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At least 42 Bangladeshi schoolboy football fans die in cargo truck

Youngsters aged 8-12 are killed when truck bringing them home from a soccer tournament overturns into canal A cargo truck packed with schoolchildren returning home from a football tournament crashed into a canal in south-east Bangladesh, killing at least 42 people. About 60 children aged from eight to 12 were on board. The death toll may rise as more bodies are feared to be trapped inside the sunken vehicle. Rescuers recovered 42 bodies from the wreckage in Chittagong district, 136 miles (216km) south-east of the capital, Dhaka. It was not clear if the driver was among the dead. Troops joined the rescue teams, and doctors from nearby towns were deployed to help treat the survivors. “According to several witnesses the boys were singing and dancing on board the truck,” said a police spokesman. “The truck skidded off the muddy road and turned [over] as it plunged into the canal.” Angry residents vandalised some vehicles nearby, complaining that the rescuers were late to reach the scene. In Bangladesh it is common practice to hire cargo trucks to carry large groups during festivals or celebrations. Bangladesh guardian.co.uk

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Italy looks to budget cuts in bid to avoid bailout

Italian bailout fears grow but finance minister promises austerity measures in attempt to ‘send the markets a strong signal’ Italy was firmly in the eye of the eurozone debt storm on Monday as it became the target of potentially self-fulfilling fears that it will be unable to pay off its huge public debts . In an attempt to stem selling surges in the bond and equity markets, Italy’s finance minister Giulio Tremonti, promised to “send the markets a strong signal”. He said a package of measures to reduce the budget deficit would be “armour-plated” and approved by parliament within a week: “Something that has never happened in the history of Italy.” The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, said she had discussed the situation on Sunday with Italy’s prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi. She told a press conference in Berlin that Italy had to agree “on a budget that meets the need for frugality and consolidation”, adding: “I have full confidence the Italian government will pass exactly this kind of budget.” Concern over the effectiveness of the package was central to the sell-off of Italian shares and bonds that began on Friday. But neither Tremonti’s nor Merkel’s words managed to stem the panic. The yield on benchmark 10-year government bonds soared to 5.565% – the highest since May 2001 – which sharply increases the state’s borrowing costs. At one point, the spread between the Italian benchmark bond and its German equivalent reached a record 290 percentage points. The concern over bonds infected the stock market where Italian banks, leading holders of their country’s debt, were particularly badly hit. Intesa SanPaolo’s shares lost more than 6% as the FTSE MIB index of Milan bourse blue chips slid 3.3% by early afternoon. One of the concerns driving markets was that the return on Italy’s bonds could reach a level that was unsustainable for its treasury. The rise in yields, the effective interest rate Italy must pay to borrow, comes at a particularly awkward moment: Bloomberg estimated last week that between now and the end of 2012, the government will have to re-finance 26% of its public debt. The state’s accumulated borrowing has risen to almost 120% of GDP – the second highest level in the EU after Greece. As part of a programme for its reduction, Tremonti last week unveiled a four-year, €40bn plus package of deficit-cutting measures . But, with Silvio Berlusconi’s coalition partners in the Northern League clamouring for tax cuts to buy back the government’s lost popularity, all but €6bn of the adjustments was postponed until the next legislature. Fears that the package could be watered down – or that Tremonti may not be around to see them through – contributed to a growing sense of unease among investors. Berlusconi has long been impatient of the straitjacket put on him by his finance minister, and at the end of last week his exasperation with Tremonti spilled into the open in an interview in which he accused him of intellectual arrogance. At the same time, Tremonti has been caught up in a scandal that prejudices his chances of survival: he has admitted that an adviser, who faces arrest on corruption charges, paid the rent on the €8,500 a month flat he used in Rome. European debt crisis European banks Italy Financial crisis Europe Europe Silvio Berlusconi Global recession John Hooper guardian.co.uk

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Italy looks to budget cuts in bid to avoid bailout

