Tag: President

  • I’ll Reset Ghana, John Dramani Mahama Vows as He’s sworn in as President

    I’ll Reset Ghana, John Dramani Mahama Vows as He’s sworn in as President

    It is the beginning of a new day for Ghana as former President John Dramani Mahama returned to power as he was officially sworn in as Ghana’s president at a spectacular inauguration ceremony held at the Black Star Square in Accra.

    He was sworn in as the sixth President in Ghana’s Fourth Republic, taking over from outgone President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    Both oath of allegiance and Presidential oath were administered to him by Ghana’s Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo at a superlative ceremony witnessed by 21 African leaders, including Nigeria’s President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, some global leaders as well as members of diplomatic corps serving in Ghana.

    President John Mahama takes his oath of office
    President John Mahama takes his oath of office

    It was a festival of sort as Ghanaians, who thronged the Black Star Square in Accra in their thousands to witness the historic event, sang and danced their hearts out as their beloved country began another democratic journey.

    Mahama, 65, had made a significant political comeback having secured an emphatic victory over the out-gone Vice President, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, in the December 7, 2024 presidential vote.

    In an election that saw a 60.9 percent voter turnout, Mahama candidate of then opposition party, the Democratic National Congress, NDC, secured 56.6 percent of the vote cast against his New Patriotic Party (NPP) rival, then Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, who got 41.6 percent.

    This margin of victory, according to political pundits, is the largest recorded in Ghana’s elections in 24 years.

    Mahama, who ruled Ghana between 2012 and 2017, replaces Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, promising to address pressing issues such as economic challenges, corruption, unemployment, and the environmental damage caused by illegal mining, known locally as galamsey.

    Having lost the 2016 and 2020 elections, political observers see Mahama’s dramatic return to power as a testament to his resilience and the electorate’s demand for change.

    They also see his victory as a continuation of Ghana’s time-tested tradition of alternating power between the NDC and the NPP, with no party winning more than two consecutive terms since the return to multi-party democracy in 1992.

    In his inaugural speech, President Mahama thanked Ghanaians for their confidence in him, stating that he sees the historic mandate given him as a golden opportunity to reset Ghana.

    He promised to bring about change, exercise sound judgment, and make timely decisions even as he emphasized his government’s commitment to restoring economic stability, promoting good governance, and implementing 24-hour economy policy which was an important peg in his campaign.

     

     

     

     

  • IPI Nigeria re-elects Musikilu Mojeed as President, Shekarau Secretary

    IPI Nigeria re-elects Musikilu Mojeed as President, Shekarau Secretary

    The Editor-in-Chief of Premium Times, Musikilu Mojeed, and the CEO of the Media Trust Group, Ahmed I. Shekarau, have been re-elected President and Secretary of the Nigerian chapter of International Press Institute (IPI)  respectively.

    Mojeed, Shekarau and four other officials, elected unopposed and sworn in on Thursday, will direct the affairs of the Nigerian affiliate of the global media body for the next three years.

    A statement issued by a member of the global executive board of the IPI, Raheem Adedoyin, disclosed that other members elected into the executive committee of IPI Nigeria include Fidelis Mbah of Al Jazeera Television (deputy president), Rafatu Salami of Voice of Nigeria (treasurer), Yomi Adeboye of Herald Newspaper (assistant secretary) and Tobi Soniyi of Arise News (legal adviser).

    Speaking during the inauguration of the new leaders, Mojeed, who promised inclusive administration, solicited the support and commitment of members to enable his team achieve the organisation’s set objectives of enhancing the Nigerian media operating environment.

    The election of new leaders was preceded by the organisation’s annual general meeting (AGM) where the Mojeed-led executives rendered account of their three-year stewardship and updated members on the financial state of the body. Some sections of the organisation’s constitution were also amended during the AGM.

    A major highpoint of the event was the arrival of ex-Governor Segun Osoba, a renowned journalist and prominent, longtime member of the IPI. He praised IPI Nigeria members for their commitment to press freedom, journalists’ rights and independent journalism.

    Mr. Osoba, who recently returned from an overseas trip, further commended the organisation’s leadership for ensuring a successful conference.


