Thursday, March 28, 2024

Spiritual Sounding Elias Chipimo bemoans the lack of leadership in many areas in Zambia

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File:National Restoration Party president Elias Chipimo junior and his vice Charles Maboshe
File:National Restoration Party president Elias Chipimo junior and his vice Charles Maboshe

ELias Chipimo Jr has bemoaned the lack of leadership in many spheres of Zambia. Speaking this morning on a theme the year ,aheard ahead for NAREP, Mr Chipimo wondered where the good men and women of Zambia, the leaders of the past, the young professionals and civil society who clearly see the wrong direction the country is headed to and decided to remain silent and do nothing.

Mr Chipimo went on to say that say that the Bible tells us that we will be judged just as much by what we do as by what we do not do while we are here on this earth.

Mr Chipimo also express his perplexity on why God allowed the PF Government to ascend to power.

“We don’t know what God’s plan was in allowing the PF to come to power. It may well have been to demonstrate the importance of persistence. Maybe it was to teach us to be careful about listening too closely to the promises of politicians, or perhaps it was just to rid us of a Party that forgot about the people as it took care of itself. No one really knows. What we do know is this: every one of us was born with the right to be free; the right to assemble freely; the right to be protected from the arbitrary use of power – whether by the state or from the hands of a defiler, ” he said.

Below is the full speech:

2013 – THE YEAR AHEAD FOR NAREP AND ZAMBIA
STATEMENT DELIVERED ON THURSDAY 10 JANUARY 2013 BY NATIONAL RESTORATION PARTY PRESIDENT ELIAS C. CHIPIMO, JNR

In search of honest men and women

Good morning ladies and gentlemen. I start this morning’s press conference with a quotation from the Book of Jeremiah (5:1). It reflects both our concern about recent developments in Zambia and our theme for 2013 – the NAREP Year of Action:

“Go up and down the streets of Jerusalem, look around and consider, search through her squares. If you can find but one person who deals honestly and seeks the truth, I will forgive this city”.

As we usher in a New Year some will have lost loved ones, others will have welcomed new life. On a personal note, I have experienced both through the loss of my mother-in-law last November and the birth of my nephew last week. We live, we learn, we love and we mourn. Always, we look to the future with hope and expectation.

A time for reflection

The New Year is a convenient time to pause and reflect on the challenges we face as a nation. At a time such as this, I am reminded of the saying: evil prevails in the world because good men do nothing. So it is only right to ask: Where are the good men and women of Zambia? Where are the leaders of the past that surely must know our country is not heading in the right direction? Where are the young professionals? Where is civil society? The Bible tells us that we will be judged just as much by what we do as by what we do not do while we are here on this earth.

For we can no longer afford to pretend that all is right. We cannot pretend we do not know:

  • that people are dying daily at clinics, hospitals and health institutions around the country from curable illnesses and from the lack of prompt and proper care
  • that our women and young girls are being subjected to sexual abuse and exploitation on an unprecedented scale in schools, homes and workplaces.

We cannot pretend that it is alright to still have routine cholera outbreaks in our land. We cannot continue to pretend that excessive load-shedding is normal and that high mealie-meal prices are just a function of exploitative millers and traders or that it is acceptable for our youths to publicly threaten violence while the political leaders they report to and to whom they are accountable maintain a stony silence.

We cannot pretend that in a country that claims to promote democracy it is right to silently deport foreigners without recourse to an independent review by our courts or that there is any justification in preventing the political Opposition from meeting and holding rallies.

[pullquote]We cannot continue to pretend that excessive load-shedding is normal and that high mealie-meal prices are just a function of exploitative millers and traders or that it is acceptable for our youths to publicly threaten violence while the political leaders they report to and to whom they are accountable maintain a stony silence.[/pullquote]

We cannot accept as normal the possibility that some of us might wake up tomorrow morning and find ourselves living in a new district. These things are confusing. These developments are not normal and yet we are expected to pretend that they are. The sooner we wake up to the reality of the confused state we are living in, the better off we, our children and our grandchildren will be – but only if we determine to change our individual and collective mindsets.