Italian bailout fears grow but finance minister promises austerity measures in attempt to ‘send the markets a strong signal’ Italy was firmly in the eye of the eurozone debt storm on Monday as it became the target of potentially self-fulfilling fears that it will be unable to pay off its huge public debts . In an attempt to stem selling surges in the bond and equity markets, Italy’s finance minister Giulio Tremonti, promised to “send the markets a strong signal”. He said a package of measures to reduce the budget deficit would be “armour-plated” and approved by parliament within a week: “Something that has never happened in the history of Italy.” The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, said she had discussed the situation on Sunday with Italy’s prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi. She told a press conference in Berlin that Italy had to agree “on a budget that meets the need for frugality and consolidation”, adding: “I have full confidence the Italian government will pass exactly this kind of budget.” Concern over the effectiveness of the package was central to the sell-off of Italian shares and bonds that began on Friday. But neither Tremonti’s nor Merkel’s words managed to stem the panic. The yield on benchmark 10-year government bonds soared to 5.565% – the highest since May 2001 – which sharply increases the state’s borrowing costs. At one point, the spread between the Italian benchmark bond and its German equivalent reached a record 290 percentage points. The concern over bonds infected the stock market where Italian banks, leading holders of their country’s debt, were particularly badly hit. Intesa SanPaolo’s shares lost more than 6% as the FTSE MIB index of Milan bourse blue chips slid 3.3% by early afternoon. One of the concerns driving markets was that the return on Italy’s bonds could reach a level that was unsustainable for its treasury. The rise in yields, the effective interest rate Italy must pay to borrow, comes at a particularly awkward moment: Bloomberg estimated last week that between now and the end of 2012, the government will have to re-finance 26% of its public debt. The state’s accumulated borrowing has risen to almost 120% of GDP – the second highest level in the EU after Greece. As part of a programme for its reduction, Tremonti last week unveiled a four-year, €40bn plus package of deficit-cutting measures . But, with Silvio Berlusconi’s coalition partners in the Northern League clamouring for tax cuts to buy back the government’s lost popularity, all but €6bn of the adjustments was postponed until the next legislature. Fears that the package could be watered down – or that Tremonti may not be around to see them through – contributed to a growing sense of unease among investors. Berlusconi has long been impatient of the straitjacket put on him by his finance minister, and at the end of last week his exasperation with Tremonti spilled into the open in an interview in which he accused him of intellectual arrogance. At the same time, Tremonti has been caught up in a scandal that prejudices his chances of survival: he has admitted that an adviser, who faces arrest on corruption charges, paid the rent on the €8,500 a month flat he used in Rome. European debt crisis European banks Italy Financial crisis Europe Europe Silvio Berlusconi Global recession John Hooper guardian.co.uk

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A wide range of community leaders are standing behind the hotel maid accusing Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sex assault, even though her credibility has been hammered . “Rumors about this woman’s past that have nothing to do with the case and even if they were true should not prevent her case from…

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The first daughter of Victoria and David Beckham has joined the sweepstakes for odd celebrity child names with her new moniker—Harper Seven, reports the Daily Mail . The tabloid seemed a little confused by the unusual name, suggesting several theories for its meaning. Maybe Harper was for Harper Lee, or…

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A political history of Africa since 1900 – interactive

On Saturday 9 July 2011 South Sudan celebrated its independence day. How did the current nation states emerge from colonisation? Paddy Allen Lucy Lamble Giulio Frigieri

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Southampton city council faces further strikes over job cuts