    Apart from ex-Governor Osoba, some other prominent journalists who attended the AGM included a former Editor-In-Chief of Tribune Newspapers (who chaired the forum), Folu Olamiti; former presidential spokesperson and ex-President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors, Garba Shehu; chairman of the Editorial Board of the Herald and member of the global board of the IPI, Mr. Adedoyin; Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR), Oluwafisan Bankale and the Executive Director of the organisation, Dayo Aiyetan.

    Some of the other dignitaries at the congress were Professor Abigail Ogwezzy-Ndisika of the University of Lagos; Kunle Babs, the Nigerian Bureau Chief of Feature Story News; Danlami Nmodu, publisher of Newsdiary Online;  Fabian Benjamin, editor-in-chief of JAMB Bulletin; Sule Yau Sule of Bayero University, Kano; Dotun Oladipo, publisher of The Eagle Online; Funke Egbemode, former President of the Nigerian Guild of Editors; Ochiaka Ugwu, an editor with Peoples Daily;  Ken Ugbechie, publisher of  Political Economist; Lawal Sabo Ibrahim, former managing director of The Triumph newspapers; Mohammed Danjuma, publisher of Katsina Times; Christopher Isiguzo, former president of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ); Lanre Arogundade, executive director of the International Press Centre; Zainab Suleiman Okino, chair of the editorial board of Blueprint Newspapers; and Hameed Bello, chief operating officer of  Peoples Daily newspapers.

    Earlier on Wednesday, IPI Nigeria hosted a well attended conference with the theme: “Democracy, Media Freedom and the Imperative of Protecting the Nigerian Civic Space.”

    The Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, who chaired the conference’s opening day session said press freedom exists in Nigeria. The keynote address was delivered by Professor Tony Iredia. He disagreed with the minister, arguing fiercely that press freedom does not exist in Nigeria.

    The Director-General of the Department of State Services, Adeola Oluwatosin Ajayi, gave a presentation on “Dissecting the Frosty Relationship Between the Nigerian Media and Security Agencies” while the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Ola Olukoyede, spoke on “How the Media and Journalists can Partner Anti-corruption Agencies in the Fight Against Corruption.”

    In the same vein, a former Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, addressed participants on the topic  “Government Vs Media: How to Reduce Tension, Enhance Mutual Understanding, and Avoid Censorship”.

    The three-part event concluded on the night of 12th December with a dinner for the organisation’s members, partners, and supporters.

    The International Press Institute (IPI), with headquarters in Vienna, Austria, is a global network of media executives, editors, and leading journalists. Since its establishment in 1950, it has consistently advocated for journalists’ rights and media freedom worldwide.

    IPI Nigeria is the Nigerian branch of IPI Global and is totally committed to credible and independent journalism, media freedom, freedom of speech and the free flow of news and information in Africa’s most populous country and the continent’s biggest economy.

  • Dotun Oladipo, Publisher of The Eagle Online, emerges President of Media Cooperative Society

    Dotun Oladipo, Publisher of The Eagle Online, emerges President of Media Cooperative Society

    The Publisher of The Eagle Online, Dotun Oladipo, has emerged as the President of the Innovative Media Partners Cooperative Multipurpose Society.

    The former President of the Guild of Corporate Online Publishers was among others who are members of the pioneer Executive Committee.

    Other pioneer executive committee members of the IMPCMS are Nkanu Egbe, who is the General Secretary, and Dolapo Otegbayi as the Treasurer.

    Oladipo, Egbe and Otegbeyi were endorsed for the position at the inaugural meeting of the IMPCMS on October 25, 2024, which birthed a new era of collaboration and empowerment among media professionals.

    The IMPCMS was inaugurated by the Lagos State Ministry of Commerce, Cooperatives, Trade and Investment.

    The inauguration, directed by Naseerat Oyindamola Dosunmu, who led a team from the Surulere, Lagos State branch of the ministry, was a culmination of events that followed the Second Nigerian Media Leaders’ Summit held in May 2024, convened by Taiwo Obe, the Founder and Director of The Journalism Clinic.

