Sunday, October 15, 2006

What Next For US Interventionists?

U.S. Intervention in Venezuela and in Latin America

Wednesday, Oct 11, 2006 Print format
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By: Noam Chomsky

A public event on the occasion of the 30th Anniversary of the bombing of Cubana airliner, flight 455, which cost the lives of 73 passengers, was held on October 6th, 2006, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), in Boston. Participating in this event were political activist and analyst Noam Chomsky, Cuban specialist and French scholar Salim Lamrani and the President of the National Lawyer’s Guild, Michael Avery, for a discussion of US foreign policy towards Cuba and Latin America, and the cases of Luis Posada Carriles and the Cuban Five.

The following is Noam Chomsky’s response to a question from the audience:

Audience Member: With the recent integration and cooperation between Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia, obviously the US is paying more attention to these countries. What in your opinion could be the agenda of secret agents currently in action in Venezuela? and could you please analyze the possibility of military intervention in Venezuela and Bolivia on the part of the US government.

Noam Chomsky: I think your point is well taken. We know that the US did support a military coup, which briefly overthrew President Chavez and the US had to back down, when he was restored quickly and also had to back down in the face of a very angry reaction in Latin American. In almost all of Latin America, there was a very angry reaction. They take democracy there more seriously then we do here.

Right after trying to overthrow the government by force, the US immediately turned to subversion, supporting anti-Chavez groups. That’s described in the press, the way it’s described is, the US is supporting pro-democracy groups, which are opposed to President Chavez.

Notice it’s true by definition that if you oppose the president, you are pro-democracy. It’s completely irrelevant that according to the best polls (Latin America has very good polling agencies which take regular polls on these issues around the continent). Support for democracy has been declining—not for democracy but for the democratic governments—has been declining through Latin America, for a pretty good reason, the governments have been associated with neo-liberal programs which undermine democracy—IMF, treasury department programs—so your support for the governments are declining. There are exceptions, and the major exception by far is Venezuela.

Since 1998, when Chavez was elected, support for the elected government as be rising very fast, its now by far the highest in Latin America. He has won several elections that have been recognized to be free and fair, he has won numerous referendums, but he is a dictator, a tin-pot dictator, which is proven by the fact that our dear leader said so, and since we are voluntary North Koreans, when the dear leader says it, it’s true. So therefore, he’s a dictator, and if you carry out subversion to overthrow him, that’s pro-democracy by definition. You have to look hard to find an exception to this, or even a comment on it, just like the other examples I discussed.

We might ask ourselves how we would react if Iran, say, had just supported a military coup that overthrew the government in the United States and when they have to back off from that, immediately turned to supporting pro-democracy groups in the United States that are opposed to the government. Would we give them ice-cream and candy?

Well in dictatorial Venezuela, they let them keep functioning. In fact, even let the newspapers in support of the coup keep functioning. I could go on with this, but what’s likely to happen?

Well, the US has had two major weapons for controlling Latin America for a long time. One of them is economic controls, the other is military force. They have both been used continually. Both of them are weakening and it’s a very serious problem for U.S. planners.

The Economic, for the first time in its history since the Spanish colonization, Latin America is beginning to get its act together. It’s moving towards some degree of independence, even some degree of integration. The Latin American countries have been very separate from one another through their histories, they have a huge gap between the very rich and the huge massive poor, so when we are talking about the countries, we are talking about the rich elites. The rich elites have been oriented towards Europe and North America, not their own citizens, not each other. So that Capital flight goes to Zurich, or London, or New York, the second home is in the Riviera, the children study in Cambridge or something like that. That’s the way it’s been, with very little interaction, and it’s changing.

First of all there are major popular movements, like in Bolivia. They had a democratic election of the kind we can’t even dream of. I mean if there was any honest newspaper coverage in this country we would be ashamed at the comparison between their election and ours. I won’t go through it, but with a little thought you can quickly figure it out, because there is mass popular participation, and the people know what they are voting for, and they pick somebody from their own ranks and their major issues and so on. It’s unimaginable here where elections are about the level of marketing toothpaste on television, literally.

