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Officials say Fingerprints Tie Tunisian to Berlin Attack

This undated picture provided by Najoua Amri on Thursday, Dec. 22, 2016, shows the fugitive Tunisian suspected in Berlin's deadly Christmas market attack, Anis Amri, posing at his parents' house in Oueslatia, central Tunisia. (Courtesy Najoua Amri to AP)

BERLIN — German officials presented mounting evidence Thursday that Anis Amri was behind the wheel of a truck that smashed into a Christmas market in Berlin, killing 12, as authorities across Europe pressed ahead with their feverish manhunt for the 24-year-old Tunisian, who has evaded capture since the attack.

Police raided properties in Berlin and the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia where Amri is believed to have spent time. They also swooped on a bus in the southwestern city of Heilbronn after receiving a tip that turned up nothing.

Police: Truck Attack That Killed 12 in Berlin ‘Intentional’

No arrests were made, said Frauke Koehler, a spokeswoman for federal prosecutors.

Even so, investigators were increasingly confident that Amri carried out the rampage after finding his fingerprints in the cab of the truck that had been hijacked shortly before Monday’s attack.

“We can tell you today that there are additional indications that this suspect is with high probability really the perpetrator,” Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said after visiting the Federal Criminal Police Office along with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

“Fingerprints were found in the cab, and there are other, additional indications that suggest this,” he told reporters. “It is all the more important that the search is successful as soon as possible.”

German authorities have been on the defensive after it emerged that Amri had been considered a potential threat for months, subjected to surveillance and put in pre-deportation detention in August only to be released again due to paperwork problems.

The fact that the attack is alleged to have been carried out by a man who came to Germany seeking asylum last year also prompted fresh criticism of Merkel’s decision to allow hundreds of thousands of migrants into the country without thorough security checks.

While police have noted that most migrants are law-abiding, a number of high-profile crimes, including the New Year’s Eve assaults in Cologne and several violent attacks over the summer have stoked anti-migrant feeling in Germany. Two attacks in July, along with the truck attack in Berlin, were claimed by the Islamic State group.

“We have made great efforts in recent years to better prepare for terrorist threats,” Merkel told reporters. “This makes me confident that we will withstand the test that we now face.”

While members of Merkel’s party have called for tighter asylum laws and a crackdown on potential extremists in the wake of the attack, the chancellor appealed once more for calm.

“I want to say how very proud I’ve been in recent days that the great majority of people have reacted soberly,” she said.

At the site of the bloodbath, Berliners made a show of defiance. Vendors reopened their stalls at the Christmas market next to the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church even as police placed concrete blocks by the roadside to provide extra security.

In tribute to the victims, organizers decided to do without festive music and bright lights. Berliners and visitors placed candles and flowers at a makeshift shrine for the victims .

Berlin’s state Health Ministry raised the number of injured in the attack to 56, saying some victims went to hospitals on their own.

The agency said 12 people were being treated for severe injuries, with some still in critical condition. Another 14 people with less-serious injuries remained hospitalized and 30 others had been discharged.

German authorities have offered a reward of 100,000 euros ($105,000) for information leading to Amri’s arrest, but they warned he could be “violent and armed.”

In Tunisia, Amri’s brothers spoke to The Associated Press, urging him to surrender to authorities. “Whether he did it or not, I ask him to report to the police. We are suffering because of him,” said Abdelkader Amri.

Another brother, Walid, said Amri may have been radicalized in prison in Italy, where he went after leaving Tunisia in the wake of the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings.

Italy’s Justice Ministry confirmed reports that Amri was repeatedly transferred among Sicilian prisons for bad conduct, with prison records saying he bullied inmates and tried to spark insurrections. He served 3½ years for setting a fire at a refugee center and making threats, among other things — but Italy apparently detected no signs that he was becoming radicalized.

Amri’s mother, Nour El Houda Hassani, insisted he had shown no signs of radicalization and questioned whether he was really the market attacker. Speaking in the central Tunisian town of Oueslatia, she said poverty drove Amri to steal and to travel illegally to Europe.