Unions warn of ‘strategic campaign’ of industrial action after leaked council document reveals plans to axe 1,200 jobs Union officials have warned council leaders across the UK that they face targeted strikes on key public services if they attempt to push through drastic cost cuts without adequate consultation, as a standoff between Britain’s two largest unions and a local authority enters its third month of industrial action. Hundreds of workers at Southampton city council – including parking wardens, bridge toll collectors and port health officers – embarked on a new week-long strike on Monday to protest against a pay cut of up to 5.5% imposed by the Conservative-led local authority on 4,600 staff. The joint action by local members of Unite and Unison has singled out the council’s revenue-generating services such as parking and road tolls, rather than staging mass walkouts. Strikes have been taking place since 23 May. A senior Unite official said the Southampton walkouts marked a “strategic campaign” by unions. Last month council-employed refuse collectors walked out in Southampton as the unions rotated industrial action. “The unions are looking at a strategic campaign where we are using selective action,” said Ian Woodland, a Unite regional officer. “It is not just bringing everyone out, which is the old-fashioned view, but bringing out key workers that will have an effect on the state nationally and locally. We have shown how it can be done locally.” He added: “We have picked sections of workers that have an effect. It will either affect the council’s income stream or it will cause people to complain and put pressure on the council.” Unite and Unison believe Southampton could be a harbinger for other local authorities and are determined to stop further compulsory changes. As in Southampton, Shropshire council has “fired” thousands of employees and re-hired them on less pay. Southampton city council has pushed through the pay cut by serving notice on its employees and replacing their contracts with new terms and conditions, including lower pay and cuts in petrol allowances for social workers. As of Monday’s deadline for accepting those contracts, about 97% of staff have switched to their new deals rather than face redundancy because the notice period on their previous contract has expired. Unison’s regional organiser, Andy Straker, said initial fears over the appetite for opposition to the changes – the strike ballots were only 51% and 56% in favour at Unite and Unison respectively – had been assuaged. “We have been surprised by how many groups are contacting us and want to go out [on strike].” On Monday morning Southampton’s port was hit by a walkout by health officers, who must certify food imports such as spices, rice and fish. Their week-long strike is expected to lead to delivery delays for food containers that would have been bound for supermarkets such as Iceland and Sainsbury’s. Ged Burden, 44, one of the officers on strike, said repeated walkouts could see companies switch their business to rival ports. “One of the joys of working in this part of the public sector is working with small businesses or entrepreneurs and making a real difference, because it can cost people money if you don’t do your job well. And that’s the downside for us today. It is hugely disappointing to jeopardise our relationship with them.” He added: “If the action carries on it could get to the point where businesses start to think ‘stuff Southampton, I will go to Felixstowe’.” Burden said council workers had to “take a stand” to show the council that they wanted a 21st-century public sector but “this is not the way to do it”. The Conservative leader of Southampton city council has warned there will be “some redundancies” over the next four years among the authority’s 4,600 staff because budgets are “very tight”. Speaking on BBC News, Royston Smith said the enforced pay cut would save up to 400 jobs this year and dismissed a Unite claim that 1,200 jobs would be at risk over the next four years, according to a leaked internal document. “I don’t know where that document came from,” he said. The authority has pitted its wiles against Unite and Unison in an attempt to keep services running this week. Eight “mega-bins” have been put in the town centre to prevent rubbish from overflowing and managers are taking over the roles of road toll collectors and parking wardens. However, a town hall spokesman admitted there had been some disruption. “Generally we have been able to put resources into running most of the services today. But there has been significant disruption across the city, particularly in regards to waste building up across Southampton.” Public sector cuts Local government Unite Trade unions Dan Milmo guardian.co.uk

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David Cameron promises to ‘end state’s monopoly’ over public services

