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FM
Former Member

Come clean on Patil, China Paper MoUs

 

Posted By Staff Writer On December 4, 2013 @ 5:30 am In Local News | No Comments

 

Two Memoranda of Understanding for large agricultural projects which were quietly signed by the government with Indian and Chinese companies are raising disquiet as their terms have not been publicized.

Dr Rupert Roopnaraine of APNU yesterday stated that the first knowledge of dealings with the D Y Patil Group and China Paper came to his attention through reporting in the Stabroek News. He said that “with these MoUs we are of the firm belief that they need to be fully ventilated and brought to the National Assembly.”

Prior to the reportage in the last Sunday Stabroek and Monday’s Stabroek News there had been no information from the government on the details of MoUs clinched with the two companies.

Roopnaraine stated that the government and the Minister of Agriculture, Dr Leslie Ramsammy will have to answer to the dates that these deals were signed and what the specifications were. He told Stabroek News that “this is a matter that is very vexing and I’ve raised it before when the MoU with Trinidad (for food security) was signed…these things cannot be done in secret.”

From left DY Patil, former President Bharrat Jagdeo and Ajeenkya Patil at a reception in February 8, 2011 that was hosted in Jagdeo’s honour by the Patils in Mumbai. [The Times of India photo)

From left DY Patil, former President Bharrat Jagdeo and Ajeenkya Patil at a reception in February 8, 2011 that was hosted in Jagdeo’s honour by the Patils in Mumbai. (The Times of India photo)

The shadow agriculture minister stated that A Partnership for National Unity will be discussing the lack of transparency at the next shadow cabinet meeting. He said that the way in which the government conducts agreements with foreign investors and other countries needed to be scrutinized and the minister would have to answer “there has to be accountability and  these agreements should be straightforward.”

Three days after the Sunday Stabroek published that the D Y Patil Group has advanced beyond a MoU and started cultivating 65, 000 hectares of land in the Canje Basin there has been no official statement from the agriculture ministry. This newspaper has made repeated attempts to contact the ministry as well as the D Y Patil Group in relation to the terms of the MoU but to no avail.

Roopnaraine did also note that the interconnections between the D Y Patil Group’s Chairman, Dr Ajeenkya D Y Patil, and former President Bharrat Jagdeo were “very telling of the intricate web of connected interests.”

He said that APNU did not have prior knowledge that Jagdeo had received an honorary doctorate in 2011 from the same group as reported in the last Sunday Stabroek nor was he aware when Dr Ajeenkya D Y Patil and Jagdeo both received honorary doctorates from the University of Lancaster. APNU’s shadow minister stated that even Dr Ajeenkya D Y Patil’s appointment as Guyana’s Honorary Consul in Mumbai was not public knowledge.

Director General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Elisabeth Harper was reported in yesterday’s Kaieteur News as saying that this announcement was made public, however when Stabroek News contacted the ministry yesterday Harper was not available to give a specific date as to when the announcement was made. She said according to the Kaieteur News report that it was done a long time ago. To date, Stabroek News can find no trace of a press release from the ministry on the appointment.

Wikipedia also lists in Dr Patil’s resume that he was an advisor to president Jagdeo. Stabroek News has not been able to confirm this.

Roopnaraine stated that the lack of transparency in MoUs is telling of how the government chooses to conduct business. He said that the while the government was looking to foreign investors, local investors could be faced with a significant imbalance of opportunities. He noted that foreign investors are receiving incentives. The D Y Patil Group was reportedly given approval for timber logging which is much sought after by Indian and Chinese companies. The Group was also given approval for agriculture-related projects which could include dairy processing, rice milling and processing, fisheries and poultry, fruit and vegetables and sugar cane production for ethanol.

The last reference to the D Y Patil Group’s MoU from the government came in the form of a release from the Government Information Agency (GINA) on July 20, 2013 about Guyana’s potential as an agricultural investment hotspot for Middle East investors.  In the very last paragraph of the news item it was stated that the D Y Patil  group had “signed an MoU with the Government of Guyana for 65,000 hectares of land in Canje Basin to be used for agricultural-related projects, which could include dairy processing; rice milling and processing; fisheries and poultry; fruit and vegetables; and sugar cane production with ethanol and power.”

China Paper came to public notice when it advertised in local newspapers for the services of a competent local firm to provide environmental and logistical services for its operations. According to the ad in the last Sunday Stabroek, the company is seeking to develop a project in the agriculture sector in Guyana. The seeking of environmental services would suggest that China Paper has proceeded beyond the MoU.