“I want the truth to be revealed about my son,” she said. “If he is the perpetrator of the attack, let him assume his responsibilities and I’ll renounce him before God. If he didn’t do anything, I want my son’s rights to be restored.”

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Christmas Day Bomb Plot Foiled, 5 Detained in Australia

Police accompany a woman as they attend the scene where a house was raided on Friday at Meadow Heights in Melbourne, Australia. Photo: Julian Smith / AAP Image via AP

CANBERRA, Australia — Police in Australia have detained five men suspected of planning a series of Christmas Day bomb attacks in the heart of the country’s second-largest city, officials said Friday.

The suspects had been inspired by the Islamic State group and planned attacks on Melbourne’s Flinders Street train station, neighboring Federation Square and St. Paul’s Cathedral, Victoria state Police Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton said.

The arrests came after a truck smashed into a Christmas market in Berlin on Monday, killing 12 people. A manhunt is underway for the person behind that attack, which prompted increases in security around the world.

Two of seven people initially arrested in raids Thursday night and Friday morning in Melbourne — a 26-year-old man and a 20-year-old woman — were released without being charged, police said.

Five men between the ages 21 and 26 remained in custody and would be charged later Friday with preparing a terrorist attack. They were not identified but police said four were born in Australia and the fifth was Egyptian-born with Egyptian and Australian citizenship.

Police had been watching the alleged plotters for some time, and believed they were preparing to use explosives, knives and a gun, Ashton said.

Police believed the threat had been neutralized through the raids on five Melbourne premises, he said.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said: “This is one of the most substantial terrorist plots that have been disrupted over the last several years.”

“Islamist terrorism is a global challenge that affects us all. But we must not be cowed by the terrorists,” Turnbull told reporter.

“We will continue to go about our lives as we always have. What these criminals seek to do is to kill. But they also seek to frighten us, to cow us into abandoning our Australian way of life. They want to frighten Australians. They want to divide Australians. They want us to turn on each other. We will not let them succeed,” he added.

Since Australia’s terrorist threat level was elevated in September 2014, the government says there have been four extremist attacks and 12 plots foiled by police.

Australian Federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin said the plotters had moved very quickly from a plan to develop a capability to attack.

“In terms of events that we have seen over the past few years in Australia, this certainly concerns me more than any other event that I’ve seen,” Colvin said.

“We believe that we have removed the bulk of this particular cell, this group,” he said.

Victoria state Premier Daniel Andrews said there will be extra police on the streets of Melbourne on Christmas Day to make the public feel safe.

About 400 police officers were involved in the raids.

Ashton described those arrested as “self-radicalized” and inspired by Islamic State propaganda.

Story: Rod McGuirk

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Free Expressways, Motorways for One Week

A Si Rat Expressway toll plaza in 2012. Photo: David McKelvey / Flickr

BANGKOK — Drive through toll booths like a bandit for one week to celebrate the new year.

The cabinet approved exempting tollway fees in and around the capital city including Route  7 (Bangkok – Chonburi Motorway), Route 9 (Bang Pa-In – Bang Phli Motorway), the Si Rat Expressway and more.

No tolls will be collected for seven days from midnight Dec. 29 through midnight Jan. 4.

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Renowned Photographer Axed for Plagiarizing Royal Photos

Photo: Anuchai Secharunputong / Facebook

BANGKOK A man’s suspicion over a photo he saw at a fair earlier this month led to the outing of a world-renowned photographer for plagiarizing photos of the royal family.

The Royal Photographic Society announced Wednesday it had kicked out Anuchai Secharunputong after being found guilty of plagiarizing a series of photos from the 60th anniversary of King Bhumibol’s accession to the throne a decade ago. Anuchai was accused of using the photos without consent and adding his own watermarks.

One of the most popular pictures shows King Bhumibol waving and standing next to Queen Sirikit on June 9, 2006, at the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall. Anuchai, 51, admitted last week the photo wasn’t his and apologized.

He said it happened when he was assigned to retouch some photographs which he then passed off as his own.