Prime minister unveils white paper that promises to roll back the boundaries of the state and allow private providers to deliver more public services David Cameron has unveiled plans to shake up the “old fashioned” delivery of public services by ending the state’s “monopoly” over provision and paving a wider path for private companies, charities and mutuals to play a part. The prime minister promised to “release the grip of state control and [put] power in people’s hands” as he unveiled his long-awaited pubic service reform white paper and claimed that the current delivery of public services is “failing on fairness”. In a speech in east London, Cameron said that while public services were centralised “with all the right intentions”, the impact had been “incredibly damaging” to users of services. This was because the “old fashioned top-down take-what-you’re-given culture… is just not working for a lot of people”. Under the plans, communities will be allowed to set up neighbourhood councils to commission services on a hyper-local level, individuals will get more personal budgets to buy their own services and the use of payment by results will be expanded to encourage markets to develop across the public sector. Cameron cited as an example his own past experiences trying to get the right wheelchair for his late disabled son, Ivan, before adding that he was still hearing too many stories from others that the right wheelchair only arrives once the child has almost outgrown it. As another example, the prime minister seized on children who qualify for free school meals who are “half as likely” to get five good GCSEs as their better off peers. “The last time they counted, just 40 people who had had free school meals were going to Oxbridge – out of 80,000,” said Cameron. “We’ve got a welfare state that doesn’t deliver welfare, that doesn’t get people back into work but traps them in poverty instead. “So let me tell you what our change looks like. It’s about ending the old big government, top-down way of running public services … releasing the grip of state control and putting power in people’s hands. The old dogma that said Whitehall knows best – it’s gone. There will be more freedom, more choice and more local control. Ours is a vision of open public services.” Cameron first laid out his plans to roll back the boundaries of the state to allow private providers to deliver more public services in February , but it is widely understood that the plans contained in the white paper have since been downgraded due to an internal battle with the Liberal Democrats. The Lib Dems have sought to ensure that any outsourcing and market-driven reforms maintain a strong degree of accountability, prompting a Downing Street source to describe the resulting document as “more greenish than white”. Cameron made clear he intended to see the changes through. “I know there are those who thought we might be pulling back or losing heart for the task ahead. So let me assure you of this: we are as committed to modernising our public services as we have ever been. I’m not going to make the mistakes of my predecessors … blocking reform, wasting opportunities and wasting time. This is a job that urgently needs to be done, and we are determined to see it through.” Confidential documents obtained by the Guardian under the Freedom of Information Act reveal that ministers have been privately advised to allow schools and hospitals to fail if the government is to succeed in its overhaul of public services . They reveal research by civil servants warning that markets are susceptible to “failure” and costs could in fact rise unless a true market is created by allowing public services to collapse if they are unsuccessful. It opens up the potential for schools, hospitals, social care systems and nurseries to fold without the government stepping in to prop them up – a revelation described as “appalling” by Labour. The documents obtained by the Guardian were prepared by civil servants as part of an internal government review into the consequences for democratic accountability of the coalition’s localism, big society and outsourcing reforms that are integral to today’s white paper. Public services policy Public finance David Cameron Public sector careers Polly Curtis Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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David Cameron promises to ‘end state’s monopoly’ over public services

Prime minister unveils white paper that promises to roll back the boundaries of the state and allow private providers to deliver more public services David Cameron has unveiled plans to shake up the “old fashioned” delivery of public services by ending the state’s “monopoly” over provision and paving a wider path for private companies, charities and mutuals to play a part. The prime minister promised to “release the grip of state control and [put] power in people’s hands” as he unveiled his long-awaited pubic service reform white paper and claimed that the current delivery of public services is “failing on fairness”. In a speech in east London, Cameron said that while public services were centralised “with all the right intentions”, the impact had been “incredibly damaging” to users of services. This was because the “old fashioned top-down take-what-you’re-given culture… is just not working for a lot of people”. Under the plans, communities will be allowed to set up neighbourhood councils to commission services on a hyper-local level, individuals will get more personal budgets to buy their own services and the use of payment by results will be expanded to encourage markets to develop across the public sector. Cameron cited as an example his own past experiences trying to get the right wheelchair for his late disabled son, Ivan, before adding that he was still hearing too many stories from others that the right wheelchair only arrives once the child has almost outgrown it. As another example, the prime minister seized on children who qualify for free school meals who are “half as likely” to get five good GCSEs as their better off peers. “The last time they counted, just 40 people who had had free school meals were going to Oxbridge – out of 80,000,” said Cameron. “We’ve got a welfare state that doesn’t deliver welfare, that doesn’t get people back into work but traps them in poverty instead. “So let me tell you what our change looks like. It’s about ending the old big government, top-down way of running public services … releasing the grip of state control and putting power in people’s hands. The old dogma that said Whitehall knows best – it’s gone. There will be more freedom, more choice and more local control. Ours is a vision of open public services.” Cameron first laid out his plans to roll back the boundaries of the state to allow private providers to deliver more public services in February , but it is widely understood that the plans contained in the white paper have since been downgraded due to an internal battle with the Liberal Democrats. The Lib Dems have sought to ensure that any outsourcing and market-driven reforms maintain a strong degree of accountability, prompting a Downing Street source to describe the resulting document as “more greenish than white”. Cameron made clear he intended to see the changes through. “I know there are those who thought we might be pulling back or losing heart for the task ahead. So let me assure you of this: we are as committed to modernising our public services as we have ever been. I’m not going to make the mistakes of my predecessors … blocking reform, wasting opportunities and wasting time. This is a job that urgently needs to be done, and we are determined to see it through.” Confidential documents obtained by the Guardian under the Freedom of Information Act reveal that ministers have been privately advised to allow schools and hospitals to fail if the government is to succeed in its overhaul of public services . They reveal research by civil servants warning that markets are susceptible to “failure” and costs could in fact rise unless a true market is created by allowing public services to collapse if they are unsuccessful. It opens up the potential for schools, hospitals, social care systems and nurseries to fold without the government stepping in to prop them up – a revelation described as “appalling” by Labour. The documents obtained by the Guardian were prepared by civil servants as part of an internal government review into the consequences for democratic accountability of the coalition’s localism, big society and outsourcing reforms that are integral to today’s white paper. Public services policy Public finance David Cameron Public sector careers Polly Curtis Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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News International papers targeted Gordon Brown

