Younge America: Silence please for the real election drama
The introductory call of Roanoke's No Shame Theatre is that it's a place where "anything can happen." To which the crowd responds: "And it usually does." The idea is simple. You pay $5, you get five minutes and the stage is yours. There are only a few rules, the most intriguing being that you have to keep your clothes on - apparently the state...
2008-10-26 20:45:19Amarnath Samiti doing more harm than good, say Jammu residents
NAT7National/Kashmir/Politics/EconomyAmarnath Samiti doing more harm than good, say Jammu residentsJammu, Oct 7 IANS Many people in Jammu have stopped rallying around the Shri Amarnath Sangharsh Samiti, saying protests organised by it have already cost them too much economically and now it is meddling in their social affairs as well."We are a tolerant society, we were asking for restoration of land to Shri Amarnath Shrine Board and not the unwanted tags which have come partly because of the utterances of the Samiti leaders and partly by deliberate misrepresentation of facts," bemoaned Daisy Sharma, a businessman here."My shop remained closed for more than two months, but I had to shell out fees for my children and also pay salaries to my employees, and now I am told that the agreement that the Samiti signed with the government is a watered down version of the first order of land allotment to the Shri Amarnath Shrine Board," he said. In retaliation to Kashmir's boycott of Jammu traders, the Samiti has now said Kashmiri children should be refused admission to educational institutions here. People here say such utterances have only damaged the Samiti's image. The Samiti, a conglomerate of 30 social, religious, political and business organisations, spearheaded over two months the agitation against the cancellation of land allotted for pilgrims to the Amarnath shrine.This led to an economic blockade of the valley and caused a communal divide between Hindu-dominated Jammu and Muslim-dominated Kashmir. But Jammu residents say they are hurt about being dubbed as "Hindu communalists", virtually being clubbed with right wing mobs who are attacking Christians and their churches in Orissa, Karnataka and Kerala. Anil Kumar Padha, a local businessman, could not make it to marriage of his closest friend, Ashraf Malik, in Budgam in the Kashmir valley. "My family did not allow me to go there in the prevailing atmosphere of fear and suspicion between the two regions. So I had to make an excuse for not attending."A majority of Jammu residents believe the Samiti may have done more harm than good to the region. Students here could not appear in all-India entrance examinations and the economy suffered a loss of over Rs.100 billion, says local traders' body chief Rajender Motial. Worst of all, relations between the Jammu region and Kashmir valley in terms of the political, religious and social landscape have hit an all-time low. Rekha Choudhary, head of the political science department in Jammu University, said: "The losses have not only been in terms of economy. What is more worrying is the communal divide and response to separatist calls by Muslims in the Jammu region." She says there was complete loss of faith and trust between the two regions, which is "visible to a great extent between the communities". People are blaming the Samiti's tough stand during the agitation and some incidents of Kashmiri drivers being beaten up for the boycott of Jammu products by Kashmiri traders. So much so that National Conference president Omar Abdullah last week blamed the Samiti and the alleged economic blockade of the valley in the Jammu region for the rise of separatist forces in the Kashmir valley. "The economic blockade injected a new life into the Hurriyat Conference and the separatists," Abdullah declared at a rally of his party workers. "It is time the Samiti saw the writing on the wall. It is not required. It has damaged Jammu's cause and that of the whole state," National Conference's provincial president Ajay Sadhotra told the media. The Jammu Chamber of Commerce and Industry too has asked everyone not to meddle in trade relations between the Jammu region and Kashmir valley. "It would be prudent if the trade is left alone out of the political discourse," chamber president Ram Sahai has said in a statement. This was seen as a rebuff to the Samiti, who had warned the government of dire consequences if Jammu's products were not bought by Kashmiri traders. Ram Sahai has had to hear persistent taunts from his Kashmiri counterparts that his chamber was part of the Samiti that enforced an "economic blockade" of the valley. That was cited as the reason for Kashmiri traders saying "no trade" to Jammu businessmen. --Indo-Asian News Servicebj/pg/sk/jg777 Words*07101155
2008-10-07 02:04:10China's emerging middle class: a changing social and political order