You see, change for the better will not come about through a complete dependence on Government or an acceptance that everything Government does is right. We must each be the change we want to see. If we are tired of corruption, let us each make a personal undertaking to fight it where we can. If we are fed up with incompetence, let us each put in an honest day’s work:

  • let every teacher teach as though they were teaching for God, understanding that their role is to fertilise the minds of our future leaders and decision-makers
  • let every policeman, every revenue agent, every member of our security and investigative wings, every judge and every magistrate carry out their duties with the honesty, integrity, pride and dignity that should come from knowing that they are the guardians of our justice
  • and let every politician and elected official know and understand that politics was designed to be noble, not a platform for assassinating one another’s characters and championing tribal divisions or for showcasing inflated egos and insulting our women.

Challenges and goals for 2013

As we embark upon a new year, we shall face new challenges and old. These challenges should not define us, they should embolden us to work even harder to see our country and our people prosper. It is therefore only fitting that we individually examine the year we have left behind and set out a course of action for 2013.

As a Party, NAREP has set as its overall goal for the year, the recruitment of 750,000 active and committed members from all walks of life and from every part of the country; members dedicated to making a positive difference in their communities. Our core message will remain that of being the only Party that can genuinely promote issue-based politics; generate fresh rather than recycled ideas and approaches; and offer value-based national leadership for the next election and beyond. We will make this our year of action – working with grassroots all across the country as we build our branch network with community-based empowerment programmes.

NAREP is the Party of redemption and restoration – the Party that will bring justice for the poor and healing for the broken-hearted – those that still carry their loved ones to the clinic in a wheel-barrow; those whose mothers and fathers are dying from preventable diseases while Ministers and Government officials travel abroad for treatment; those that wonder whether they will ever have a day when they do not have to struggle to put a meal on the table or pay tuition fees or have a single week of uninterrupted power supply; those within our rural communities that live too far from the line of rail to have access to even the most basic of services.

You see, Zambia’s condition has never been about the curse of poverty. It has always been about the curse of poor leadership, not only in our politics but everywhere that good leadership is called to rise: in the Church, in the workplace, in the home, in our schools and yes, sadly, in our politics. But if we truly are to progress as a nation, we need political leadership that will think less about itself and more about the needs of the people it has been elected to serve.

[pullquote]Zambia’s condition has never been about the curse of poverty. It has always been about the curse of poor leadership, not only in our politics but everywhere that good leadership is called to rise: in the Church, in the workplace, in the home, in our schools and yes, sadly, in our politics[/pullquote]

It is not too late for the PF to think less about political domination and more about prioritising development. It is not too late to reverse the trend of unnecessary by-elections and to channel our energy and national resources into building a corruption-free country where the majority of citizens accept the rule of law. If this is too much to ask of the people that are in power today, then let them consider this: the Lord our God, who placed you in your position of authority can remove you just as swiftly as you were installed. Nothing is impossible with God; no amount of suppression, propaganda, or denial of freedom to assemble can stand in the way of His will.

But let us turn the page on 2012 and look to a new future, one that is characterised not by meaningless rhetoric and cheap propaganda but bold decisions and resolute action. Let us reflect on the responsibility we each have, to listen to one another. Those holding positions of power and authority need to know that they have an extra duty to listen carefully to their critics and to allow everyone the freedom to serve their country in the best way they know how:

  • let us provide the opportunity for our youth to flourish in decent work and enterprise
  • let us give dignity back to our women by protecting them from violence, removing all discrimination against them and tearing down the barriers to their advancement
  • let us work with our traditional leaders to empower rural communities
  • let us apply our public order laws in a manner that ensures equality before the law and not the illegal discrimination we witnessed last year.

We should not be fooled by the propaganda or the high sounding rhetoric that seeks to justify the impromptu and haphazard creation of districts. To some, development means waking up in the morning and finding you are in a different district from the one you went to bed in last night. Let us accept that this is simply an illusion of order in the chaos that surrounds us.

Price controls should not become the weapon with which we address the incompetent management of our staple food. Rather than price controls, we need political controls – the kind of controls that prevent us from triggering unnecessary by-elections to boost ruling Party numbers in the National Assembly. When we raise concern about this, our critics tell us we should wake up, this is politics! I say to those critics: You wake up, that is not development!