China Paper, which is state owned under the parent company China Chengtong is into asset management, integrated logistic service, capital goods trade as well as production, development and exploitation concerning forestry, pulp and paper.

 

According to the company, its “overseas layout” concentrates in South America, Southeast Asia, Russia and other countries and regions. It says that with the support from national policies and auxiliary capital, China Paper strives to own an annual papermaking capacity of over 5 million tons and an annual pulp-making capacity of over 5 million tons and control over 10 million “mu” (Chinese acre land measurements equivalent to 1/6 of an acre) of forest lands both at home and abroad at the end of the period of the 12th Five-Year Plan, with assets, income and profit all going to new levels.

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Guyana continues slide in TI corruption ranking

 

Posted By Staff Writer On December 4, 2013 @ 5:29 am In Local News | No Comments

Guyana has slipped further down the Transparency International (TI) Corrup-tion Perception Index (CPI) after scoring an unflattering 27 out of 100 points following its assessment for this year.

The country’s ranking of 136 from a list of 177 countries was announced by the Transparency Institute of Guyana Inc (TIGI) yesterday at the Pegasus Hotel, where it was also revealed that Guyana placed 28th out of the 32 countries in the Americas and is the worst performer for all Caribbean countries with the exception of Haiti.

By contrast, Barbados scored 75 points, the highest in Caricom; The Bahamas 71; St Lucia 71; Trinidad and Tobago 38; and Jamaica 38. Suriname came in at 36 this year. It is against this backdrop that Guyana’s score of 27 is realised as worrying. And, Guyana’s poor performance this year is further compounded by the fact that the country has actually attained a worse result that what was accorded for 2012, when it scored 28 and was 133 out of 176 countries surveyed.

The methodology used by TI ranks countries from 1 to 100 after measuring perceived levels of public sector corruption. A score of 100 is reflective of the lowest perception of corruption.

Anand Goolsarran

Anand Goolsarran

Commenting on the results yesterday, chartered accountant and financial analyst Christopher Ram told Stabroek News that the results are disappointing but that he doubted that anyone will be surprised considering the many revelations of corruption made by politicians and other civil society members.

“You can’t blame the people for believing that corruption exists,” Ram said, while nothing that there are probably persons in Guyana who do not perceive a high rate of corruption, or are at least defensive on the matter.

He also said that the drop from 28 to 27 might not seem significant but argued that “any downward movement is very bad when your numbers are already low.” Guyana’s situation is cast in an even bleaker light as TI, in its report, says that any score of less than 50 indicates that a country is facing serious corruption problems. Guyana shares its score of 27 with Bangladesh, Kenya, and the Ivory Coast.

 Implications of poor score

President of TIGI Anand Goolsarran yesterday said that Guyana’s scores can bring several negative implications. Many reputable international business and other establishments, he said, have confidence in the numbers produced by TI and therefore use these indicators to determine where to invest and where to avoid investing, since operating in a corruption-wrought state can prove to be costly.

Goolsarran, a former Auditor General, also said that citizens, in their attempt to flee a state they perceive to be riddled with corruption, may migrate. “There is therefore brain-drain with the concomitant spiralling effect of not having the relevant skills to effectively manage the operations of a government. In short, high levels of corruption result in the perpetuation of weak governments,” Goolsarran said.

Alliance for Change (AFC) leader Khemraj Ramjattan, who attended the announcement yesterday, noted that high levels of corruption may also attract “non-reputable companies.” TIGI Vice President Frederick Collins affirmed Ramjattan’s point and noted that several companies have been known to bribe their way into winning contracts to conduct projects in various countries. The same thing is liable to happen here, he said, unless actions are taken against corruption.

How did we do worse?

Ram thinks that the perception of corruption in Guyana has not improved because the political will necessary to make needed changes does not exist or has not been demonstrated. The government, he said, has done little more than admit that corruption exists in Guyana.

Meanwhile, “many of the constitutionally required institutions that can impact on corruption are weakened or do not exist,” Ram told Stabroek News. The Public Procurement Commission (PPC), which has been the topic of much debate as of late, the Ombudsman’s Office, the Integrity Commission, the Whistleblower Legislation and the Access to Information Act are all either non-existent or not fully constituted.

In relation to the Integrity Commission, Goolsarran said that public officials continue to submit their returns to the commission even though it is not functioning and he said that this makes absolutely no sense. This view, he said, was expressed to the representatives from the Organisation of American States when they visited Guyana earlier this year to hear from stakeholders in various matters.