There are mass popular movements all over and they have begun to integrate to some extent for the first time.

The military weapon has been weakened. The last effort of the US had to back off very quickly, in 2002 in Venezuela. The kinds of governments the US is now supporting—forced to support—are the kinds it would have been trying to overthrow not very long ago, because of this shift.

The economic weapon is weakening enormously. They are throwing out the IMF. The IMF means the US Treasury Department. Argentina, it was the poster boy of the IMF, you know, following all the rules and so on. It went in to a hideous economic crash. They managed to get out of it, but only by radically violating IMF rules, and they are now, as the President put it, “ridding themselves of the IMF” and paying off their debt with the help of Venezuela. Venezuela bought up a lot of their debt. The same is happening in Brazil. The same is going to happen in Bolivia.

In general, the economic measures are weakening, the military measures are no longer what they were. The US is deeply concerned about it, undoubtedly. We shouldn’t think that the US has abandoned the military effort, on the contrary, the number of US personnel—military personnel—in Latin America is probably as high as its ever been. The number of the Latin American officers being trained by the US is going up very sharply. By now, for the first time (it never happened during the cold war) the US military aid is higher than the sum of economic and social aid from key federal agencies- that’s a shift. There are more air bases all over the place.

Keep your eyes on Ecuador, there’s an election coming up in about a week, the likely winner, [Rafael] Correa is an interesting person, he was recently asked what he would do with the big Manta US airbase in Ecuador and his answer was, well he’d allow it to stay if the United States agreed to have an Ecuadorian airbase in Miami.

But these are the things that are going on. There’s a call for an Indian Nation for the first time. The indigenous—in some states like Bolivia—majority is actually entering the political arena for the first time in 500 years, electing their own candidates. These are major changes, but the US is certainly not giving up on it.

The Military training has been shifted. Its official focus now is on what’s called radical populism and street gangs. Well, you know what radical populism means, like the Priests organizing peasants or anyone who gets out of line. So yeah, it’s serious. What will they do?

Governments have what are called security interests; they have to protect the national security. If any of you have ever spent any time reading declassified documents, you know what that the means. I’ve spent a lot of time reading them and it’s true, there is defense of the government against its enemy, that prime enemy. Its prime enemy is the domestic population. That’s true of every government I know. So if you read the declassified documents, you find that most of them are protecting the government from its own population. Not much has to do with anything you might call security interests, in another sense, and that’s true right now. So we don’t know what they are planning because we have to be protected from knowing what the government is planning. So we have to speculate.

If you want my speculation, based on no information except what I would be doing if I was sitting in the Pentagon planning office and told to figure out a way to overthrow the governments of Bolivia, Venezuela, and Iran, in fact. The idea that immediately comes to mind, so I assume they are working on it, is to support secessionist movements, which is conceivable if you look at the geography and the places where the oil is and so on.

In Venezuela, the oil is in Zulia province, which is where the opposition candidate is coming from, right on the boarder of Colombia (one of the only states [in Latin America] where the US has a firm military presence). It’s a rich province, pretty anti-Chavez, and it happens to be where most of the oil is, and in fact there is rumor of a Zulia independence movement, which, if they can carry it off, the US could then intervene to protect against the dictator. That’s Venezuela.

In Bolivia, the major gas resources are in the low-lands, the eastern low-lands, which is mostly European, not indigenous, opposed to the government, rich area, near Paraguay (one of the other countries where the US has military bases), so you can imagine the same project going on – also secessionist movements.

In Iran, which is the big one, if you look at it, the oil of the region (that’s where most of the hydrocarbons in the world are) they are right around the gulf, the Shiite sections of Iraq, the Shiite sections of Saudi Arabia and an Arab—not Persian—region of Iran, Khuzestan, right near the Gulf, it happens to be Arab. There is talk floating around Europe (you know it’s probably planted by the CIA) of an Ahwazi Liberation Movement for this region. A feasible, I don’t know if it’s feasible or not, but I think the kind of thought that would be occurring to the Pentagon planners is to sponsor a liberation movement, so-called, in the area near the Gulf then move in to defend it. They’ve got 150,000 troops in Iraq; presumably, you might try that, and then bomb the rest of the country back to the Stone Age. It’s conceivable, I mean, I wouldn’t be surprised if those are the kinds of plans that are being toyed with.