[pullquote]Price controls should not become the weapon with which we address the incompetent management of our staple food.[/pullquote]

Wake up and realise that we have a crisis on our hands when mealie-meal prices are reaching levels that have never been seen before in Zambia, when excessive load-shedding and water blues are a normal part of life, when employers are laying off workers because they have to comply with regulations that were introduced without proper consultation, when investors are holding back their plans because they are not sure what to expect next. Wake up and ask yourselves one simple question: What has the PF administration been doing while all this has been going on?

Well, I will tell you – it has been renaming airports, creating new districts overnight, moving provincial capitals, relocating districts, poaching Opposition members, engineering by-elections, jailing Opposition leaders, creating new ministries, shuffling ministries along with ministers, firing permanent secretaries and district commissioners and appointing new ones at will, removing hundreds of experienced senior and middle management staff from missions abroad and replacing these with many inexperienced individuals connected by blood or origin; and then, as if to demonstrate the full extent of how out of touch they are when it comes to offering solutions to our most pressing social crisis, they have launched a tree-planting exercise as the answer to Zambia’s massive unemployment problem!

[pullquote]as if to demonstrate the full extent of how out of touch they are when it comes to offering solutions to our most pressing social crisis, they have launched a tree-planting exercise as the answer to Zambia’s massive unemployment problem![/pullquote]

When the Zambian people voted in 2011, they were hoping for a serious government with serious plans. We all dream of a land in which everyone can have the right to a decent life. Is it asking too much to expect running water to flow into every home; to have homes and businesses connected to a stable source of electric power? Is it asking too much to expect our Ministers not to fly abroad for treatment but to use the very health institutions they run away from when they fall seriously ill; or to expect our youth to be properly empowered with opportunities for work and enterprise?

Conclusion

Contrary to what some may think or feel, it is not, and has never been our desire as a Party to see the PF administration fail. If the PF – or any other administration for that matter – fails to lead a badly underdeveloped nation like ours with clarity, determination and a compelling vision, it is the people who suffer. We want the PF to perform the role for which God allowed them to be declared victors at the last election. But they will not do this by alienating the very people they were elected to serve. They will not do this by honouring mediocrity and neglecting our youth.

[pullquote]Contrary to what some may think or feel, it is not, and has never been our desire as a Party to see the PF administration fail[/pullquote]

We don’t know what God’s plan was in allowing the PF to come to power. It may well have been to demonstrate the importance of persistence. Maybe it was to teach us to be careful about listening too closely to the promises of politicians, or perhaps it was just to rid us of a Party that forgot about the people as it took care of itself. No one really knows. What we do know is this: every one of us was born with the right to be free; the right to assemble freely; the right to be protected from the arbitrary use of power – whether by the state or from the hands of a defiler.

Going forward, let us recognise that while there is much work to do and many mistakes to avoid, no work will be harder than changing the mindset of our people. This is the hard path that NAREP has chosen to take. It requires us to lead by example and we will do this with resolute determination. Let no one fool the people of Zambia – our Party is not for sale to any bidder and nor is its leadership. We want only what is best for every Zambian, young and old. That will be the standard of our commitment and our leadership.

May God’s grace be with Zambia and with our national team as they defend our AfCON crown. I thank you and wish you all a productive and prosperous 2013.

Elias C. Chipimo
NAREP President

78 COMMENTS

  1. ”OH OH AJE AJE AMOSCOLE,AMOSCOLE AJE AJE”
    Who remembers that Congolose song, fellows?I used to like it!
    Coming to the topic at hand,what is Elias Chipimo trying to ‘happen’ now?

    • This rational leader is saying his desire is not to see the govt fail, but they will not do this by alienating the very people they were elected to serve. He is the only one who speaks sense. No recycling of leaders and methods, we need fresh minds

    • Elias has very good and pertinent points in his speech and due recognition should be given here. Politics of harrasment have always been a path to failure throughout the world. One thing is sure, a few come out rich! The few are mainly the ruling team members! Elias is trying to reach to that core of reality that brings about tangible development. He should be commended.

  2. Serpent Cobra Sata CNP is an evil man and Elias thank you for now agreeing with me that we have a wrong man as president.

  3. LT,you have got issues you even publish what nonetities say now,I mean I have lived in Zambia for 83 years now and I have never never never heard of some crook called Elias Chipimo.

