House cleaning or window dressing?
Are they playing us like a cheap fiddle again? For a while, it was
all about the Meles Dam and how to collect nickels and dimes to build
it. That kind of played itself out. (Not to worry. That circus will be
back in town. The public has the attention span of a gold fish. So they
think.) It’s time to change the flavor of the month. Time for a new
game, a new hype. How about “corruption”? It’s a chic topic. The World
Bank is talking about it. Everybody is talking about it. Even the
corrupt are talking about corruption. Imagine kleptocrats calling
corruptocrats corrupt? Or the pot calling the kettle black?
I have been talking and writing about corruption in Ethiopia for
years. After dozens of commentaries on some aspect of corruption in
Ethiopia, I am still drumbeating anti-corruption. I have been “lasing”
corruption in my commentaries in 2013. I was flabbergasted by the World
Bank’s 448-page report, “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia”. I am still reeling from the shocking findings in that report. In my commentary last week, “Educorruption and Miseducation in Ethiopia”,
I focused on corruption in the education sector. It is one thing to
steal an election or pull off a gold heist at the national bank, but
robbing millions of Ethiopian youth of their future by imprisoning them
in the bowels of a corrupt educational system is harrowing, downright
criminal. Aarrgghh!
“The Administration of Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn made the
full might of its power known last Friday, after ordering the arrest of
10 high and medium ranking officials of the Ethiopian Revenues &
Customs Authority (ERCA), along with six businessmen, some of whom are
well known… Hailemariam wants to prove that there are no holy-cows…”
tooted the opening sentence of an online media outlet. My initial
reaction was a bemused, “You don’t say!?” (To be perfectly frank, I
exclaimed, “Holy cows? Holy _ _ _ t!!”)
The two dozen “corruption” suspects nabbed in the “investigation”
include ERCA “director general” with the “rank of minister”, his
deputies and the “chief prosecutor” along with other customs officials. A
number of prominent businessmen and some of their family members were
also snagged in the dragnet. “Ethiopia’s top anti-corruption official”
Ali Sulaiman told the Voice of America Amharic program last week “the
suspects had been under surveillance for over two years.”
The anti-corruption crusaders put on quite a show-and-tell on their
television service. They put up dramatic footage of wads and stashes of
greenbacks and Eurodollars in suitcases allegedly seized at a suspect’s
residence. They displayed allegedly fraudulent land records from another
suspect and gave interviews on how the suspects engaged in their
corrupt practices. (The show-and-tell was reminiscent of the “terrorist”
suspects they paraded in “Akeldama” and “Jihadawi Harakat” with caches of guns and explosives. For the “corruption” suspects, it was stashes of cash.)
The regime’s public relations machine kicked into overdrive. Comments
by unnamed “Ethiopian activists praising efforts by the government to
crackdown on corruption in the East African country” were reported. One
anonymous activists declared, “Ethiopia is pushing forward on efforts
to help end the rampant corruption within government and business in the
country…. We need to clean up our government…” Other anonymous
commentators were quoted proclaiming moral victory on corruption. “The
arrests are the beginning of a new Ethiopia free from the politics and
past craziness and greed that had been part of the country for far too
long.”
Divergent viewpoints on the “investigation” and arrest of the
suspects were bandied in the Ethiopian Diaspora. Some offered muted
praise for “Hailemariam’s government” for launching a “war” on
“corruption”. They said the bagging of the two dozen or so suspects
represents a shot across the bow for all “corruptitioners” (a neologism
to describe professional practitioners of corruption). Others were
convinced the suspects were guilty “because everybody knows they are
corrupt. They shakedown every businessman importing goods into the
country…” They were glad to see these “bad guys” bagged. There were many
who dismissed the whole investigation as a sham, a public relations
charade. It is political theater staged for the World Bank, the IMF and
other donors who are demanding anti-corruption action as a precondition
for handouts.
Some even suggested it was a special show staged for U.S. Secretary
of State John Kerry who is expected to visit Ethiopia to attend an
African Union summit. The regime bosses can bob and weave against any
Kerry punches on human rights and the jailing of dissidents, journalists
and opposition leaders by touting their “anti-corruption” efforts.