“A friend who I respect warned me that the [photo] was his. Therefore, to avoid conflict regarding the picture, I must declare I retouched the photo and [it] belongs to Rachot Visalarnkul,” Anuchai wrote.

The controversy began on the Pantip forum, where a man who went to an annual photo fair earlier became suspicious about a framed picture he thought to be Anuchai’s hanging in a Sony booth.

A famous photo of King Bhumibol and Queen Sirikit from June 9, 2006, at the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall was at the center of a controversy over a photographer who claimed it as his own.
A famous photo of King Bhumibol and Queen Sirikit from June 9, 2006, at the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall was at the center of a controversy over a photographer who claimed it as his own.

That struck him as odd because he knew Anuchai shot on a Canon camera. A staffer told him Anuchai did not take the photo.

Kittisak Panmanee, a former photographic society member involved in the 2006 celebrations, then confirmed Anuchai was not one of the two photographers who could have taken the image. Rachot was.

Anuchai’s work has been recognized by many advertising distinctions including the Cannes Lion, Clio Awards, Andy Awards and Asia-Pacific Advertising Festival.

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Calls for Justice Answered by Social Media in 2016

Justice is a rare commodity susceptible to malleable laws, uniforms, wealth and family connections.

But the rise of social media in recent years, for all its flaws, has given the public a powerful tool to draw attention to their grievances and sometimes prompt action by occasionally indifferent authorities.

Got scammed by a resort or hotel? Out them on Pantip. Some meth methods to your van driver’s road rage? Post a clip to YouLike. Police not taking your assault claim seriously? Get a hashtag trending.

In many cases netizens simply post videos, images or stories publicly onto Facebook and wait for them to go viral, drawing attention to the latest outrageous crimes or injustices. The social pressure proves effective when organizations risk losing face by not taking action.

Here are some of the year’s stories you probably wouldn’t have heard about were it not for social media.

1
Police on May 3 escort six of the suspects to criminal court where the judges ordered them to be remanded.

When six men allegedly murdered a disabled street vendor in broad daylight, police allowed them to go to the hospital instead of arresting them. Four of the suspects were sons of police officers, but when horrifying video of the abject cruelty of what happened that day went viral, they were quickly arrested, charged and jailed to await trial.

2
Rescue workers on March 16 show caning marks on a 4-year-old girl’s body who was reportedly beaten by her stepfather and mother in Pathum Thani province.

Domestic violence remains all too common. While the majority of such crimes are believed to go unreported and unpunished, videos or images of such sometimes end up online of things like a man stomping a 7 year old, a mother beating her daughter and a teacher disfiguring his student. The ensuing outrage forces the authorities to take action. Whether justice is served remains open for debate.

3
Image: Karen Humor / Facebook

Tired of the potholes in a road near her home in Tak province, a 22-year-old Karen woman took a bath in one and shared the photos online. It worked. Suddenly her road maintenance issue was a national issue, and the officials who ignored complaints vowed to take action.

4
Soldiers posted outside an army auditorium where civilians were being brought in for ‘attitude adjustment’ one day after the coup on May 23, 2014, in Bangkok.

The military is a powerful institution that sometimes seems above the law. But this year a video of a drill sergeant caning a recruit prompted an investigation, and another video showing a colonel threatening a family in the Deep South led to his abrupt transfer.

5
Mudasir Slatasoh, a political science student at Prince of Songkhla University, posted this animated gif with the words ‘Graab my car.’

Road rage, arrogant celebrities and smartphone cameras: a recipe for a perfect social media storm. That’s exactly what happened when television host Acharanat “Nott” Ariyaritwikol punched a motorcyclist who struck his Mini Countryman on a Bangkok road, and then made him prostrate, or graab, in apology to his beloved car. Society’s near-universal shaming cost Nott his job and saw him charged with assault.

6
A pre-censored photo said to show Saroj going to meet boy at Terminal 21 posted by Troll Students of Suankularb

Instead of complaining to school administrators about the child pornography their science teacher was tweeting, a group of students at Suan Kularb, the kingdom’s oldest and most prestigious all-boys public school, exposed him as a predator who actively sought out sex with underage boys. Their evidence against him included screenshots of him boasting of sex with minors and going to a meeting they arranged at a shopping mall. Saroj was suspended, put under investigation and charged with sexually abusing minors.