Newspapers obtained details from the former prime minister’s bank account and legal file and his family’s medical records Journalists from across News International repeatedly targeted the former prime minister Gordon Brown, attempting to access his voicemail and obtaining information from his bank account, his legal file as well as his family’s medical records. There is also evidence that a private investigator used a serving police officer to trawl the police national computer for information about him. That investigator also targeted another Labour MP who was the subject of hostile inquiries by the News of the World, but it has not confirmed whether News International was specifically involved in trawling police computers for information on Brown. Separately, Brown’s tax paperwork was taken from his accountant’s office apparently by hacking into the firm’s computer. This was passed to another newspaper. Brown was targeted during a period of more than 10 years, both as chancellor of the exchequer and as prime minister. Some of the activity clearly was illegal. Other incidents breached his privacy but not the law. An investigation by the Guardian has found that: • Scotland Yard has discovered references to both Brown and his wife, Sarah, in paperwork seized from Glenn Mulcaire, the private investigator who specialised in phone hacking for the News of the World; • Abbey National bank found suggestion that a “blagger” acting for the Sunday Times on six occasions posed as Brown and gained details from his account; • Brown’s London lawyers, Allen & Overy, were tricked into handing over details from his file by a conman working for the Sunday Times; • Details from his infant son’s medical records were obtained by the Sun, who published a story about the child’s serious illness. Brown joins a long list of Labour politicians who are known to have been targeted by private investigators working for News International, including the former prime minister Tony Blair and his media adviser Alastair Campbell, the former deputy prime minister John Prescott and his political adviser Joan Hammell, Peter Mandelson as trade secretary, Jack Straw and David Blunkett as home secretaries, Tessa Jowell as media secretary and her special adviser Bill Bush, and Chris Bryant as minister for Europe. The sheer scale of the data assault on Brown is unusual, with evidence of attempts to obtain his legal, financial, tax, medical and police records as well as to listen to his voicemail. All of these incidents are linked to media organisations. In many cases, there is evidence of a link to News International. Scotland Yard recently wrote separately to Brown and to his wife to tell them that their details had been found in evidence collected by Operation Weeting, the special inquiry into phone hacking at the News of the World. It is believed that this refers to handwritten notes kept by Mulcaire, which were seized by police in August 2006 and never previously investigated. Brown last year asked Scotland Yard if there was evidence that he had been targeted by the private investigator and was told there was none. Journalists who have worked at News International say they believe that Brown’s personal bank account was accessed on several occasions when he was chancellor of the exchequer. An internal inquiry by Abbey National’s fraud department found that during January 2000, somebody acting on behalf of the Sunday Times contacted their Bradford call centre six times, posing as Brown, and succeeded in extracting details from his account. Abbey National’s senior lawyer sent a summary of their findings to the editor of the Sunday Times, John Witherow, concluding: “On the basis of these facts and inquiries, I am drawn to the conclusion that someone from the Sunday Times or acting on its behalf has masqueraded as Mr Brown for the purpose of obtaining information from Abbey National by deception.” Abbey National were not able to identify the bogus caller who tricked their staff. It is a matter of public record that a Sunday Times reporter frequently used the services of a former actor, John Ford, who specialised in “blagging” confidential data from banks, phone companies and the Inland Revenue (now HM Revenue & Customs). Also in January 2000, one of the paper’s reporters used a conman named Barry Beardall, who was subsequently jailed for fraud, to trick staff at Brown’s solicitors, Allen & Overy, into handing over details