The Attorney General’s Office, he said, which is also supposed to work in the favour of the people in Guyana, cannot be taken seriously.

 Mitigating corruption

If corruption is to be prevented, Goolsarran said, Guyana must adhere to four principles. The first is referred to as the arms-length principle which demands that decision are made on merit rather on the basis of personal and other relations. “There should be no room for nepotism, fovouritism and cronyism.

The second principle, “citizens’ participation and involvement in public decision making,” will ensure that there is collective responsibility for actions taken, Goolsarran says. He believes that such a provision will minimise the perception that corruption is taking place. The final two principles require free and independent media to accompany transparent decision-making, and limitations on the use of discretionary powers.

But, just how reliable are the figures produced by TI?

Ram is of the opinion that the information released by the organisation in relation to Guyana, is valid and reliable because it was constructed from the reports of surveys carried out in Guyana by four reputable independent bodies: the World Bank (WB), the World Economic Forum, the International Country Guide, and the Global Insight Country Risk Ratings.

Explaining the processes followed by these bodies when carrying out their surveys, Goolsarran said that they frame questions; decide on sample sizes big enough to reflect the perception of the population, and use a combination of questionnaires and face to face interviews to arrive at their figures.

He said that members of the business community, general members of the public and government officials are also interviewed in an effort to generate society’s perception of corruption in Guyana. TIGI is not at all involved in the generation of the index, Goolsarran explained.

Transparency International is a global civil society organisation devoted to fighting corruption. Although the organisation defends its index, it concedes that the findings are not absolute.

 

“There is no meaningful way to assess absolute levels of corruption on the basis of hard empirical data. Possible attempts to do so, such as by comparing bribes reported, the number of prosecutions brought, or studying court cases directly linked to corruption, cannot be taken as definitive indicators of corruption levels. Instead, they show how effective prosecutors, the courts, or the media are in investigating and exposing corruption. Capturing perceptions of corruption of those in a position to offer assessments of public sector corruption is the most reliable method of comparing relative corruption levels across countries. The CPI is the most widely used indicator of corruption worldwide that guides investors, lending institutions and other interested parties in their dealings with individual countries,” TI says on its website.

FM
Originally Posted by JB:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

 

No one is as "DUTTY" as you, got it? You sleep with prostitutes and launder money. 

Gal, Don't call yourself names. Have some respect for yourself. You are God;s child. You still have time to change your DUTTY ways

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

so you not worried that the CHinese will cut down all them trees eh bai...all this time I thought you cared about Guyana

FM
Originally Posted by raymond:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

so you not worried that the CHinese will cut down all them trees eh bai...all this time I thought you cared about Guyana

That is PURE nonsense!!!!   You think we will sit and let that happen. I hope you can read an agreement and understand it's content.

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by raymond:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

so you not worried that the CHinese will cut down all them trees eh bai...all this time I thought you cared about Guyana

That is PURE nonsense!!!!   You think we will sit and let that happen. I hope you can read an agreement and understand it's content.

You never cease to impress on us how completely committed to self deception you are. The request is for clarity as to what unfold and here you are speaking of fictive agreements. Who the hell has seen the agreement you speak of? Is the complaint not that those few indo in the PPP completely believe that Guyana is there to plunder at their will? Where is the agreement and who agreed to what?

 

Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by raymond:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

so you not worried that the CHinese will cut down all them trees eh bai...all this time I thought you cared about Guyana

That is PURE nonsense!!!!   You think we will sit and let that happen. I hope you can read an agreement and understand it's content.

You never cease to impress on us how completely committed to self deception you are. The request is for clarity as to what unfold and here you are speaking of fictive agreements. Who the hell has seen the agreement you speak of? Is the complaint not that those few indo in the PPP completely believe that Guyana is there to plunder at their will? Where is the agreement and who agreed to what?

 

Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

WE RUN things Bhai. Start a Revolution nah.

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by raymond:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

so you not worried that the CHinese will cut down all them trees eh bai...all this time I thought you cared about Guyana

That is PURE nonsense!!!!   You think we will sit and let that happen. I hope you can read an agreement and understand it's content.

You never cease to impress on us how completely committed to self deception you are. The request is for clarity as to what unfold and here you are speaking of fictive agreements. Who the hell has seen the agreement you speak of? Is the complaint not that those few indo in the PPP completely believe that Guyana is there to plunder at their will? Where is the agreement and who agreed to what?