7
The singer of famous Korean boy band Ok Taec-yeon, being refused by a Bangkok taxi driver in a Dec. 14, 2014 file photo. Photo: Ok Taec-yeon / Twitter

Meanwhile, viral videos exposing the explosively violent road rage incidents involving bad taxi drivers – a perennial topic – seemed to win swifter responses than filing complaints to the bureaucracy.

8
Dead cats discovered Aug. 16 in the east Bangkok apartment of Panuwat Singhsahat.

Animal abuse has been a reliable trigger for social media rage for some years. But thanks to a stronger animal welfare law and internet-based animal rights activists, police have no longer shrugged it off or issued limp fines. A former politician was charged with shooting a “7-Eleven dog,” and most notoriously, police arrested a motorcycle taxi who smashed at least nine kittens to death thanks to tips from online cat lovers. Panuwat Singhsahat was sentenced to 18 months in jail for animal cruelty.

9
Jenphop Viraporn walks to his family car on Nov. 14 as he leaves the Ayutthaya Provincial Court.

Two graduate students were on their way to their university north of Bangkok – one to complete his dissertation and the other to apply for a pilgrimage to India – when their car was rear-ended at a speed of 200kph by millionaire businessman Jenphop Viraporn. Moments later they were burned alive when their car burst into flames. It looked as though police would let Jenphop off the hook until social media began seething after the lead investigator went on national television to clumsily defend the decision not to test his sobriety. National police took over, suspended the officers involved, and now Jenphop is on trial.

Funny Money: Alleged Dollar Counterfeiting Ring Busted in Bang Kapi

Police display counterfeited U.S. dollars seized from a suspected forgery ring on Wednesday in Bangkok’s Bang Kapi district.

BANGKOK — Thai police arrested five alleged counterfeiters in a joint operation with the U.S. Secret Service, seizing USD$154,400 worth of forged American banknotes Wednesday in Bangkok’s Bang Kapi district.

Police conducted a sting operation that led to the arrest of four Thais and one foreign national, along with the seizure of counterfeiting materials and equipment they suspect may be linked to other such operations in the kingdom.

“We got reports of a large amount of counterfeit dollars, so we worked together with the U.S. Secret Service to find them, said Maj. Nattapol Rattanamongkolsak from the Crime Suppression Division.

Though the U.S. Secret Service is mostly known for protecting American heads of state and their families, it is also tasked with investigating counterfeiting.

Those arrested Wednesday morning were Tatchanan Kuns, 48, Panisra Techaisradech, 47, Kittipong Yanawanthanapong, 43, Natchapattarapong Yaempradit, 55, and Jean Jules Tenker, 45 of Cameroon. Officers also seized 1,534 counterfeit $100 bills, forged documents, mobile phones and chemicals used for producing the fake cash.

Cameroonian suspect Jean Jules Tenker was arrested Wednesday morning on suspicion of counterfeiting U.S. currency.
Cameroonian suspect Jean Jules Tenker was arrested Wednesday morning on suspicion of counterfeiting U.S. currency.

After the counterfeit ring was traced to Bang Kapi, police placed an order for 10,000 $100 dollar bills at 1,100 baht each. They set up the buy to go down at a Makro store in the same area.

At the meetup, Maj. Nattapol said that Tatchanan and Tenker brought the counterfeit notes in liquor boxes, at which point they were arrested. Police then arrested Panisra and Kittipong at the restaurant of a nearby hotel who were waiting for the deal to be completed.

The four arrested reportedly told police they acquired the bills from Natchapattarapong, who they said is known in the counterfeiting world as “Ajarn Toang” because he is a university professor in the northeast.

Nattapol said police then asked Panisra to order more bills from Natchapattarapong, who was arrested when he came to the hotel to deliver them Wednesday night. Police found the counterfeiting equipment in his apartment in the Khlong Chan area.

Police said the suspects confessed to counterfeiting U.S. dollars for many years. Natchapattarapong was their link to international counterfeiting gangs due to his English-language skills.