  4. Eish,you mean to say Sata is now the President of Zambia.You you also Zambians,how do you vote for Sata as your President you you also

  5. This young man has a condition known as “Multiple Personality Disorder Syndrome”. There is no value in this one. Its not curable, but effects can be minimized by proper psychological care. The best we can do is say “good boy” to him whenever he talks, so he won’t be depressed, lest the condition degenerates into madness.

  6. Thank you Mr Chipimo is that what the Bible says? that we will be judged just as much by what we do as by what we do not do? That’s justice! It means most of Europeans will go to hell for not doing anything about slavery. Namvela bwino maningi lomba. Apartheid too.

    • If u finished Grade 7 u will find that he has said much abt the ZP’s incompetence. Wat has Nawakwi’s daughter got to do wit yo future? Dimwit

  7. People talk of a country being run poorly, being run with an Iron fist, in my opinion these countries have an identity about them.
    Zambia is a joke, to see the local industries being monopolised by foreigners, setting businesses basically running your country and perceiving this as ‘doing well’ is a disgrace. Your thoughts people are misplaced and ignorant.
    You are like a business with a lot of cash but without profits, your debt is insurmountable and this has been added in , in recent times, You do not have Airline.Wait let me cut this short, What belongs to Zambians of all those tall buildings I found there?

    • It took hundreds of years to ensure that the psyche of our people would be dominated by an illusion of superiority which is our challenge to resolve. Interesting observations that could actually lead to a greater conclusion of an alternative solution. Look forward to seeing you when an alternative reality sinks in. I guess your answer is to shut your eyes and go back to sleep 🙂 Sweet dreams. Don’t worry. Someone else will break the mould one day. The country you reside in developed differently from how we will have to develop ours. They don’t own most of their tall buildings either, funnily enough 🙂 Don’t lose heart though. It is doable.

    • I have never felt insulted as a nation like today. Mushota why are you still interested in Zambia? Tell me how does it feel to have the disabled working in UK after beiNg on welfare all this time due to low performing economy? How does it feel now that you now have people who work and do Not get a livable wage? All this is happening in Britain. You go abroad and find people have developed there nation and democracy for more than 200 years and you feel like they need you ! Eish you are so low. The gods were Not crazy when they took you abroad. You are not part of anything extraordinary here nor there. Instead you can’t see that when your Nick laughs at Zambians he still is laughing at you! What a shame.

    • MUSHOTA HAS BLOGGED SENSE and I quote : “Zambia is a joke, to see the local industries being monopolised by foreigners, setting businesses basically running your country and perceiving this as ‘doing well’ is a disgrace. Your thoughts people are misplaced and ignorant.
      You are like a business with a lot of cash but without profits”. Well analysed Thread Mushota.

  8. I don’t want to mention names for fear of stepping too far but how on earth is Zambia ranked by all those nonenties of doing well, You are like a cup that is clean outside but dirty inside, surely you can’t use that to drink a cup of tea?

    Why not concentrate on agriculture, tourism. Yes it called 21st century but having been there recently your country’s priorities are misplaced as Nick put it. I am sorry I have no intention of coming back
    I didn’t like the UNroadworthy cars, I didn’t see any shops, business run by Zambians, I didn’t like the looks of a common man on the streets, I didn’t like the fact that UNZA was closed, I mean even newspapers had 6 pages ¾ of those with adverts, what a waste. What happened to ZNBC?

  9. Zambia is a Zimbabwe of 15 years ago , do you know what happened 10 years later? As a matter of fact Zimbabwe was a better country at its pinnacle than Zambia now
    Ignorant people, who cant see what I can see. I am not even mentioning my education anymore I am tired of talking to people who are fortunate to be in the same forum as I am
    Wake Up! Nick was right.
    Thanks

    • For once i agree with you… you visit Zambia even educated people think like Grade 7’s. Look at this Oxford educated Chipimo who thinks like a Grade 7.

      I think too much Nshima has negative effect on the brain

  10. As a PF subsidiary, this NAREP has no future.

    If chipimo tries to depart from being used by the PF then he will contribute positively to this country. grow up young man look at the hard work being done by Nevers, how come Ukwa does not even bother about you instead he even funds your trips?