Transcribed for Venezuelanalysis.com by Michael Fox


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This site contains some copyrighted material that in some cases has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance the understanding of politics, human rights, the economy, democracy, and social justice issues related to Venezuela. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

Venezuela's Chavez Pointed Out the Obvious

Friday, Oct 13, 2006

By: Mark Weisbrot - The Augusta Chronicle

Hugo Chavez's speech at the United Nations in New York in mid-September ignited a firestorm of indignation from politicians, TV pundits, and editorial writers that has yet to be extinguished. The president of Venezuela referred to President Bush as "the devil" and warned the world about the threat of the "American empire."

It's too bad that these same people who were outraged by Chavez's speech were not so offended by the Bush administration's support for a military coup against Chavez's democratically elected government in 2002.

Although Chavez's U.N. language was undiplomatic, a military coup that abolishes another country's constitution, Supreme Court and elected Congress is considerably less diplomatic. But almost all of the voices loudly denouncing Chavez were silent - or worse, supportive - when democracy was temporarily overthrown in Venezuela.

THE U.S. STATE Department has stated that "U.S. assistance programs provided training, institution building, and other support to individuals and organizations understood to be actively involved in the brief ouster of the Chavez government."

The CIA has released documents showing that the Bush administration had advance knowledge of the coup; but the White House and State Department lied about the events, claiming it was not a coup at all, in an effort to help it succeed.

The Bush administration claims that it is not currently funding efforts to topple Venezuela's government, but it is pouring millions of dollars into organizations within the country and won't divulge where this money is going.

So Chavez can hardly be blamed for seeing President Bush as a threat to democracy and the sovereignty of nations. So, too, does most of the world, as was evidenced by the hearty and sustained applause that his speech received from the U.N. delegates.

More powerful evidence will be seen on Oct. 16: despite intense lobbying, threats, and bribing from the Bush administration, the majority of countries will vote to have Venezuela represent Latin America on the U.N. Security Council. The United States is backing Guatemala, a country with a long history of horrific human rights abuses.

Yet Chavez is not anti-American, as the media describe him. While in New York, he announced that Venezuelan-owned Citgo would more than double the number of U.S. low-income households - already in the hundreds of thousands last winter - that would receive heating oil at discounts of up to 40 percent this year. "Citgo Petroleum and Venezuela have stepped up to the plate to help people worried about freezing in their own homes this winter," said Brian O'Connor of Citizens' Energy Corp. in Boston.

It was not the United States or Americans that Chavez railed against in his speech, but "the empire," and he was careful to make that distinction. "What kind of democracy do you impose with marines and bombs?" he asked.

Many millions of Americans are asking the same question: They do not think that the United States should invade other countries or try to rule the world. And we are paying a high price for such efforts, especially in Iraq, where more than 2,700 U.S. soldiers have been killed and more than $380 billion wasted.

U.S. AMBASSADOR to the United Nations John Bolton responded to Chavez's speech by lamenting that the Venezuelan president didn't give the "same freedom of speech" to Venezuelans that he had just exercised. Conservative TV talk show host John McLaughlin made fun of Bolton's ignorance: "Well, Ambassador Bolton, maybe they already have freedom of speech." Indeed they do, with the most anti-government media in the hemisphere.

The Bush administration seeks to de-legitimize Venezuela, both to weaken Chavez's criticism and to justify its intervention there. The media often contribute to this effort. But Venezuela remains a democracy, even if Washington doesn't like what its elected president has to say.

(Editor's note: The writer is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.)







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This site contains some copyrighted material that in some cases has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance the understanding of politics, human rights, the economy, democracy, and social justice issues related to Venezuela. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

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hugo chavez vrs bush

Hugo Chavez Has A Way With Words. He Tells It Like it Is.