Others viewed the arrests as a fallout of the post-Meles power struggle
that is raging among ruling party factions. For the suspects to be
arrested, their protector “god fathers” must have been vanquished or
purged out in the power play. Still others said the arrest of these
particular suspects is the low hanging fruit of corruption in Ethiopia.
Going after officials of the customs authority, an agency historically
stained with corruption, provides the regime an aura of credibility and
magnifies its purported anti-corruption efforts.
I see the whole things with a jaded eye. I am convinced the cunning
regime power players are gaming corruption. They are showboating and
grandstanding. They are trying to kill two birds with one stone. Nail
their opponents and get public relations credit and international
handouts at the same time. They are desperately trying to catch some
positive publicity buzz in a media environment where they are being
hammered and battered everyday by human rights organizations, NGOs,
international media outlets and others. It is a public relations stunt
and political theatre without much substance or seriousness of purpose.
It is standard operating window dressing procedure for the regime. It is
red meat for the local population to make themselves look good and drum
up support. It is a calculated strategy to reinvent “Hailemariam’s
government” with smoke and mirrors. After repeated public cathartic
confessions that he is the handmaiden of Meles, Hailemariam now wants to
show the world he is Mr. Clean, not Mr. Clone (of Meles). He is no
longer part of the corrupt-to-the-core ancien regime of Meles.
Mr. Clean is going to clean house and he has already bagged his first
“Dirty 2 Dozen”. (Reminds one of Pinocchio telling Geppetto he dreams of
becoming a real boy. Hailemariam, a real prime minister?!) What better
agitprop to mobilize and capitalize on the infamy of a long reviled and
hated agency. If they can’t hoodwink and drum up public support by
talking ad nauseam about the Meles Dam, perhaps they can pull it off with a “corruption investigation” of the customs authority. It is sleazy investigating greasy and cheesy.
To say the corrupt Meles regime has no credibility with me is an
understatement. The anti-corruption crusaders want us to believe only
their side of their story and their silly show-and-tell. But every story
has two sides or more. In telling a story, credibility is everything.
The regime convicted Eskinder Nega, Reeyot Alemu, Woubshet Taye and so
many others on lies, fabrications and tall tales. They have no
credibility.
I believe those corruptoids are interested in clinging to power, not
good governance or stamping out corruption. The only reason they are
able to remain in power is because corruption courses in their
bloodstream. Corruption is the hemoglobin that delivers life-sustaining
oxygen to their nerve center. Without corruption, the tyrannical regime
will simply wither away.
I take a dim view of the regime’s “anti-corruption” efforts” not
because I am its relentless critic or because I will not miss an
opportunity to ding them or make them look bad. I make no apologies for
my trenchant criticisms. But the truth of the matter is that if I
believed in the slightest that they were serious and genuine about
rooting (instead of tooting) out “corruption”, I would be the first to
raise my pen and lavish them with praise. I would be rooting and tooting
for them.
As I have often remarked, corruption is the malignant cancer that has
metastasized throughout Ethiopia’s body politic. That’s why the World
Bank’s voluminous report was aptly titled, “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia.”
It is a “clinical” diagnosis which has determined the cancer cells of
corruption are not confined to one organ of state (customs authority)
which can be surgically removed and treated with the penal equivalent of
chemotherapy and radiation. The corruption cancer has spread
throughout all organs of state.
The chemotherapy for the cancer of corruption in Ethiopia is a free
press that can aggressively and doggedly investigate and report corrupt
officials and practices for public scrutiny. The radiation therapy for
the cancer of corruption is an independent prosecutorial office that
could catch not only the small winnows in the pond but most importantly
the big whales and sharks swimming at the highest levels of government.
An independent judiciary that is capable of adjudicating corruption
cases with due process of law is also very much needed. The preventive
care for the cancer of corruption involves vigilant civil society
institutions which can work freely at the grassroots levels and provide
anti-corruption awareness, education, training and monitoring. It also
involves a genuinely competitive multiparty system that can hold the
ruling party and its officials accountable.
None of these “medicines” exist in Ethiopia today. That is why I
believe the cancer of “corruption” in due course will destroy the regime
though it is the very source of its survival now. More on my views on
the “anti-corruption efforts” of the regime later; but a word or two
about due process, the rule of law and the “corruption” suspects.