INT7International/SocietyChina's emerging middle class: a changing social and political orderBy Ren KeBeijing, Oct 6 Xinhua Eric Wang walks into a restaurant near his office in Beijing's central business district. Wearing an immaculately pressed dark blue suit with a gold-coloured tie, he picks up a cup of cappuccino and sips."It's really a sharp contrast between my life and that of my parents," says Wang. A certified public accountant CPA in an international accounting firm, he enjoys a life of great vicissitudes.Born into a rural family in east China's Zhejiang province, Wang every summer visits his village to help his parents who earn a living by farming and fishing in the Taihu Lake.Now 29, he earns more than 200,000 yuan $29,000 a year by working for companies which look to be listed on the stock exchange.In major metropolian cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, among others, Wang and his ilk are making up a group that has emerged in China after the country's economic makeover began three decades ago.Thirty years ago, Wang's parents lived in a people's commune in which everything was collectively owned by the member peasants. Workers in factories enjoyed cradle-to-grave welfare.Another group, the intellectuals, including teachers in colleges and performing artistes, were tied in different organizations.Situations changed as China adopted a policy of opening up to the outside world in 1978, when national leader Deng Xiaoping and his supporters decided to end the class struggle and turn to economic development.Zhang Wanli, deputy researcher with the Sociology Institute of the China Academy of Social Sciences CASS, notes that before 1978 China had three classes - peasants, workers, and intellectuals. Private enterprise was strictly prohibited. A peasant who sold eggs in rural free market would be seen as "the tail of capitalism" that had to be cut off.Restrictions were gradually lifted from 1978. People now could run private enterprises and employ workers.Then, foreign capital came. Thanks to those changes, commercial, financial and services sectors grew rapidly. New jobs, white-collar managers in foreign and domestic enterprises, owners of small and medium enterprises came into existence. So did professionals, like lawyers and accountants.Freed from the restraints of the old system, they gained in mobility that allowed them to acquire economic interests, like entrepreneurship and knowledge, in the budding markets.However, the new class has stirred up controversies. Many people believe "middle class" is a lifestyle. They think a middle class family should own at least one apartment and one car, have a golf club membership, and often travel overseas. In other words, it is a lifestyle of the rich."I have no car, and I live in an apartment built as work unit accommodation from the CASS," says Zhang."But when I was interviewing a millionaire entrepreneur at one time, he said I definitely belong to the middle class." Zhang says social status and profession, rather than income, play more important roles in defining social classes.In 2001, the CASS conducted a nationwide survey, which found the middle class in terms of profession, including people with new jobs and in non-public sectors, and those government officials and intellectuals in the middle levels, accounted for 20 percent of the total population.In that survey, intellectuals, executives, officials of vice-ministerial level and above, billionaire private business owners were defined as the upper class, while industrial workers, business people, and farmers and jobless people were placed in the lower classes.Although the middle class kept increasing in the past seven years, Zhang says its proportion to the total population remains approximately the same as more rural people come to the cities to seek work swelling the number in the lower stratum. Considering that rural population account almost 64 percent, it is really a large number.In 2006, the state-run Outlook Weekly reported the newly emerging strata, including non-public sectors and professional people, accounted for 11.5 percent of the population and contributed almost one third of the total taxes. They also held more than half of the total technical patent rights."If the middle class can be quantified by money, I belong to it," says Eric Wang, "but it makes no sense - I'm only a high-paid worker."China's middle class is trying to find a place in the established political system. The recent years have witnessed its rise as a politically significant section.Zhang points out that more private entrepreneurs and professionals became delegates to the National Congress of the Communist Party of China in 2007. Considering the increasing economic and social influence of the new social stratum, the Party has made efforts to include them in the political mechanism.--Xinhuadkg835 Words06100848
2008-10-06 00:00:00FOR THE PAST TWO WEEKS
NAT19National/Education/Society/TerrorismJamia Millia: living a nightmare with remarkable restraint CommentBy Rumki BasuFor the past two weeks, Jamia Millia Islamia has been in the news for all the wrong reasons. Even in my worst nightmare I did not imagine that I would walk up to my political science department one day to face mediapersons waiting to establish the identity of an alleged terrorist killed in the Jamia Nagar police encounter. When we did check the records, it emerged that Atif Amin, the student in question, had taken admission in the human rights course this year as a day scholar, though he was yet to get an identity card made, having barely attended classes for a month.The M.A. degree course in human rights like the M.A. course in public administration are unique courses - they are not offered anywhere in the capital except in our department. While our new student was dead, killed in the police encounter, our department's name was being flashed in the media, as if its only claim to fame was our association with this unknown 'terrorist'. Incidentally, in the Social Science School in Jamia, the