from his personal file. A tape made by Beardall at the time reveals that he claimed to be an accountant from the “Dealson group of companies” and that they were interested in buying Brown’s flat. Beardall also practised trickery in an attempt to provide Sunday Times stories about Blair, the then prime minister, and Labour’s candidate for the mayor of London, Frank Dobson. Confidential health records for Brown’s family have reached the media on two different occasions. In October 2006, the then editor of the Sun, Rebekah Brooks, contacted the Browns to tell them that they had obtained details from the medical file of their four-month-old son, Fraser, which revealed that the boy was suffering from cystic fibrosis. This appears to have been a clear breach of the Data Protection Act, which would allow such a disclosure only if it was in the public interest. Friends of the Browns say the call caused them immense distress, since they were only coming to terms with the diagnosis, which had not been confirmed. The Sun published the story. Five years earlier, when their first child, Jennifer, was born on 28 December 2001, a small group of specialist doctors and nurses was aware that she had suffered a brain haemorrhage and was dying. By some means which has not been discovered, this highly sensitive information was obtained by news organisations, who published it over the weekend before Jennifer died, on Monday 6 January 2002. In 2003, Devon and Cornwall police discovered that one of their junior officers was providing information from the police national computer to a network of private investigators. The Guardian has established that one of these investigators, Glen Lawson of Abbey Investigations in Newcastle upon Tyne, used this contact to commission a search of police records for information about Brown on 16 November 2000. Lawson also commissioned searches related to two other Labour MPs – Nick Brown and Martin Salter. Lawson made these searches on behalf of journalists, a previously unreported court hearing was told. Transcripts obtained by the Guardian show that the search on Martin Salter was made at a time when the News of the World, then edited by Brooks, was attacking him for refusing to support the paper’s notorious “Sarah’s law” campaign to name paedophiles. Lawson currently refuses to name the journalists who commissioned him. An attempt to prosecute this network was blocked by a West Country judge, Paul Darlow, who shocked police by ruling that it would be a misuse of public money to pursue the case. However, Devon and Cornwall police contacted the office of the then chancellor to warn him that he had been a victim, as they also did with his two Labour colleagues. Brown’s tax paperwork was obtained from the offices of his accountants, Auerbach Hope, in late 1998. The first sign that the records had been taken came when a journalist from the now defunct Sunday Business called the accountants to say that they had been passed a copy of the records, including a schedule of Brown’s income for the most recent year. The journalist acknowledged that the paperwork showed no sign of any kind of wrongdoing on Brown’s part but wanted to do a story about the fact that it had been stolen. Police came and found no sign of any break-in. The originals of the documents were still in Brown’s file, which ruled out the possibility that they had been taken from the firm’s dustbins. Auerbach Hope discounted theft by an insider on the grounds that they would have stolen paperwork which showed wrongdoing and thus had greater media value. They concluded that the most likely explanation was that somebody had hacked into their computer systems, specifically targeting Gordon Brown. Senior Labour figures also strongly suspect that a news organisation broke the law to obtain the emails that led to the resignation in April 2009 of Brown’s close aide Damian McBride. The emails, which disclosed a scheme to smear Tory MPs, had been exchanged between McBride and a Labour party activist, Derek Draper. The Labour figures believe that the emails were hacked from Draper’s computer and that their contents were then sent to the political blogger Guido Fawkes, whose stories were then followed by Fleet Street. Phone hacking Gordon Brown The Sun Sunday Times News International Newspapers & magazines National newspapers Newspapers Nick Davies David Leigh guardian.co.uk

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