Due process and the rights of the accused
As I was drafting this commentary, I was advised by some learned
colleagues that any statement I make that seems remotely sympathetic to
the suspects accused of “corruption” could send the wrong message and
create the misimpression that I would stoop low to defend even the
manifestly corrupt just to make political points against the regime. I
was told not to bother because “everybody knows the suspects are
corrupt…” One of my feisty friends in a moment of rhetorical impetuosity
was compelled to ask, “Why should you care if these S.O.B’s get a fair
trial? Everyone knows they are guilty. Let them hang!”
That is where I part ways with my learned friends. The last time I parted ways with them was when I defended Meles Zenawi’s right to speak at Columbia University in September 2010.
At the time, I was roundly criticized by friends and some of my regular
readers. “How could you defend the ‘monster’ who had denied millions of
Ethiopians the right to speak and even breath?” I insisted I was not
defending a “monster” but the principle of free expression. My defense
was simple, “If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we
despise, we don’t believe in it at all.” My position is no different
now. If we don’t believe in a fair trial for those we despise as
corrupt, then we do not believe in fair trial at all.
I believe in fairness and justice. I do not believe in revenge or
retribution. I take no position on the factual guilt or innocence of
those accused of “corruption”. If they did the crime, they have to do
the time. However, I believe they have a constitutional right to be
presumed innocent until proven guilty in a fair trial. In other words, I
make no exceptions or compromises when it comes to taking a position in
defending the principle and practice of due process of law and respect
for fundamental human rights. Those accused of “corruption” now (and
those who will certainly face accusations of crimes against humanity and
other crimes in the future) are entitled to full due process of law,
which includes not only the presumption of innocence and the right
against self-incrimination but also the rights to counsel, adequate
notice of charges, an impartial and neutral fact-finder, speedy trial
and adjudication by the standard of beyond a reasonable doubt.
My deep concern over the arbitrary administration of justice or
denial of fair trial to anyone accused of “corruption”, “terrorism”,
“treason”, etc., is rooted in the manifest absence of the rule of law
in Ethiopia and the harsh realities of Meles’ officialdom. Any petty
“law enforcement” official of the regime has the power to arrest and
jail an innocent citizen. As I argued in my February 2012 commentary, “The Prototype African Police State”, a local police chief in Addis Ababa felt so arrogantly secure in his arbitrary powers that he threatened
to arrest a Voice of America reporter stationed in Washington, D.C.
simply because that reporter asked him for his full name during a
telephone interview. “I don’t care if you live in Washington or in
Heaven. I don’t give a damn! But I will arrest you and take you. You
should know that!!”, barked police chief Zemedkun. If a flaky policeman
can exercise such absolute power, is it unreasonable to imagine those at
the apex of power have the power to do anything they want with
impunity. The regime in Ethiopia is living proof that power corrupts and
an absolute power corrupts absolutely.
In my view, denial of due process (fair trial) is the highest form of
“corruption” imaginable because its denial results in the arbitrary
deprivation of a person’s life, liberty and property. I am unapologetic
in my insistence that the suspects accused of “corruption” are entitled
to full due process of law under the country’s Constitution and
international human rights conventions. The question is: Could they get a
fair trial in the regime’s kangaroo courts? Do these “corruption”
suspects have the same chance of getting a fair trial today as those
accused of “treason”, “terrorism”, “subversion” yesterday?
Article 20 (3) Ethiopian Constitution provides, “During proceedings
accused persons have the right to be presumed innocent.” The same right
is secured under the Article 11 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, Article 14(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR) and Article 7(b) of the African Charter on
Human and People’s Rights (ACHPR). Disrespect for the presumption of
innocence has been the hallmark of the Meles regime. To be accused of a
crime by the Meles regime is to be convicted and sentenced to a long
prison term. That is why I have often caricatured the Meles’ judicial
system as kangaroo court justice. The courts are corrupted through
political manipulation, intimidation and domination. The 2012 U.S. State Department Human Rights report concluded, “The law provides for an independent judiciary. Although the civil courts operated with a large degree of independence, the criminal courts remained weak, overburdened, andsubject to political influence.”
One of the “corruption” suspects during his first court appearance
complained of prejudicial pretrial publicity because “state television
showed his house being searched.”