political science department is the largest in terms of courses offered, student strength and number of faculty. Our department is an interesting experiment in multiculturalism - our students truly represent a microcosm of the 'idea' of India - coming as they do from almost two-thirds of Indian states and an equal divide in terms of Hindu/Muslim students. The nightmare, I did realise, had just begun. Unfortunately, we had very little information on the alleged 'mastermind' whom some of my colleagues had barely seen for a month before he was declared dead. In the next few days, two students were arrested for their alleged involvement in the Sep 13 Delhi bomb blasts. They were students staying outside the campus, not even one was picked up from the student hostel in Jamia, a central university.Most of my students from the human rights course looked terrified and completely lost in apprehension. More and more reports came in of students being 'picked up' by the police for questioning, leaving behind a trail of fear, mistrust, shock and disbelief on the campus. Many students who lived on rented accommodation in nearby areas of Jamia Nagar were simply asked to vacate rooms by their landlords for fear of police reprisals.These 'homeless' students about 2,500 had no option but to go home with no clue about their future options when they came back. Suddenly their futures seemed uncertain, their careers were at stake for reasons completely beyond their control or comprehension. An 80-year-old institution's secular and nationalist credentials were being virtually dragged in the mud and the future of its 14,000 students being held to ransom by the alleged terror links of a couple of students. Could anything be more unfairMore than anybody, I am aware of the personal sagas of some of our poor and middle class students - their struggle to reach a Central University in Delhi from vernacular medium schools in villages and districts of far-flung states in India, had never been easy. They were students from Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir and the northeastern states, for whom Jamia seemed a truly 'happening', and therefore a preferred, academic destination in the last few years.Jamia had seen unprecedented expansion in the past four years with the present vice chancellor's untiring efforts for mainstreaming the university and students were being offered core and optional courses in human rights, public administration, social work, education, management and journalism not offered anywhere in Delhi. 'Modernization' was the buzzword and the mood of the students upbeat. Jawaharlal Nehru University and Delhi University were obvious role models to follow and one could sense that our students were now ready for competition and exposure. Debate, dialogue and discuss - this is what universities need to do to change and transform mindsets since all ideas have to be ultimately introduced/defended/fought in the public sphere in all democracies.It was at this point that terror struck. Terror can never be justified since no cause can be greater than the right to life - which is the only inviolable and non-negotiable natural human right. You cannot have any dialogue with terror: it strikes blindly and irrationally with fixed targets at times, at others with random. The Delhi blasts which hit the public at large indiscriminately have perhaps impacted civil society in exactly the same way as the 'post encounter aftermath' in Jamia - break spirits, polarise communities and suffocate chances of dialogue and peace. However, none of this did actually happen in Jamia itself, where the atmosphere on campus remained hurt but peaceful.'Terrorism' was being debated, so were 'police encounters' and I was amazed by the maturity and objectivity of my students on arguments such as these. What emerged most strongly was that we must not communalise or valorise 'terrorism' in any way. There was a complete consensus also to protect the secular image of the institution and the fledging careers of our students - since both were equally at stake. There was continuous resentment however at the fact that the private behaviour of students outside the campus had to be justified/condemned/defended by Jamia Millia Islamia a public institution - the public-private divide somehow got obliterated in all that was happening on the Jamia campus.We, as teachers of Jamia Millia Islamia, can only hope that this will pass and that the darkest hour is indeed before dawn. The fact that our students in the past two weeks have shown remarkable restraint and courage is our only ray of light at the end of this long tunnel - a result perhaps of the legacy of hope, faith and trust in the long standing secular traditions of Jamia - bequeathed to them over the years.Rumki Basu is head of the department of Jamia Millia's political science department. She can be reached at basurumki56@rediffmail.com-Indo-Asian News Servicerum/pg1047 Words**05101246
2008-10-05 03:05:08China seeks balance between food security, urbanisation