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Cuatro bolivarianos arrestados en Nueva York durante protesta en defensa de Venezuela

Entendiendo que la desobediencia civil en EEUU es una herramienta
legal que han utilizado en años anteriores las comunidades
afro-americanas, puertorriqueñas, indígenas, dominicanas etc.,
el Círculo Bolivariano Alberto Lovera de Nueva York decidió
convocar una manifestación de desobediencia civil el pasado 2 de
febrero enfrente a la sede diplomática de EE.UU. ante Las Naciones
Unidas.




(Fotos) Cuatro bolivarianos arrestados
en Nueva York durante protesta en defensa de Venezuela
Por: Círculo Bolivariano Profesor Alberto Lovera de Nueva York
Fecha de publicación: Sábado, 05/02/05 08:36pm





Los manifestantes protestaron la
intervención estadounidense en asuntos internos de Venezuela.
Credito: Círculo Bolivariano Profesor Aberto Lovera




Alrededor de 30 personas se congregaron entre la 3ra. Avenida y
Lexington en Manhattan para demostrar su repudio y rechazo a la
política hostil estadounidense hacia la República Bolivariana de
Venezuela, y a su vez condenar el discurso intervensionista de la
Secretaria del Departamento de Estado, Dra. Condolezza Rice, quien
en más de una ocasión ha dicho que el Presidente de Venezuela es
una fuerza negativa en la región.

Williams Camacaro hace entrega del
documento de protesta al diplomático estadounidense.
Credito: Círculo Bolivariano Profesor Aberto Lovera

Entre los manifestantes se encontraban compañeros y compañeras de origen
peruano, colombiano, dominicano, puertorriqueño, cubano, ecuatoriano,
afro-estadounidense, y anglo-sajón. Algunas de las pancartas decían:

“Chávez para Presidente de EE.UU. 2008”
“Condolezza Rice – Terrorista Internacional”
“Con Colombia y Venezuela NO Se Meta!”
“La Gran Colombia Renace”
“Bush - 2 Elecciones Fraudulentas, Chávez - 9 Confirmaciones Electorales”.


La manifestación también tuvo como propósito entregar un documento a
la sede diplomática de los Estados Unidos ante las Naciones Unidas.
En dicho documento se condenaba la actitud asumida por la Doctora Rice
en contra de Venezuela así como la política intervensionista del gobierno
de los EE.UU. El diplomático estadounidense que recibió el documento,
no pudo esconder su sorpresa al ver los diferentes afiches con el rostro
del Presidente Chávez, prueba de ello era que mientras hablaba con los
compañeros que le entregaban el documento él pasaba su mirada hacia
la manifestación con ojos atónitos.



Después que los compañeros y amigos del Círculo Alberto Lovera:
William Camacaro, (miembro del Círculo); Reverendo Luis Barrios,
reconocido activista de la ciudad de Nueva York (Pastor de la
Iglesia San Romero de Las América); Lourdes Vela (miembro del Círculo)
y Claudia de La Cruz (Miembro de La Iglesia San Romero de Las América)
entregaron el documento al representante de la Misión estadounidense,
llevaron acabo un acto de desobediencia civil, bloqueando la puerta de
la Misión Diplomática, acción por la cuál fueron arrestados y llevados
a la comisaría policial 017, donde estuvieron por varias horas, y en
la cual recibieron una citación para presentarse ante un juez el
próximo mes donde deberán explicar las motivaciones que los
llevaron a cometer el acto de desobediencia civil.

Al salir de la comisaría, el compañero Williams Camacaro, dijo que
venían tiempos difíciles y que la desobediencia civil era una
herramienta que debíamos considerar para defender el proceso
revolucionario de Venezuela desde dentro de los EE.UU. El pastor Luis
Barrios añadió que si la desobediencia civil había dado resultado en
los tiempos del movimiento de derechos civil en los Estados Unidos, en
la lucha contra la guerra en Vietnam, o en lucha por sacar la marina de
Vieques, en la lucha por defender la soberanía de Venezuela también iba
ha funcionar.