There is a long and predictable pattern and practice of disregard for
the constitutional right to presumption of innocence and wholesale
abuse and denial of a panoply of constitutional rights to those accused
of political crimes in Ethiopia. Following the 2005 election, Meles
publicly declared that “The CUD (Kinijit) leaders are engaged in
insurrection — that is an act of treason under Ethiopian law. They will
be charged and they will appear in court.” They were charged, appeared
in “court” and were convicted. In December 2008, Meles railroaded
Birtukan Midekssa, the first female political party leader in Ethiopian
history, without so much as a hearing let alone a trial. He sent her
straight from the street into solitary confinement and later declared:
“There will never be an agreement with anybody to release Birtukan.
Ever. Full stop. That’s a dead issue.” In 2009, Meles’ right hand man
labeled 40 defendants awaiting trial as “desperadoes” who planned to
“assassinate high ranking government officials and destroying
telecommunication services and electricity utilities and create
conducive conditions for large scale chaos and havoc.” They were all
“convicted” and given long prison sentences.
Meles proclaimed the guilt of freelance Swedish journalists Johan
Persson and Martin Schibbye on charges of “terrorism” while they were
being tried and he was visiting Norway in 2011. He emphatically declared
the duo “are, at the very least, messenger boys of a terrorist
organization. They are not journalists.” Persson and Schibbye were
“convicted” and sentenced to long prison terms.
Violations of the constitutional rights of those accused of crimes by
the regime are not limited to disregard for the presumption of
innocence. Internationally-celebrated Ethiopian journalists including
Reeyot Alemu, Woubshet Taye and many others were denied access to legal
counsel for months. Ethiopian Muslim activists who demanded an end to
religious interference were jailed on “terrorism” charges and denied
access to counsel. They were mistreated and abused in pretrial
detention. Scores of journalists, opposition members and activists
arrested and prosecuted (persecuted) under the so-called anti-terrorism
proclamation were also denied counsel and speedy trials and languished
in prison for long periods.
Article 20 (2) provides, “Any person in custody or a convicted prisoner shall have the right to communicate with and be visited by spouse(s), close relatives and friends, medical attendants, religious and legal counselors.
In an interview given to the Voice of America Amharic program last
week, a lawyer for one of the suspects complained that he and a bunch
of other lawyers were denied access to their clients accused of
“corruption” after waiting for five hours. They were told to return the
following day because the “suspects were undergoing interrogation.” Yet,
Article 19 (5) provides, “Everyone shall have the right not to be forced to make any confessions or admissions of any evidence that may be brought against him during the trial.”
Article 19 (1) provides, “Anyone arrested on criminal charges shall have the right to be informed promptly and in detail… the nature and cause of the charge against him… Article 20 (2) provides, “Everyone charged with an offence shall be adequately informed in writing of the charges brought against him.
The “corruption” suspects have yet to be “informed promptly and in
detail the charges against them”. “Ethiopia’s top anti-corruption
official” Ali Sulaiman told Voice of America Amharic last week that the
“suspects have been under surveillance for two years”. Yet at the
suspect’s first court appearance, the prosecutors requested a 14-day
continuance to gather more evidence. The “court” ruled the suspects can
be held in custody “until the Federal Ethics & Anti-”corruption”
Commission (FEACC) could collect additional evidence to bring charges against them.”
If it took them 2 years to investigate the case, but couldn’t wait
another 14 days to gather the last pieces of vital evidence before
arresting and publicly parading the suspects? This is a trick they have
used before. It is called arrest and jest. Put the suspects in jail,
crucify them in the press and laugh at them as they languish in prison
for months on end. There will be endless delays and continuances “to
collect more evidence” and the “court” will allow it because the “court”
does what it is told by their political bosses.
There is no judicial system in the world where suspects are
arrested of committing crimes after being investigated for 2 years and
then the prosecution asks for two more weeks to gather additional
evidence. The regime’s trial by publicity and demonization will go
on. They will keep pumping out unrebutted damaging information in
flagrant disregard of the suspects’ constitutional rights to create
hostile pretrial publicity. They talk with a loose tongue about the
suspects crimes of “tampering with loan-sharking investigations”,
“illegal trading and tax evasion”, “improprieties especially involving
imports of steel”, etc. Such is the sad fact of corruptoid justice in
the regime’s kangaroo courts. Arrest persons presumed to be innocent and go out and look for evidence of their guilt! What a crock of _ _ _ t!