INT5International/EconomyChina seeks balance between food security, urbanisationBeijing, Oct 5 Xinhua Feeding 1.3 billion people remains one of China's top challenges after 30 years of reform and opening up and the government's worries are all the more aggravated by the continuous loss of farmland and labour to rampant urbanisation."We used to store big urns of grain at home every year, but now few families do so and instead we buy grain. The young are working away from the farms," says 57-year Zhou Siyu of Longkou village in Shandong province."The buildings and roads take too much high-yield cropland and shrubs or flowers have been planted in beautification schemes," she rues.The government's concerns reflect the worries of ordinary farmers. In July, the government approved a medium to long-term guideline to ensure food security, setting grain production targets at 500 billion kg by 2010, 540 billion kg by 2020 and 95 percent self-sufficiency by 2020.It also prescribes ways to protect farmland, construct rural infrastructure and raise farmers' incomes.China presently has about 1.827 billion mu 121.8 million hectares, or 1.39 mu 0.09 hectares per capita, about a third of the global average. In 1996, it had 1.951 billion mu 130.07 million hectares, or 1.59 mu 0.11 hectares per person - a loss of 6.4 percent of the arable land in 11 years mainly to urbanisation.China's urban population is also growing fast: from 17.9 percent of the total population in 1978 to 43.9 percent in 2006. The government is aiming for 70 percent by 2050, about average for a "relatively developed country".A survey in 145 cities by the Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research under the China Academy of Sciences showed 70 percent of new construction in large and medium-sized cities is on arable land. "The figure is 80.9 percent in some western areas," says Chen.China reported 7,438 square km of urban area in 1981 and 32,521 square km in 2005, a 340-percent increase in 25 years.Meanwhile, the ministry of agriculture says the country will need 1.824 billion mu 121.6 million hectares of farmland in 2010 and 1.85 billion mu 123.33 million hectares in 2030 to achieve 95 percent self-sufficiency, meaning the farmland area must increase.However, some believe urbanisation does not necessarily bring about a reduction in farmland or lead to an impending "grain crisis". It could be attributed to "irrational urbanisation," says Chinese Academy of Social Sciences CASS researcher Li Chenggui. "Scientific urban planning could save farmland or use it more efficiently."Minister of Land and Resources Xu Shaoshi says the government must protect farmland, ensuring development takes as little farmland as possible, and use more non-farm land and improve land use efficiency.Experts believe China's two categories of land ownership are at the root of the problem. "The system is why farmland disappears so easily," Li says.Land ownership is divided into state-owned and collective-owned land. Collective-owned land, almost all rural and suburban land, is owned by the rural collective economic organisation. Farmers do not own farmland, although they have the right to use and manage it.Turning rural land into state-owned land, then into construction land, means profits.According to the national Land Administration Law, compensation for farmland appropriation for construction should be, at most, "30 times the average annual output in the previous three years".The high profits may encourage local governments to allow contractors to turn rural land into state-owned construction land, Li says.Some experts argue for only one form of ownership so the government can maintain overall control over planning, says Liu Weixin, deputy director of the Modern Urban and Rural Development Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.CASS researcher Li says grain output can also be increased through cultivation of as hybrid rice, infrastructure construction to boost output of low and medium-yield land which is about two-thirds of the arable land in China and introduction of modern farm management.This year, China could have a fifth consecutive bumper summer harvest, the longest run of bumper harvest since 1949, according to the ministry of agriculture.The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation defines food security as access for all people, at all times, to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.The peasant woman of Longkou village remembers the extreme famine from 1959 to 1961, when "all the tree bark disappeared. People had to consume the barks to survive"."Our generation have experienced hunger. We feel uneasy when we see high-yield farmland wasted," Zhou says. She keeps tending a small plot of cropland.--Xinhuadkg/jg842 Words05100738
2008-10-05 00:05:07War on Terror threat has less impact on 2008 US prez poll: Survey
Washington, Oct.3 ANI: New research from the University of California, Berkeley, indicates the war on terror has less impact on presidential popularity than it did during President Bush's first term.Contrary to earlier studies that found that the threat of terrorism favors conservative leaders, a new national field study conducted by UC Berkeley sociologists Robb Willer and Nick Adams shows that terror warnings delivered by such government agencies as the Department of Homeland Security may reduce support for John McCain among moderates or swing voters.While the survey shows that terror alerts have little, if any, influence on how self-described conservatives and liberals cast their ballots, politically moderate voters or swing voters are less likely to vote for McCain in the face of an imminent terror threat, according to a report on the survey published this week in the journal Current Research in Social Psychology.The survey found, while the war in Iraq still ranks as a major concern, the