 

Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

WE RUN things Bhai. Start a Revolution nah.

I think you need to search Utube for the demise of Samuel Doe. One moment he was there with all his clan shouting about what he would do and what he is empowered to do and the next instance someone was castrating his ass and tying him behind a truck. More recent you can remember how one week, there was an image of Gaddafi taking over a half mile square and thousands chanting his name. The next week they were castrating him and torturing him. You may think you run things but people's patience run out as well

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by raymond:
Originally Posted by Nehru:

HEHEHEHE APNU talking bout CLEAN, DEM DUTTY BASTARDS!!!

so you not worried that the CHinese will cut down all them trees eh bai...all this time I thought you cared about Guyana

That is PURE nonsense!!!!   You think we will sit and let that happen. I hope you can read an agreement and understand it's content.

You never cease to impress on us how completely committed to self deception you are. The request is for clarity as to what unfold and here you are speaking of fictive agreements. Who the hell has seen the agreement you speak of? Is the complaint not that those few indo in the PPP completely believe that Guyana is there to plunder at their will? Where is the agreement and who agreed to what?

 

Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

WE RUN things Bhai. Start a Revolution nah.

We who?

FM
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

Perhaps, right in advocating nonsense.

FM
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

Perhaps, right in advocating nonsense.

being a PPP asswipe you would not grasp the seriousness of it.

FM
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

Perhaps, right in advocating nonsense.

And your point is?

FM
Originally Posted by JB:
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

Perhaps, right in advocating nonsense.

And your point is?

He is talking to the man in the mirror.

Mitwah
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by JB:
Originally Posted by Demerara_Guy:
Originally Posted by Stormborn:
Freddy is right. In the event that these cretins continue their unabated disrespect for their obligation to inform the nation of their dealings the necessity to remove them by force becomes a pressing option. Their unfettered plunder of our national hermitage cannot continue unchecked.

Perhaps, right in advocating nonsense.

And your point is?

He is talking to the man in the mirror.

It has to be 

FM

APNU and clean are mutually exclusive concepts. We who lived through the dark days of the pnc know better and have the battle scars to show. They may have changed their names from PNC to APNU, but it is the same evil folks at the helm.

FM
Originally Posted by BGurd_See:

APNU and clean are mutually exclusive concepts. We who lived through the dark days of the pnc know better and have the battle scars to show. They may have changed their names from PNC to APNU, but it is the same evil folks at the helm.

That's not entirely true. Most of them are now deified  at the helm of the PPP and paid well. Can you name them?

Mitwah

http://www.stabroeknews.com/20...with-the-government/

 

APNU’s deals with the government

Posted By Staff Writer On April 23, 2012 @ 5:01 am In Editorial | No Comments

No matter how it is parsed or spun, APNU’s deal-making last week with the PPP/C government will be seen as a continuation of the historic engagement of the duopoly that has bestridden the political landscape for the last 55 years or so and which has left the country wallowing in the backwaters of development and deeply divided.

In respect of the expectations of the  AFC, many blunt descriptions can be applied to the nature of APNU’s foray into the Office of the President when certain commitments were given and it seems that the glimmers of a deal for the passage of the 2012 budget developed. If APNU wanted its mission to OP to be described as honourable and statesman-like then it required at least a modicum of courtesy to the AFC; perhaps a discussion of what should be broached with President Ramotar or the inclusion of an AFC representative. There was inexplicably none of this. Worse, APNU appeared to want to keep this meeting a secret for as long as possible. Did APNU’s Head, Mr David Granger go to OP with his APNU cap on or as Opposition Leader? Neither capacity justifies the exclusion of the AFC. Mr Granger would no doubt understand that wherever he goes these days he is first and foremost the Leader of the Opposition and that entails representing not only the views of APNU MPs but the AFC’s MPs. In a consultative democracy representation requires consultation at the minimum with the various groups, in this case, the AFC and the constituents of APNU.  APNU’s shutting out of the AFC is just as crass as the government’s disdain for the opposition parties in the 9th Parliament.

APNU undoubtedly has complete freedom of action but its constituency would no doubt counsel that this freedom be exercised wisely, judiciously and honourably. For the first time since 1992, the opposition has been gifted – via the elections results – with the opportunity to hold the blatant excesses of PPP/Civic governance in check. The clearest and most uncomplicated way for that to be accomplished is by means of a common agenda subscribed to by the two opposition parties and then presented to the government for mature discussion. The clearest and most viable mechanism through which this joint programme could be achieved is the expressing of the 33 opposition votes in Parliament as compared to the government’s 32. Reducing this equation to 33, 26 and seven is pure senselessness.