Fall guys or grand fall
There is something strange about the regime’s current “corruption”
narrative; and I must say it reflects very badly on Meles himself.
According to reports, the “director general” (the alleged kingpin of the
“corruption” ring) was appointed by Meles in 2008. He is a “senior
cabinet member”. He is credited for “overseeing several tax reforms
including widening the tax base, by requiring businesses to install cash
registration machines and to become registered for Value Added Tax
(VAT).” According to one report, “Under [the “director general”], the
amount of revenues the federal government mobilized has reached 71
billion Br in 2011/12, a dramatic increase from the 19 billion Br
collected before he took the position.”
Something is not right with that picture. Was Meles so blind and
incompetent to select such a “corrupt man” to take the helm of his money
making machine? Did Meles select him to oversee his corrupt empire
because he knew the “director general” was the just right man for the
job? Is it possible that the “director general” is a victim in a
political power play? In any case, the arrest of the “director general”
and the smear on his character and reputation reflects very poorly on
Meles judgment, common sense and integrity. In my view, if the “director
general” is truly the corruption ringleader, then he cannot possibly be
the capo di tutti capi (boss of all bosses), perhaps an underboss or a consigliere.
The anticorruption warriors should be mindful of the law of
unintended consequences. If they succeed in their corruption crusade,
Meles’ legacy may be at extreme risk. When it came to corruption, Meles
had a double standard. For instance, when 10,000 tons of coffee
vanished from the warehouses, Meles forgave the coffee thieves and
others “because we all have our hands in it”. He threatened to cut the
hands of coffee thieves if they steal again. Meles was content to rail
against “government thieves” without doing much more. Now Hailemariam
wants a single standard of corruption applicable to all. For someone who worships Meles, Hailemariam’s move is downright heresy!
It is noteworthy that the last time Meles mounted a “corruption”
investigation was over a decade ago when he rounded up some of his
former comrades and their business associates and charged them with
“corruption” and railroaded them to prison. Back in the mid-1990s, he
jailed the “prime minister” of the “transitional government” on
charges of corruption. That “prime minister” ate 12 years in Meles’
prisons. Hailemariam now, without warning, wants to go after all
corruptitioners and cut off their hands? Is it going to be the legacy of
corruption of Mr. Crook against the promise of good governance by
anti-corruption crusader Mr. Clean?
Going after corruption, inc. (unlimited) — the real “holy cows” of “corruption”
In 2011, Meles publicly stated that 10,000 tons of coffee earmarked
for exports had simply vanished from the warehouses. He called a meeting
of commodities traders and in a videotaped statement told
them that he will forgive them this time because “we all have our hands
in the disappearance of the coffee”. He threatened to “cut off their
hands” if they should steal coffee in the future. In 2011, a United
Nations Development Program (UNDP) commissioned report from
Global Financial Integrity (GFI) on “illicit financial flows” (money
stolen by government officials and their cronies and stashed away in
foreign banks) from the Least Developed Countries (LDCs) revealed the
theft of US$8.4 billion from Ethiopia. In 2009, over US $3 billion
illicitly left Ethiopia. “The vast majority of the rise in illicit
financial flows is a result of increased corruption, kickbacks, and
bribery while the remainder stems from trade mispricing.”
In 2008 “USD16 million dollars” worth of gold bars simply walked out of the bank in broad daylight never to be seen again. According to a Wikileaks cablegram,
the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the current ruling party
in Ethiopia, “Upon taking power in 1991… liquidated non-military assets
to found a series of companies whose profits would be used as venture
capital to rehabilitate the war-torn Tigray region’s economy…[with]
roughly US $100 million… Throughout the 1990s…, no new EFFORT
[Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray owned and operated by
TPLF] ventures have been established despite significant profits,
lending credibility to the popular perception that the ruling party and
its members are drawing on endowment resources to fund their own
interests or for personal gain.” According to the World Bank, roughly
half of the Ethiopian national economy is accounted for by companies
held by a business group called the Endowment Fund for the
Rehabilitation of Tigray (EFFORT) cloasely allied with the ruling EPDRF
party. EFFORT’s freight transport, construction, pharmaceutical, and
cement firms receive lucrative foreign aid contracts and highly
favorable terms on loans from government banks. “Generals” and other
military leaders have managed to accumulate properties worth hundreds of
millions of dollars. Last year, a regime general told Voice of America
Amharic that he was able to build a number of multistory buildings worth
tens of millions of dollars because he was “given bank loans”.