Bush: 2 elecciones fraudulentas, Chávez: 9 confirmaciones electorales
Credito: Círculo Bolivariano Profesor Aberto Lovera



Claudia de La Cruz de la Iglesia San Romero de Las Américas, al momento del arresto.
Credito: Círculo Bolivariano Profesor Aberto Lovera de NY


Williams Camacaro (izquierda), Lourdes Vela y el Padre Luis Barrios al momento del arresto.
Credito: Círculo Bolivariano Profesor Aberto Lovera

Las Conquistas de la Mujer Venezolana en la Revolución Bolivariana llegan a Nueva York

Las Conquistas de la Mujer Venezolana en la Revolución Bolivariana llegan a Nueva York
Por: Prensa Consulado de Venezuela en Nueva York
Publicado el Martes, 31/01/06 12:37am
imprímelo























María del Mar viuda de Lovera recibe placa de reconocimiento de
parte del Círculo Bolivariano que lleva el nombre de su fallecido
esposo, Alberto Lovera
Foto: Roberto Mercado

















Las representantes venezolanas junto a las autoridades
diplomáticas y a las mujeres activistas de Nueva York.
Foto: Roberto Mercado


El pasado martes 24 de Enero del 2006, se celebro un foro llamado
“Las Conquistas de la Mujer Venezolana en la Revolución Bolivariana”.
El acto se llevo a cabo en los bellos espacios de Community Church,
New York, en la isla de Manhattan, Lugar conocido por su lucha titánica
en contra del apartheid en Sur África y visitado en innumerables
oportunidades por el ex presidente Nelson Mandela. El evento estuvo
organizado por este Consulado General de la República Bolivariana
de Venezuela y el Circulo Bolivariano “Alberto Lovera”.

El foro contó con la presencia de connotadas mujeres representantes
de las distintas luchas que las mujeres Venezolanas han llevado a
cabo. Más de 200 personas de diferentes nacionalidades y simpatizantes
del proceso revolucionario que se vive en Venezuela se hicieron
presentes. La primera en dirigirse al público fue la Cónsul General
Leonor Osorio, quien dio unas palabras de bienvenida al público.

En dicho foro escuchamos las palabras de Maria León, Presidenta del
Instituto Nacional de la Mujer, quien fue presentada a la audiencia
por Leslie Cagan directora de una de las organizaciones más activas
en contra de la guerra en Iraq llamada en ingles “United for peace
& Justice”. Posteriormente, Mónica Somocurcio miembro de “Answer
coalition” presento a la Presidenta del Banco de La Mujer Nora
Castañeda. Teresa Gutiérrez co-director del “Centro de Acción
Internacional” que es dirigido por Ramsey Clark quien fuera fiscal
general de los Estados Unidos, presento a Ana Elisa Osorio, miembro
del Directorio del Instituto Nacional de la Mujer; a su vez Hyun Lee,
miembro de la Organización Coreana “Red de Acción Coreana para la
Unificación” presento a Maria del Mar Alvarez de Lovera quien es
Defensora Nacional de La Mujer a la cual le siguió Andree Nicola
Mclaghlin quien es jefa del Departamento de Estudios de la Mujer en
Megaever College y por ultimo Nieves Ayres, Co-directora de la Peña
del Bronx presento a Reina Arratia miembro de la Comisión Presidencial
en Contra del Racismo.

Cada una de las ponentes hablaron sobre los avances de la
revolución Bolivariana. Cada una de nuestras representantes
conforman la Comisión de República Bolivariana de Venezuela
en el Comité para la Eliminación de la Discriminación en
Contra de las Mujeres (Sesión 34) de las Naciones Unidas.

La Cónsul General de la Republica Bolivariana de Venezuela en
Nueva York, Leonor Osorio, entrego al final obsequios, en nombre
de las mujeres bolivarianas. Finalmente, Williams Camacaro,
vocero del Círculo Bolivariano, entregó una placa de reconocimiento
a la señora Maria del Mar Álvarez de Lovera, viuda de Alberto Lovera,
quien fuera en vida un gran luchador por los derechos Civiles y
Sociales y quien muriera asesinado por la policía política adeca
de Raul Leoni llamada entonces Digepol.