All four will be charged with counterfeiting.

“We believe the ajarn still has links to other counterfeiting rings in the country,” Nattapol said Thursday. “We will continue investigating.”

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A Free-Spirited February at Gypsy Carnival

Gypsy Carnival 2016 in an image posted Feb. 6. Photo: Gypsy Carnival / Facebook

RATCHABURI — The butterflies are calling, it’s time to free the spirit to nature at an outdoor fest just two hours from Bangkok.

Camp out on the grass with a of the hills and listen to music in February at the second edition of Gypsy Carnival.

For 2017 the festival’s free-spirit highlights include Modern Dog, Greasy Cafe, Polycat and reggae-ska guru T-Bone.

Off stage will be will be games, a fair, flea market, picnic zone and children’s playground. Night owls can enjoy the campfire stage, where acoustic music will lull audiences through the night.

Tickets are 1,200 baht, plus another 500 baht to 1,000 baht for a camping spot. More information can be found online.

The festival starts from 10am and goes late Feb. 18 at Tonphung Farm in Ratchaburi province’s Suan Phung district. A round-trip van service between Bangkok and the venue can be purchased for 650 baht at ThaiTicketMajor. The van leaves at 10am from Maleenont Tower on Rama IV Road.

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40 Students Injured as Bus Driver Dozes Off at Wheel

Students receive first aid after their bus crashed in Khamphaeng Phet city early Thursday morning.

KAMPHAENG PHET — At least 40 students were injured when their bus overturned and crashed early Thursday morning in Kamphaeng Phet city. The driver told police he fell asleep.

At about 4am, the Bangkok-bound bus was carrying almost 50 students from King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Ladkrabang from a camp in Chiang Mai province when it left the road and crashed through a roadside statue shop.

Several students were seriously injured and taken to a hospital for treatment, according to Capt. Chakrapong Jainakrob of Kamphaeng Phet police.

Driver Banchoed Boonchan had not yet been charged as of Thursday morning, Chakrapong said. The 42-year-old driver told police he felt sleepy and nodded off since there was no backup driver.

Chakrapong said the bus was among four carrying approximately 200 students.

Debris of the shattered statues where the bus came to a stop Thursday morning.
Debris of the shattered statues where the bus came to a stop Thursday morning.
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Of Pokemon and Creepy Dolls: The Trendiest Trends of 2016

Sunday was both a national constitutional referendum and Pokemon Go’s first full day of release. Many chose to spend their day chasing Pokemon, as these players in Korat.

While the world churned, many of us kept busy finding new obsessions to keep us happy.

As the Year of the Monkey passes and past fads like craft beer and food trucks fade into memory to join the likes of donuts and charcoal food, new addictions emerged through our smartphones, wallets or stomachs.

1Haunted Child Dolls

It wasn’t new, and it didn’t stay long. But for a few weeks, one of the more bizarre fads to burn the psyche was everywhere.

Luk Thep, or child spirit dolls, were minor thing of 2015. When a budget airline announced they could fly as passengers, they exploded in the imagination and national media. Soon the dolls, which cost up to 100,000 baht and are consecrated with black magic, were everywhere and even drew international attention. Students brought them into classrooms, hotels banned them and before long young, female luk thep were being exploited as drug mules.

Fortunately the trend died after a few weeks. But this led to a new problem, as the life-like dolls – believed to contain a child’s soul – could not be thrown away. Those unsold or abandoned by their humans were abandoned at local temples like they were stray animals. Soon major temples such as Wat Phai Lom and Wat Sawang Arom in Nakhon Pathom province were stuck with up to 10,000 luk thep dolls.

2Pokemon Go

A powerful, imported drug cooked up in a San Francisco lab arrived mid-year to devastate communities nationwide.

Nothing hit the smartphone-toting youth of Thailand this year quite like Pokemon Go. When the GPS-powered, augmented-reality game launched in July, it was an instant hit and national productivity plummeted as millions discovered “outdoors,” a place where they could catch’em all.