There is an old Ethiopian saying which roughly translates as follows:
“There is no beauty contest among monkeys.” A pig with lipstick at the
end of the day is still a pig as the old saying goes. There are no good
corruptoids. In any power struggle, it is not uncommon for one group of
power players to accuse another of being corrupt. Bo Xilai (once touted
to be the successor to President Hu Jintao in China) Liu Zhijun and
other high level Chinese communist cadres are facing criminal and
political sanctions for alleged abuses of power and accepting
bribes. Mikhail Khodorkovsky (once considered the “wealthiest man in
Russia”) was jacked up on “corruption” charges and given a long prison
sentence. Corruption show trials are a powerful weapon in the arsenal of
dictators who seek to neutralize their opponents. As I argued in my commentary “Africorruption”, Inc.”,
the business of African “governments” including the Ethiopian regime in
the main is corruption. Those who seized political power in Ethiopia in
1991 may have believed they were fighting for freedom and democracy,
but once they got absolute power, they became absolutely corrupt. They
began to function as sophisticated criminal enterprises with the
principal aim of looting the national treasury and operating government
as a criminal syndicate and a racket. If the regime is serious about
corruption, it should go after the real “holy cows” of corruption, not
just the unholy cows that have been forced to become scapegoats.
Scapegoating or “anti-corruption”?
The so-called “corruption investigation” appears to be a case of
scapegoating. Tradition has it that on the day of atonement a goat would
be selected by the high priest and loaded with the sins of the
community and driven out into the wilderness as an affirmative act of
symbolic cleansing. It made the people feel purged of evil and
guiltless. The “corruption” suspects were supporters, defenders and
handmaidens of the regime. Now they are made out to be loathsome
villains. The sins and crimes of the regime are placed upon their heads
and they driven out into the wilderness. The high priests of the
regimes are telling the people they have been cleansed and the
community is free from evil. In this narrative, the regime
“anti-corruption warriors” become the white knights in shining armor.
But no amount of scapegoating can divert attention from the real
situation. It is wise for those who live in glass houses not to throw
stones.
How to deal with “horruption”
I am compelled to invent a new word to describe the horrible
“corruption” in the ruling regime in Ethiopia. That word is,
“horruption” (horrible corruption). The extended definition of this
word is found in the World Bank’s corruption report on Ethiopia
referenced above.
What is the best way to deal with horruption in Ethiopia? Simple.
Line up the right social forces to fight corruption. Allow the free
press to flourish so that it can aggressively and doggedly investigate
and report corrupt officials and practices for public scrutiny.
Establish an independent prosecutorial office properly budgeted and
staffed (supported by certified international anti-corruption experts)
to go after not only the small winnows but most importantly the big
whales and sharks splish splashing in a sea of corruption. Take
comprehensive measures to increase the transparency of all public
institution and translate into action the mandate of Article 12 of the
Ethiopian Constitution (Functions and Accountability of Government).
Reduce the regime’s involvement in the economy. Allow the functioning of
an independent judiciary that is capable of adjudicating corruption
cases with full due process of law. Let civil society institutions
flourish so that they can maintain ongoing vigilance and work at the
grassroots levels to provide anti-corruption awareness, education,
training and monitoring. Let there be a genuinely competitive multiparty
system that can hold the ruling party and its officials accountable. In
short, institutionalize the rule of law. Then we can act against
“horruption” instead of talking about corruption.
The regime thinks they can distract attention by talking about
“corruption” and selectively arresting a few of their own members and
supporters and putting them on show trials. That is nice political
theater but it will not solve the problem of horruption unless one
believes, to paraphrase H.L. Mencken, “Nobody ever went broke
underestimating the intelligence of the Ethiopian people.”
Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at
California State University, San Bernardino and is a practicing defense
lawyer.
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