    Before the inauguration, Dosunmu outlined the key provisions of the cooperative’s bylaws, emphasising the importance of transparency, accountability, and democratic governance.

    She commended the initiative, stating: “This cooperative demonstrates the power of collective action.

    “It will not only empower the members, but also contribute to the growth of the media industry in Lagos State.”

    Egbe, who had been coordinating events of the cooperative following its formation, provided an insightful overview of its vision, mission, and goals.

    He highlighted the following key objectives: Resource Sharing: Providing access to shared tools and facilities to reduce costs and enhance production quality; Training and Development: Offering workshops, seminars, and mentorship programmes to upskill members and stay abreast of industry trends; Collaborative Projects: Fostering and championing joint projects of interest to the members; Networking Opportunities: Creating a strong network of media professionals to facilitate collaboration and knowledge sharing.

    Dosunmu also inaugurated Oladipo, Egbe and Otegbayi to steer the affairs of the IMPCMS for the next two years, in the first instance, subject to renewal for another term of two years only.

    The initial three-member executive, Dosunmu said, is expected to bring others on board, subject to the agreement of members.

    In his acceptance speech, Oladipo promised to lead the cooperative to the best of his ability in fulfilling its objectives.

  • President Xi Jinping Invites Tinubu to China in September

    President Xi Jinping Invites Tinubu to China in September

    Chinese leader President Xi Jinping has invited President Bola Tinubu to pay a state visit to China in September.

    China’s Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chen Xiaodong delivered the invitation to Tinubu at the Aso Villa..

    The Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, made this known in a statement issued via his official X handle on Friday.

    According to the statement, Tinubu has accepted the invitation and hoped that it would strengthen Nigeria-China bilateral relations and the proposed currency swap agreement.

    The statement added, “Chen, who came with a large entourage, said President Xi would also welcome First Lady Remi Tinubu during the visit

  • Afam Osigwe Emerges as NBA President

    Afam Osigwe Emerges as NBA President

    Afam Osigwe,, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, has emerged as the president-elect of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA).

    He emerged victorious in the 2024 NBA election conducted online.

    Osigwe scored 20,395 votes, the highest recorded in the contest, to beat his closest rival, Tobenna Erojikwe, who got a distant 10,970 votes, and Chukwuka Ikwuazom (SAN), who secured 9,007 votes.

    He succeeds the outgoing president, Mr. Yakubu Maikyau, SAN.

    Other members who got elected into the NBA Executive Council are:

    1st Vice-President: Sabastine Anyia defeated Bartholomew Aguegbodo

    2nd Vice-President: Mrs. Bolatumi Animashaun with 26,534 votes, defeating Pius Oiwoh, who scored 11,121 votes. 

    3rd Vice-President: Mrs. Zainab Garba with 23,550 votes, defeating Michael Olorunmola, who received 13,897 votes.

    General Secretary: Dr. Mobolaji Ojibara with 25,713 votes, defeating Abdulwasiu Alfa, who received 11,730 votes. 

    Assistant General Secretary: Henry Ehi with 28,552 votes, defeating Oluwaseun Aka, who received 8,317 votes.

    Treasurer: Mrs. Blessing Udofa-Poromon with 17,998 votes, defeating Mbamala Chukwuemeka, who garnered 9,825 votes.

    Publicity Secretary: Mrs. Bridget Edokwe with 19,542 votes, defeating Charles Ajiboye, who scored 10,989 votes.

    Assistant Publicity Secretary: Miss Ebiere Ekpese with 26,955 votes, defeating Lawrence Ayewa, who scored 9,690 votes.

    Welfare Secretary: Nyada Auta with 18,369 votes, defeating Oaikhena Osagie, who scored 12,855 votes.

  • PR consultant, Muyiwa Akintunde assumes office as Rotarian president

    PR consultant, Muyiwa Akintunde assumes office as Rotarian president

    Rotarian Muyiwa Akintunde being decorated for his new office and President
    Rotarian Muyiwa Akintunde being decorated for his new office and President

    Public Relations consultant and online media publisher, Rotarian Muyiwa Akintunde, last Friday, formally assumed office as the President of Rotary Club of Ikeja-Alausa Central.