  11. Well, the young educated man is trying to market his party. The problem is that Zambia has too many political parties. Moreover, most of these entities do not even have an ideology. It is clear that the motive is centred on the ‘self’ concept. I still have hope for Zambia. Leadership is just a catalyst to development. The question should be coined around the ethos of ethics and values and most importantly ‘What should I do for my country’. However, one could argue that to do something requires an effective leadership. A leadership that encourages people to participate in the process of development. I suppose hope is the last thing to lose. Yes!

  12. But we have already seen that the Masebos are now preparing a place for themselves in the NAREP cabinet should it assend to power and continue the plunder.

  13. A summary of what has already been said or done by others. Here’s a thought. Set up something that does something. The blatant reality is most prefer to critique and probably because they have busy lives of their own, have lost hope or see solutions but know they will be blocked by someone on a personal get rich quick mission. That said when we stop living in denial as though helping out will ruin our lives and start to act (positively) then we will have stopped ‘waiting to be saved’ by the next sweet talker 🙂 it’s never too late. Politics aside Zambia is still worth investing in. Home is home. Not necessary for those who have moved on to other lands and wish to forget their roots but more for those who carry a light in their hearts and want to change things for posterity.

  14. LT,
    you are impartial. Thank you for carrying news to the people regardless of who the news is from.

    Can you please edit the first sentence of your report, not ignoring to correct “aheard” to “ahead”?

  15. BUT this guy refused to help his father’s. He literally refused to help on his residence. Why is he criticising government or can he look after Zambia when he himself cant help his family? Shame

  16. Mr Presido am with u, lets start ruling our Mbuyaz and Shikuluz not old pipo fulufulu mu govt. Inonge Wina, Chikwanda, John Phiri, Luo, John Phiri, Scott, Sata, Shamenda the list is endless. Thez pipo need to retire with their colonial kind of politics. They can only advise the young ones but not being at the helm aweeeee

  17. The Brazil trip has completely gotten out of Jr system. Jr should appologies to HH for his attacks when HH pointed out all these issues early last year.

  18. Good new year message Mr. President.
    The problem is that we have a bad constitution.We can change leaders but with this current constitution, even you Mr. President or an angel can get corrupted with so much power being entrusted in the Presidency. We need true separation of powers, so that there is proper accountability,our rights protected in the constitution, good POA. The whole governance system is rotten. We need to change the constitution and these crop of leaders. They are failures. What will they leave when they are gone?Nothing. Only criminal cases.
    1. Change the constitution
    2. Change these recycled leaders
    3.Change our mindset
    We must change.

  19. We warned you, we are now 30 years back with a different outlook. More misery is to come if zambians allow this dictator to push you as at a farm. Glad am away from Zed at the moment, sorry for my fellow Zambians. Will come back soon dictator…………….

  20. Being in the diaspora makes people clever right.You fcking economic African refugees, keep being lost in the big cities of the West like the movie coming to America

  21. We need you as the president of Zambia 2016.Am very much ready to compaign here in chingola as PF has patritically failled.
    Go go NAREP

  22. In Africa, Zambia in particular, if a girl sleeps away(with a boyfriend) its taken as marriage, it would be upside-way of thinking if Chipimo would argue that he only went with Sata to Brazil because he did not know that this year(2013) he would not have known why God allowed PF to come to power.

  23. THis is a good touching speech as evident from most of the emotional reactions of the bloggers. I was expecting Nevers to speak like this. Nomba nakalya: Ba Nevers nomba forgot the bible verses completely. Thanks mune Chipimo.

  24. Elias has abused the platform, by not being directional and factual! He simply is neither agreeing nor disagreeing, but making an analytical expose of his views on the PF and its governance.
    If you’re to be a Leader, speak clearly. Make your stance known and by principle you’ll earn respect. Dont try and brainwash readers of this (misty) vague rhetoric with your compromised approach.
    Wise-up!

  25. This is very interesting, it looks like Chipomo wants to be a pastor while Nevers wants to be a politician… Human resource misplacement..by the way this can’t be Chipomo Jr.. He looks too old for that title…

  26. Ala ukutungulula ichalo kwalyafya mune Chipimo Jr, tekanda fye ichisungu ngawiso….if you are truly zambian you did you study in Europe and condemn those treated outside zambia? Bwfya

  27. @27 ,I agree with u .When u are analytical u don’t see any difference btn jnr and other opo. Of o the political leaders currently Sata stands the tallest tho he is not 1oo% right.Yes everyone must know dat we shall answerable b 4 GOD.