economy is a greater priority than the "war on terror."The survey is a follow-up to Willer's earlier study at Cornell University in which he tracked 131 Gallup polls between 2001 and 2004 and found that each government-issued terror alert prompted an increase the following week in President Bush's approval rating.To test the effect of the threat of terrorism on the presidential election, Willer and Adams designed an Internet-based survey experiment funded by a National Science Foundation program for large-scale field experiments. The survey was conducted by the media research firm Knowledge Networks in late May and early June with a nationally representative group of 1,282 Americans. Of the total sample, 36 percent identified themselves as conservative; 40 percent as moderate and 24 percent as liberal.Respondents first were divided into a control group and a "threat-exposed" group and asked to rate various journalistic accounts based on their newsworthiness and importance. Both groups evaluated two articles about social welfare policy and health technology, but the "threat-exposed" group rated an additional article, adapted from The New York Times, which warned of a possible Al Quaeda attack on the United States.Respondents were then asked whom they planned to support in the 2008 election and to what degree they favored President Bush. ANI
2008-10-03 23:00:39India, Bahrain to sign healthcare agreement
INT53International/Diplomacy/HealthIndia, Bahrain to sign healthcare agreementDubai, Sep 30 IANS India and Bahrain are set to sign a bilateral agreement for the development of small and medium healthcare enterprises in that Gulf nation.Minister of State for External Affairs E. Ahamed, who was on a two-day visit to Bahrain, said that a memorandum of understanding MoU would be signed between the two countries when India's Health Minister Anbumani Ramadoss visits Bahrain."Anbumani Ramadoss may visit Bahrain soon to sign the MoU," Ahamed told reporters in Manama."The Mou will establish guidelines for recruiting doctors and nurses from India to Bahrain and encourage Bahrain's health ministry to benefit from India's surgical facilities of international standard," he added.According to Ahamed, under the terms of the proposed agreement, imports of drugs, pharmaceutical products and medical equipment from India to Bahrain will also see an increase.As for cooperation in other economic fronts, the minister said that both Bahraini and Indian businessmen have identified areas for investment. He said that Bahrain's Minister for Social Development Fatima Al Beloushi had also expressed interest in India's agriculture technology and small and medium enterprises during her visit to India earlier this year. "I have also expressed India's interest in being a party to the development of Bahrain in the science and technology realm," he said. During the course of his visit, Ahamed also met his Bahraini counterpart Nazar Al Baharna. Al Baharna said that Bahrain looked forward to India's support for various training projects. "We are ready to share the expertise of our world-class training institutes with Bahrain," Ahamed said.Bahrain is home to around 290,000 expatriate Indians.--Indo-Asian News Serviceab/mv/dg298 Words*30091523
2008-09-30 06:00:00Ethnic conflicts stoked by government intervention, not liberalisation
INT32International/ScienceEthnic conflicts stoked by government intervention, not liberalisationToronto, Sep 30 IANS Eruption of ethnic violence and social evils over the past two decades worldwide has been ascribed to globalisation and liberalisation. But a new study conducted by McGill University researchers has challenged this assumption, suggesting that violence and rebellion are instead the outcome of greater governmental intervention. Conversely, the more economically open a society is, the less likely such violence becomes, said Stephen Saideman of McGill and his former student David Steinberg. "Our study counters the idea that a liberalised economy is worse for ethnic groups. Minorities are more likely to be on the outside of the political system," explained Saideman, associate director of graduate studies in McGill department of political science."So, if the government is involved in the economy, minorities are more likely to be affected by the whims of the state than by the whims of the market."Utilising their own original research, along with the 'Minorities at Risk' dataset compiled by University of Maryland colleagues, Steinberg and Saideman showed how government intervention leads to a spiral of political competition among groups to gain control and the economic spoils it distributes."Thus groups on the outs feel threatened because they have no control, which can lead to open rebellion," Saideman said, "while those who are in power become terrified of losing control, as occurred in Serbia. Before the war the Serbs controlled a large chunk of the Yugoslav political system and it was their fear of losing it that led to war." Moreover, the researchers said, their results were reasonably consistent in virtually every society they studied, regardless of political system, according to a McGill University release."We're not just talking about command economies like the old Soviet Union or Yugoslavia," he said. "We control for regime type, so whether a country is a democracy or not, statistically and probabilistically, the more government involvement there is in the economy, the more likely ethnic conflict is.""Ironically, look at how the US government is now in the process of buying up a large hunk of the economy to bail out Wall Street," he said. "In the future, this will give people who are denied loans or who have other economic grievances an incentive to blame the government." The study was published in the current issue of International Studies Quarterly. --Indo-Asian News Servicest/dg421 Words30091258