    Lead Consultant/CEO of Leap Communications and Publisher of Breezy News, Akintunde becomes the fourth member to emerge President of the club, and succeeded reputable Estate Surveyor and Valuer, Rotarian Olayinka Patunola-Ajayi. A retired Permanent Secretary with the Lagos State Government, Patunola-Ajayi was President of Rotary Club of Ikeja-Alausa Central from 1 July 2023 to 30 June 2024.

    According to the club, a series of fund-raising activities will start on Friday 12 July 2024 at Lagos Airport Hotel, Ikeja. The event kicks of at 6:30 pm.

    The new club president pledged his total commitment to the service of the club, and the communities that Rotary elevates through its intervention programmes.

    He said he would be guided by the relevant laws of the club and Rotary International, and would promote stakeholders’ engagement and participation.

    He immediately announced the constitution of a Byelaws committee headed by Rotarian Idowu Olawoyin, who has served the club in various critical capacities. Akintunde tasked the committee to conclude its assignment ahead of the club’s next election in the first week of November.

    Other officers of the club who will serve in the 2024-25 Rotary year (1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025) include: Rotarians Busayo Akomolafe (Vice President), Tolulope Ajimotokan (President-Elect), Adedapo Adejumo (Secretary), Oluwabunmi Akinde (Club Administrator), Modupe Aderemi-Bello (Treasurer), Moses Oyelami (Service Projects Chair) and Vincent Isaac (Membership Chair).

    Others are: Claude Mwamba (Public Image Chair), Anthony Jejelowo (Youth Service Chair), Olawoyin (Conference and Convention Chair), Adeyemi Oguntirin (Sergeant-at-Arms), Oluyemi Ogunsanya (WeCare Chair) and Kamal Azeez Adekunle (Vocational Service Chair).

    All past presidents of the club are also on the board. They are: Charter President, Deji Shonuga; Adebukunola Soile-Balogun and Patunola-Ajayi.

    Earlier, the outgoing President presented the report of the club’s achievements in the 2023/24 Rotary year. She recognised club members who were instrumental towards attaining the goals set for the year with awards and other gifts.

    The event was attended by the club’s Assistant Governor, Rotarian Ibraheem Adebayo; and the 2022-23 president, Soile-Balogun.

    Rotary Club of Ikeja-Alausa Central was chartered by Rotary International on 23 March 2021. At only two years old and competing against about 140 other clubs in Lagos and Ogun States, which the then Rotary International District 9110 covered, the club emerged third best during Soile-Balogun’s presidency. The club also won the awards for Best in Club Administration, and Best in Youth Service in one fell swoop.

    Following the split of RI 9110 into two at the beginning of this month, Rotary Club of Ikeja-Alausa Central now belongs to RI District 9112 with Rotarian Femi Adenekan as pioneer District Governor.

  • Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi Killed in Helicopter Crash

    Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi Killed in Helicopter Crash

    Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, a hardliner long seen as a potential successor to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in a helicopter crash in mountainous terrain near the Azerbaijan border, officials and state media said on Monday.

    The charred wreckage of the helicopter which crashed on Sunday carrying Raisi and Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian was found early on Monday after an overnight search in blizzard conditions.

    “President Raisi, the foreign minister and all the passengers in the helicopter were killed in the crash,” a senior Iranian official told Reuters, asking not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

    Raisi’s death was later confirmed in a statement on social media by Vice President Mohsen Mansouri and on state television.

    State TV reported that images from the site showed the aircraft slammed into a mountain peak, although there was no official word on the cause of the crash.

    State news agency IRNA said Raisi was flying in a U.S.-made Bell 212 helicopter.

    Raisi, 63, was elected president in 2021, and since taking office has ordered a tightening of morality laws, overseen a bloody crackdown on anti-government protests and pushed hard in nuclear talks with world powers.

    Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who holds ultimate power with a final say on foreign policy and Iran’s nuclear programme, had earlier sought to reassure Iranians, saying there would be no disruption to state affairs.