  28. Brilliant man indeed! Unfortunately, we have so many nit-wits in Zambia, to a point where they can’t level with a man of such a mindset. We come from a country where our idea of great politicians is about the one who can make the most noise and show the most ignorance. We get a clean, intelligent, young man like this guy, offer himself to liberate us from our socio-economic bondages and surprisingly, here are some people just really being sarcastic, not even lending this well meaning man an ear. This is why our country will never go anywhere. We are used to mediocrity. Shame!

  29. I find these thoughts positively challenging and encouraging at the same time:

    -look to the future with hope and expectation
    -We must each be the change we want to see.
    -May God’s grace be with Zambia and with our national team as they defend our AfCON crown. I thank you and wish you all a productive and prosperous 2013.

    Please note that
    Prosperity starts from the intention of the heart,
    integrity enhances it and
    political will facilitates it.
    Mother Zambia is not materially poor.

    Empowering people at all levels is the way to go.
    EC, I would love to hear you articulate this in your next speech.

  30. I f people voted they voted because they wanted some problems to be solved mind you it is the poor who voted:they wanted some one to save them from greedy politicians

  31. This has been said already,Mr Chipimo! However, I’m glad that u spent time going over it again in a more civil manner.

  32. Iwe chi No 32 ‘Come 2016’, Elias has already told us what the PF has done in the year 2012 ie:it has been renaming airports, creating new districts overnight, moving provincial capitals, relocating districts, poaching Opposition members, engineering by-elections, jailing Opposition leaders, creating new ministries, shuffling ministries along with ministers, firing permanent secretaries and district commissioners and appointing new ones at will, removing hundreds of experienced senior and middle management staff from missions abroad and replacing these with many inexperienced individuals connected by blood or origin; and then, as if to demonstrate the full extent of how out of touch they are when it comes to offering solutions to our most pressing social crisis, they have launched a…

  33. Deforestation in Zambia has has reached critical levels, and a politician who has no respect for the environment should not be supported. The government should be recommended for carrying this important exercise of reforestation. People like Chipimo, if in power they will even sell the national parks because to them, it is just trees and animals which are not important. Zambia is faced with many environmental challenges due to heavy mining activities and we have a would be president who do not care about the environment. Landslides and all these floods due to river overflows we are experiencing year after year are the results of heavy deforestation . NAREP has no plan for Zambia, being a leader does not mean you have to be a politician!

  34. Dear Ol man Chipimo Jr, has your system been finally cleaned up of your PF impurities? And by implication are you finally back from your taxpayer paid for holiday in Rio de Janeiro? Poor Ol man Chipimo Jr seems you are scared of the Serpent! Stop talking about his dictatorship like you’re talking to your parents -in- law! You’re nothing but a wimp!

  35. Interesting points. But Elias still has one problem: he fails to be brief and to the point. This is more of a university essay than a political statement. How many people have time to read such long discourses? He can learn something from HH on this one; HH always releases straight and to the point statements to the media. All this could be said in a few punchy paragraphs.

    • And look at the success of HH politically, NOT something write home about, is it?

      If your “straight and to the point statements to the media” all sound negative & egotistic, people will always find and listen to the alternative, no matter how long the speech may be. And say what you want about Chipimo Jr., his cooler and sober character will elevate him higher and better, into the national consciousness, than HH has been able to achieve with his stolen UPND party. Mark my words!!!!

  36. waste of breathe … HH said this last year. All you did last year is visit Brasil under the government and leaders you condemn today. Shut up! Attention seeker …. so tell us now ” wasn’t HH right?”

  37. I like Mushota’s comment today, though with the usual dose of nick…am not sure if your comments are meant to be satirical any way good article by Chipimo Jnr..

  38. To some of you bloggers; You condemn Sata – obviously because he has no clue in terms of wholistic governance and development. Yet, you still do not appreciate Chipimo’s near perfect analysis of the prevailing scenario. I suspect because you are intellectually lazy to discern progressive discourse. Anything that runs over half a page is too much work ( to read ) The only criticism I can make of Chipimo’s ‘heroic’ efforts, is that he does not spell out his party’s alternative socio-economic and political blue-print. Every party that professes to have a vision for Zambia should clearly state what ideological foundation governs whatever economic and political dispensation it wants for the country.

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