2008-09-30 03:00:00Your personality governs your migratory preference
Washington, Sept 25 ANI: Your address can reveal a lot about your personality, according to a new study, which suggests that specific areas attract particular personality types.The study, by Markus Jokela and Liisa Keltikangas-Jarvinen from the University of Helsinki from the National Research and Development Center for Welfare and Health and Mika Kivimaki of University College London, was aimed to know if certain personality traits would influence migration patterns more so than others. For the research, the psychologists randomly selected participants from a population-based health study in Finland and studied data which spanned over nine years and included information relating to personality via self-assessment questionnaires and a variety of demographic information including where participants had lived over the nine year period.They based their study on three personality traits or temperaments: sociability people with high sociability prefer the company of others to being alone, emotionality increased emotionality indicates a tendency to experience negative emotions, especially fear and anger and activity high activity is characterized by being very active, energetic and also restless.The findings of the study indicated that personality traits determine not only where people relocate to, but also how often they move and how far away they move.It was found that people with a very active personality have a tendency to migrate, to both urban and rural locales. People who are very emotional are more likely to move away from home, but do not migrate very far and do not move very often. Emotional people tend to migrate equally to both urban and rural locations. People with very social personalities are more inclined to leave rural settings for urban areas and are more likely to migrate over long distances.According to the authors, since urban areas are densely populated, they appeal to people with high sociability traits-urban areas offer plenty of opportunities for social interaction. While very emotional people have a tendency to move away from home, the fact that they do not move often or selectively to urban locations indicates that people with this personality trait move simply because they are not content where they are. Besides, very emotional people were found to migrate over shorter distances. Emotional people may prefer shorter moves because they are less stressful compared to long distance moves and that "emotionality appears to have a dual role in migration by increasing migration probability but decreasing migration distance," said the authors.The study has implications for urban planners, neighbourhood developers and also the real estate market. A better understanding of the types of personalities a certain place attracts may improve the way housing and jobs there are marketed, as well as the types of stores that are brought into that area. Also, personality based migration may have long term consequences for a particular location."Temperament-related self-selection may also modify population structures, and in the long run, genetic variation underlying temperament differences may become differentially distributed across geographic regions," concluded the authors.The study was reported in the latest issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. ANI
2008-09-25 16:00:00Why kids from violent families are more likely to become aggressive as adults
Washington, Sept 25 ANI: Researchers from Indiana University have found why kids who grow up in an aggressive or violent household are more likely to become violent or aggressive in future relationships. The link between witnessing aggressive behaviour as a child and carrying it out as an adult has always been known but the association has not been very clear.Researchers from Indiana University's Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences wanted to find out what changes occur in a child that affect whether he or she will choose to deal with conflict in aggressive or violent ways.According to them, children who grow up in aggressive households may learn to process social information differently than their peers who grow up in non-aggressive environments. "Children with high-conflict parents are more likely to think that aggressive responses would be good ways to handle social conflicts," said John Bates, a professor of psychology in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and a co-author of the study."This partly explains why they are more likely as young adults to have conflict in their own romantic relationships," he added. According to the researchers, unlocking the developmental link between growing up in an aggressive or violent household and becoming the perpetrator of such behaviour could prove useful for stopping the cycle of violence. The study appears in the June issue of the Journal of Family Psychology. ANI
2008-09-25 16:00:00
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