    Rescue teams fought blizzards and difficult terrain through the night to reach the wreckage in the early hours of Monday.

    “With the discovery of the crash site, no signs of life have been detected among the helicopter’s passengers,” the head of Iran’s Red Crescent, Pirhossein Kolivand, told state TV.

    Earlier, the national broadcaster had stopped all regular programming to show prayers being held for Raisi across the country.

    Source: Reuters

     

  • Mr President, Vulnerable Nigerians Are Bleeding Profusely, Stop this Wicked, Evil  Electricity Tariff Increase, By Sola Olatunji 

    Mr President, Vulnerable Nigerians Are Bleeding Profusely, Stop this Wicked, Evil  Electricity Tariff Increase, By Sola Olatunji 

    Like Elisha in the Bible who received double anointing of his master Elijah at the point of ascension, President Bola Tinubu on May 29, 2023 came with Renewed Hope when he received the mantle from ex-President Muhammadu Buhari. He hit the ground running, wasting no time to announce to Nigeria that fuel subsidy was gone.

    “Fuel subsidy is gone,” Tinubu declared on that historic day. And the echo of those four words reverberated across the length and breadth of Nigeria. It brought unprecedented pains and anguish on the people. Yet the embattled citizens were more than ready to make sacrifices.

    Not too long afterwards came the policies of the Central Bank of Nigeria that added salt to the people’s injury. Hunger, gnashing of teeth and hopelessness took over the land. Yet the bleeding was without end.

    Yes, the CBN policies have energized the naira against foreign currencies,  but the price of noodles, rice, vegetable oil, onion remain on roof top lending credence to the saying that whatever goes up in Nigeria never comes down.

    Mr President, Nigerians appreciate your passion and determination to leave an indelible legacy on the social landscape of this country before the expiration of your first four years tenure.  We are also aware that Nigerians are impatiently waiting for the low hanging fruits of renewed hope agenda which was liken to  the Marshall Plan of the former US president, Harry Truman in an attempt to reflate the economy of Europe after the devastations caused by the Second World War.

    Nigerians are also aware of the enormous problems confronting this country over the years and conscious of the fact that all these problems can’t be solved within a short while. But we are getting extremely disturbed that the president is putting many irons on the fire at the same time in an attempt to solve our problems. We are saying that removing subsidies from all public utilities is unacceptable. In the first instance, petrol subsidy was removed in a military fashion approach.  Although no one is quarrelling with this, except that it was done without a prior plan for mitigation. As we speak today, Nigerians are still battling with hyper-inflation thrown up by petrol subsidy removal..

    We have just woken up to yet another unfriendly subsidy removal on electricity. I saw the power minister, trying to justify the new tariff. I was ashamed of myself, having a person like that in such an exalted position when we had brilliant Nigerians who could do the job better. How can anyone in his right frame of mind be comparing petrol or electricity with road? Nigerians are aware that petrol is significant to them just as electricity. It will amount to economic catastrophe if we remove subsidy from petrol and electricity simultaneously. These two items are very critical in our national life. What will ultimately happen is that we may end up compounding the problems we planned to solve at the end if we deregulate these items simultaneously.  Why is Mr. President in a hurry to fix all Nigeria’s problems within his first one year in office without looking at the negative impacts of some of his policies on vulnerable Nigerians? It’s unproductive and unsustainable to be running our economy on palliatives as prescribed by IMF and the World Bank.

    Maybe electricity deregulation would have been understandable if it’s coming in two years from now. It’s expected that Nigerians would have been feeling the dividends of democracy as promised by President Tinubu. But now, we have increased the cost of domestic gas beyond the reach of the poor, we have removed subsidy from petrol and now deregulating electricity.  All these are coming within less than one year of the administration of President Tinubu in a country where workers are being paid 30k.

    In one of my articles in the past, I emphasized that there is hardly any country in the world where  citizens don’t enjoy subsidy  in one item or the other, especially the one they have comparative advantage. In the US, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Japan, South Africa and other industrialized countries, citizens enjoy different kinds of subsidies from power, food, Health, Agriculture and many more. In these countries, the governments subsidize power in particular to keep their factories running in order to guarantee employment and enhance productivity.