Para cerrar el foro, hubo un Cocktail amenizado por “Yaya”, grupo
de mujeres que interpretan la plena, y la bomba de Puerto Rico y el
palo y el gaga de Republica Dominicana

Friday, October 13, 2006

Organizaciones Afroamericanas Celebran Cumpleaños de Fidel en Harlem

Por: Círculo Bolivariano Alberto Lovera
Publicado el Viernes, 18/08/06 03:13pm



El pasado lunes en la Iglesia San Ambrosio ubicada en la calle
130 de Manhattan en Harlem, diferentes organizaciones afro-
americanas y activistas de la ciudad de Nueva York celebraron
el cumpleaños 80 del presidente Fidel Castro en una actividad
que se llamó “Cuando África llamó; Cuba Respondió” .



Entre los invitados estuvieron, el historiador africano
Elombe Brath, Nellie Hester Bailey de Cuban Solidarity New York,
quienes organizaron el evento, el poeta afro-americano Amiri
Baraka, Bernard White, director de programación de WBAI, también
estuvo el ex fiscal general de los Estados Unidos cuando
Lyndon B. Johnson, Ramsey Clark, el representante de Harlem ante
el congreso de los Estados Unidos Charles Rangel, Teresa Gutiérrez
del Internacional Action Center, el pastor Luis Barrios de la Iglesia
San Romero de Las Americas y nuestro compañero del Circulo
Bolivariano Alberto Lovera, Williams Camacaro, además de los
representantes de las misiones diplomáticas acreditas ante las
Naciones Unidas del Congo, Namibia y Cuba.

Cerca de trescientas personas se presentaron para mostrar su
admiración y apoyo al presidente Fidel Castro y a la revolución
cubana. Los discursos giraron en torno a la ayuda que Cuba dio a
África en la lucha en contra de la segregación implantada en
Sur –África, médicos, profesores y soldados cubanos que fueron a
diferentes países africanos a luchar en contra de la pobreza y el
racismo y por supuesto se hizo una especial mención al caso de
Angola. También se levantaron voces en contra del bloqueo y por
la liberación de los cinco patriotas cubanos injustamente
encarcelados en prisiones norteamericanas.
Hubo una extraordinaria presencia mediática, allí estuvieron
el Univisión canal 41, CNN, Fox News, Telemundo, CBS, entre otros
medios de comunicación.

Después de los discursos se picó una enorme torta con ochenta
velas que decía “Feliz Cumpleaños Fidel” y se cantó el cumpleaños
en español e inglés.
















El poeta africano Amiri Baraka
Foto: Roberto Mercado
















Charles Rangel se dirige a los presentes
Foto: Roberto Mercado
















William Camacaro y otros activistas, soplando la torta
Foto: Roberto Mercado

















Teresa Gutiérrez del International Action Center
Foto: Roberto Mercado

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

The Revolution Will Not Be Televised



THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED
Directed and photographed by Kim Bartley and Donnacha O'Briain
Eire, 2003

74 MINUTES

IN SPANISH WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES

Hugo Chávez, elected President of Venezuela in 1998,
is a colourful, unpredictable folk hero, beloved by
his nation's working class and a tough-as-nails opponent to the power
structure that would see him deposed.

Two independent
filmmakers were inside the presidential palace
on April 11, 2002, when he was forcibly removed from office. by a
USA/CIA approved coup junta.

They were also present 48 hours later when, remarkably, he
was returned to power by the mobilization of the workers the poor
and patriotic sectors of the military amid cheering aides.


Their film records what was probably history's shortest-lived coup d'état.
It's a unique document about political muscle and an
extraordinary portrait of the man The Wall Street Journal
credits with making Venezuela "Washington's biggest Latin
American headache after the old standby, Cuba."<
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