Just months after the elections, APNU has managed to undermine whatever solidarity existed with the AFC and it now has a lot of repair work to do.  Further, it has `tied bundle’ with a notoriously untrustworthy dialogue partner in the PPP/C whose recalcitrance, prevarication and backsliding have been well established particularly in the last decade. The failed Jagdeo-Hoyte and the Jagdeo-Corbin talks are a stark testament to the failure of our politicians at the highest levels. What happens if these talks between APNU and the government fall apart? Wouldn’t APNU have to recombine its 26 with the AFC’s seven? What sense does the separation at this early point make at all except if there was a larger deal on the table e.g. a government of national unity as APNU wants but even then the AFC would still have to be involved? Whatever epiphany APNU conjured up of the Ramotar administration, it has embarked upon a course that will lead to harsh judgements from its constituency and other stakeholders if expected radical reforms aren’t evident in reasonable time. The majority which voted against the PPP/C’s record would have done so for many reasons foremost among which would have been the twisted governance, corruption, shady deals, a stagnant economy and the enriching of a select few while poverty remains insidious in parts of the country.

No doubt APNU’s engagement with the government could lead to the passage of the 2012 budget. That would be a positive development for the country but would it be a budget shorn of the wastage, unaffordable employment contracts and ill-advised deals? This was what the AFC appeared to be trying to do by seeking cuts of the budgets of various ministries. These proposed cuts appeared to have given APNU cold feet after the engineered protest in the vicinity of Parliament or there might have been  some other factor that drove the meeting earlier in the day between APNU and the government. It must be said that the government and its ministers engaged in the most shameless exaggeration and scaremongering about the planned cuts, intimidating public servants into protests. The AFC initiative was clearly not targeting the humble cleaners, drivers and messengers and those qualified to earn what they are earning. It was targeting the questionable contracts of several dozen contract employees who have been conveniently hidden among other contract employees precisely to avoid exposure.  APNU, however, cut the AFC initiative off at the knees even though it was reported to have given tacit approval the day before.

No one is suggesting that the opposition holds the government to ransom over the budget but by the same token the opposition should by all means use the instruments available to it in the budget approval process to achieve its objectives. The consideration of the estimates provides for this exactly and this is the point at which APNU and the AFC should have trimmed wherever it was deemed necessary. APNU has clearly lost the plot.

As to the deals reached so far, APNU has already trumpeted a commitment from the government to hike old-age pensions from $8,100 per month to $10,000. This is commendable but came only after the government had offered a measly $600 increase on $7,500. What sort of government offers an increase of $600 to the impecunious and then more than triples that figure as an inducement for political support? It is the same type of cynical governance that APNU and the AFC should be trying to rein in.

There is already great discord over what was reputedly agreed in relation to electricity tariffs for Linden. Prime Minister Hinds and Mr Granger have differed already over whether tariffs will go up in July. The increase in tariffs has also been linked to three issues: the age-old dust nuisance, more small loans financing via the Linden Enterprise Network and access to more television. This was quite hare-brained negotiating by APNU as the government had already been under immense pressure to deliver all three of these and would have had to. Surely APNU should have sought some other concession.

Further, by agreeing with the government that television service would be expanded in Linden, APNU and the Leader of the Opposition have wittingly or unwittingly given the green light to the radio licences hurriedly and improperly assigned by former President Jagdeo last year. It had been sensibly argued that the opposition should bless no change to the broadcasting spectrum until a new and independent  broadcast authority is in place and this authority would then make the decisions. The government can now properly argue that APNU has agreed to the Linden television expansion under the same framework that former President Jagdeo operated under last year.

APNU and the government may well continue this engagement but the real test will be when the really serious questions arise. Was Mr Henry Greene’s departure one of the outputs of this engagement? If so, it is another public relations disaster for APNU as he has completely escaped any accountability for his abuse of office. What is APNU’s view on this? What will happen when the former president’s benefits Acts comes up for review in parliament? Will an APNU MP mysteriously miss that session of Parliament or will all of APNU backtrack? What of this long-talked about probe of the Roger Khan era, CLICO, the Skeldon factory fiasco, the public procurement commission and myriad other issues? What of the reforms of GECOM?

APNU, its member groups and its members clearly have much pondering to do before they go farther down this road.

FM

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