    While the US is the home of capitalist economy in the world and has continued to subsidize power, it’s unthinkable that the news flying around now is that Nigeria has increased electricity by 300%, which is about  the highest in the world. We are amused that a country that is not ready to subsidize any public utility is committing a  humongous N90 billion subsidy  to religious pilgrimage to Mecca and Jerusalem.  It’s also happening in a country where the minimum wage is just 30k. In my view, if this decision is allowed to stay, it will amount to sheer insensitivity and a deliberate attempt to strangulate the lives of vulnerable Nigerians who are already on life support machine with obnoxious policy of the World Bank and IMF.

    Otunba Sola Olatunji
    Otunba Sola Olatunji

    I also said earlier that vulnerable Nigerians are the ones bearing the brunt of executive recklessness. When Emefiele and other people approved $6.2m cash withdrawal from the CBN, in the face of cashless policy, it was a clear case of executive recklessness. When Ways and Means exceeded its mandatory limit of 5% of the national budget, it was best  described as executive recklessness. If our executives are approving funds from public treasury, to sponsor certain individuals or groups of people on pilgrimage to Mecca or Jerusalem, it’s an open display of executive recklessness.  We are aware that religion is a private matters and individual should fund their trips to Jerusalem or Mecca if they so desired.  A situation where the Federal government is funding pilgrimage to the tune of N90billon is a flagrant abuse of public office. It’s a great absurdity carried too far in the face of competing public needs that the government is unable to fund but prefers to filter away public resources in the name of religion.

    The policy on students’ loans is laudable, but there is palpable fear that the loan will be accessible by real student seeking loan and not some ghosts or masquerades brought forward by the powers and principalities in government as students.

    . Mr. President, we thank you for your passion and love for this country, but we are constrained to ask why none of your policies  has  improved the social wellbeing of citizens, rather Nigerians are slipping deeper into poverty. In my view, this is when to crash the prices of essential goods that are currently out of the reach of common man through deliberate policy. This idea of targeting high-end individuals, corporations, and manufacturers with the burden of new electricity tariffs will ultimately lead to an increase in prices of food items, which is currently put at 38/39%

    .Otunba Sola Olatunji, Chairman of Ikale Heritage Development Association, IHDA, writes from Lagos. 

     

  • Tinubu Off to Senegal for Faye’s Inauguration as President

    Tinubu Off to Senegal for Faye’s Inauguration as President

    President Bola Tinubu will today depart Abuja for Dakar, the capital of Senegal, as a guest at the inauguration of the country’s President-elect Bassirou Diomaye Faye.

    A statement yesterday in Abuja by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Ajuri Ngelale, reads: “President Bola Tinubu will depart Abuja on Tuesday, April 2, 2024, for Dakar, Senegal, to attend the inauguration of Senegal’s President-elect Bassirou Diomaye Faye.

    “The President’s trip is on the invitation of the Republic of Senegal.

    “President Tinubu, who is the Chairman of ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government, will join other regional leaders to witness the inauguration at Diamniadio Exhibition Centre on Tuesday.

    “The President will be accompanied on the trip by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, and other senior government officials.

    “The President is expected to return to Nigeria after the conclusion of the inauguration.”

     

  • Tinubu Slashes Travel Expenses for President, VPs’ Offices, Govt Officials By 60%

    Tinubu Slashes Travel Expenses for President, VPs’ Offices, Govt Officials By 60%

    President Tinubu on Tuesday slashed the travel expenditure of all government officials – both domestic and international – by 60 per cent.

    Ajuri Ngelale, presidential spokesman disclosed this to State House Correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He said the directive was issued as a cost-cutting measure on official travels.

    It will also affect the offices of the President, Vice President, First Lady, and ministers.

    “Tinubu has directed that all state entourages be drastically reduced,” Ngelale said.

    The presidential aide said it is “not a request” but a “directive”.

    “The office of the president and staff will be affected. VP, appointees are affected. By this directive, there will be a slashing of expenditure on official travel by 60 per cent,” Ngelale said.

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