pop singer Brunette
 
“Love The Way You Feel” is the first single to be released by Nvak, a music education non-profit working in countries facing social or political turmoil.
 
By THE FADER
August 22, 2019
Tonight at midnight, the music education non-profit Nvak will release its first single. "Love The Way You Feel," by the 18-year-old Armenian singer, songwriter, and producer Brunette (premiering above) is a humid pop song that wouldn't sound out of place on FM radio in the United States — and that's part of the point.

Tamar Kaprelian founded Nvak in 2015 after visiting the country to connect with her roots and representing her country in that year's Eurovision Song Contest. “While I was there, I noticed a vibrant, talented population who had little to no opportunity or encouragement to create original music and showcase their talent," Kaprelian says in a press release. "Moreover, due in part to years of political corruption, there was no way for young talent to get their music heard outside of the country’s borders.”

Now Nvak runs year-round mentorship and teaching programs in Armenia and Israel, and the charity is set to launch in Malawi later this year. Professors from schools like Berklee and the Clive Davis school teach classes in songwriting, music production, audio engineering, marketing, and PR, providing a hands-on learning experience for students whose talents might otherwise have gone unrecognized.

"Love The Way You Feel" is one of nine songs that were recorded and produced by Armenian and Israeli artists with the help of Nvak, and a new distribution deal with the Alternative Distribution Alliance will help take the songs across the world.

“I want young girls in Armenia to listen to my songs and to feel confident and empowered that they can also have a free voice,” Brunette says. "There isn’t a huge music business [in Armenia] and there are limited opportunities for young artists to be able to express themselves through their art. Nvak is a space where you can be free to express you.”

Listen to "Love The Way You Feel" at the top of the page, pre-save the single here, and find out more about Nvak here.



press release – ArmeniaTools4Schools for Berd

Dear journalists,

Through funding from
ArmeniaTools4Schools, the Berd Vocational State School in the Tavush region in
Armenia received $25,000 in tools, equipment, and supplies from December, 2018
through April 2019.  This support re-establishes
a welding department at the school, re-supplies the electrical department, and
doubled the equipment in their sewing and tailoring department. 

Please find attached press releases in Arnenian and English.



Հարգելի լրագրողներ,

ArmeniaTools4Schools կազմակերպության ֆինանսավորմամբ Տավուշի մարզի Բերդի պետական բազմագործառութային քոլեջը համալրվել է 25,000 ԱՄՆ դոլար
արժողությամբ վերջին սերնդի տասնյակ գործքիներով՝ հնարավորություն տալով հարյուրավոր
ուսանողների սովորել իրենց մասնագիտությունը ժամանակի պահանջներին համապատասխան։

Կից ուղարկում ենք մամլո հաղորդագրությունը հայերեն և անգլերեն։
Հարգանքով՝

Արևիկ 


– 

Arevik Badalyan

C) 919.247.9410

O) 919.424.0090

allbusmarketing.com


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press release - tools for Berd School-arm.docx

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press release - tools for Berd School-eng.docx

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