Suddenly the under-35 world was divided between dedicated Pikachu hunters and anti-Pokemon Go haters who said “Get a life!” Feeling insecure about an obsession they couldn’t fathom, government officials were quick to take action – despite their inability to do anything about it – threatening to “ban” the game unless its maker obey their demands that certain locations be made Pokemon-free.

To the surprise of no one, the developer ignored them, but by that time the fad had faded almost as quickly as it came.

3Facebook Live

One of many Facebook live broadcasts on a live map.


It was a great year for couch potatoes, who no longer needed to go out to experience concerts or events only to meet friends complaining about traffic or the government.

Facebook launched its livestreaming service in March, and the nation didn’t look back.

Suddenly everyone was livestreaming what they were eating, dancing, seeing, playing, discussing or selling. It made everyone a reporter and drove huge online engagement, what today’s media calls “organic reach.” New media jumped on the bandwagon also, using it to bring audiences to street protests and swing-dance parties. Some reporters even combined their Pokemon and Facebook Live passions and called it “work.”

4Malls Grow Up, Go ‘Community’

Photo: The Commons / Thonglor

Love or hate them, a lot of us went to malls. But in response to changing tastes and shoppers suffering CentralBurnout, some developers are building more human spaces like the six community malls which opened in the capital. Massive investments went into spaces where mallrats can escape the same-old-same-old vibes to eat, drink and chill.

First there was The Commons on Soi Thonglor 17. The four-story complex skipped chains like KFC, McDonalds and Starbucks in favor of independent food artisans. Same down the street at Soi 4, where Maze Thonglor gained fame for fairy tale-themed bar Mocking Tales. Night owls got The Street Ratchada, a loft-style mall open 24 hours for late-studying students and after-party washouts feeding at Foodland’s Tuk la Dee. Bangkok’s nightlife got an upgrade with Beam, which is located in 72 Courtyard, also on Thonglor. Pet culture continued to spread, and Habito Mall on Soi Sukhumvit 77 opened in August as a trendy place for people and their fluffy buddies to roam. The #SlowLife set got the lush Naiipa Art Complex in the heart of Phra Khanong, where they can enjoy a quiet afternoon coffee under some shade.

5Goodbye Honey Toast, Hello Bingsu!

Photo: Snow Wish Bingsu Cafe’ / Facebook

History has proven that importing something sweet for sale at Siam Paragon is a surefire way to guarantee long queues and a feeding frenzy.

Our stomach were in for many treats this year. After digesting honey toast and drooling over Ben & Jerry’s ice-cream and Pablo Cheesetart, dessert lovers decided Korean-style shaved ice was the 2016’s Most Valuable Flavor.

It was a perfect storm combining our love of fads, Siam Paragon aircon, sweet things, social media and – most of all – craziness for anything Korean.

The Bingsu trend turned into a snowy-sweet treat blizzard also because it’s a dessert made for Instagram and Facebook feeds. Just look at it.

While Thai Bingsu offers the same strawberries, cheesecake, brownies and Oreo toppings found elsewhere, try some local flavors such as mango, durian and Thai tea.

Photo: Mama Bingsu / Facebook
Photo: Mama Bingsu / Facebook

Mongolia Says Dalai Lama Will Not be Allowed Future Visits

Dalai Lama speaks at the Janraiseg temple of Gandantegchinlen monastery in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Photo: Ganbat Namjilsangarav / AP.

ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia — Mongolia’s foreign minister says the Dalai Lama will no longer be allowed to visit his country after a visit by the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader prompted protests from China and a suspension of talks on a major loan.

China’s foreign ministry said Wednesday that it “attached importance” to the Mongolian diplomat’s statement and hoped the country would “honor the commitment” it has made on the issue.

On Tuesday, the Mongolian newspaper Unuudur carried remarks by Foreign Minister Tsend Munkh-Orgil that the Dalai Lama would not be allowed to visit Mongolia even on religious grounds.

Beijing accuses the Dalai Lama of seeking to split Tibet from China.

Mongolia’s economy is heavily dependent on China. The countries are discussing a possible $4.2 billion loan by Beijing to deal with a recession.

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