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Daughter of Pakistan, Malala Yousafzai sent to U.K.

Young activist, 14, wounded in targeted Taliban shooting

  • A supporter of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement reacts
  • Supporters of the Pakistani political party Muttahida Qaumi Movement chant prayers in support of 14-year-old schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, who was shot in the head by the Taliban for speaking out in support of education for women, at the party headquarters in Karachi, Pakistan, Oct. 10, 2012. (Shakil Adil/AP)

Pakistan sent a 14-year-old activist who was shot and seriously wounded by the Taliban to the United Kingdom for treatment Monday, saying she would require prolonged care to fully recover from the physical and psychological effects of the attack.

The shooting of Malala Yousufzai and two of her classmates as they were returning home from school in Pakistan’s northwest on Oct. 9 has horrified people inside and outside the country. Tens of thousands rallied in Pakistan’s largest city on Sunday to support her.

She was shot by the Taliban for promoting girls’ education and criticizing the militant group.

Malala flew out of Pakistan on Monday morning in a specially equipped air ambulance provided by the United Arab Emirates, said the Pakistani military, which has been treating the young girl at one of its hospitals.

A panel of doctors decided to send Malala to a centre in the United Kingdom “which has the capability to provide integrated care to children who have sustained severe injury,” said the military in a statement sent to reporters.

Malala, who was shot in the head, will need to repair damaged bones in her skull and will require intensive “neuro rehabilitation,” said the military. The decision to send the girl abroad was taken in consultation with her family, and the Pakistani government will pay for her treatment.

Bullet removed from body

Pakistani military doctors earlier removed a bullet from Malala’s body and were able to stabilize her condition.

The rally in the southern port city of Karachi on Sunday was the largest show of support yet for the girl. Some Pakistanis have expressed hope that the government would respond to the attack against her by intensifying its fight against the Taliban and their allies.

Malala Yousufzai, a 14-year-old schoolgirl who was wounded in a gun attack, has been transferred to the U.K. for treatment.Malala Yousufzai, a 14-year-old schoolgirl who was wounded in a gun attack, has been transferred to the U.K. for treatment.(Reuters)

But protests against the shooting have been relatively small until now, usually attracting no more than a few hundred people. That response pales in comparison to the tens of thousands of people who held violent protests in Pakistan last month against a film produced in the United States that denigrated Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Demonstrations in support of Malala — and against rampant militant violence in the country in general — have also been fairly small compared to those focused on issues such as U.S. drone attacks and the NATO supply route to Afghanistan that runs through Pakistan.

Right-wing Islamic parties and organizations in Pakistan that regularly pull thousands of supporters into the streets to protest against the U.S. have less of an incentive to speak out against the Taliban. They share a desire to impose Islamic law in the country — even if they may disagree over the Taliban’s violent tactics.

Pakistan’s mainstream political parties are also often more willing to harangue the U.S. than direct their people power against Islamist militants shedding blood across the country — partly out of fear and partly because they rely on Islamist parties for electoral support.

One of the exceptions is the political party that organized Sunday’s rally in Karachi, the Muttahida Quami Movement. The party’s chief, Altaf Hussain, criticized both Islamic and other mainstream political parties for failing to organize rallies to protest the attack on Malala.

‘Daughter of the nation’

He called the Taliban gunmen who shot the girl “beasts” and said it was an attack on “the ideology of Pakistan.”

“Malala Yousufzai is a beacon of knowledge. She is the daughter of the nation,” Hussain told the audience by telephone from London, where he is in self-imposed exile because of legal cases pending against him in Pakistan. His party is strongest in Karachi.

Many of the demonstrators carried the young girl’s picture and banners praising her bravery and expressing solidarity.

Malala earned the enmity of the Pakistani Taliban for publicizing their behaviour when they took over the northwestern Swat Valley, where she lived, and for speaking about the importance of education for girls.

The group first started to exert its influence in Swat in 2007 and quickly extended its reach to much of the valley by the next year. They set about imposing their will on residents by forcing men to grow beards, preventing women from going to the market and blowing up many schools — the majority for girls.

Malala wrote about these practices in a journal for the BBC under a pseudonym when she was just 11. After the Taliban were pushed out of the Swat Valley in 2009 by the Pakistani military, she became even more outspoken in advocating for girls’ education. She appeared frequently in the media and was given one of the country’s highest honours for civilians for her bravery.

Many hope the shooting of Malala will help push the military to undertake a long-awaited offensive in the Pakistani Taliban’s last main sanctuary in the country in the North Waziristan tribal area.

The Pakistani Taliban said they carried out the shooting because Malala was promoting “Western thinking.” Police have arrested at least three suspects in connection with the attack, but the two gunmen who carried out the shooting remain at large.

Last Updated: Oct 15, 2012 3:00 AM ET

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Princess of Peace Malala’s Legacy for All Humanity-The Brutes also hurt Kainat (the Universe). How Ironic?

 
Kainat (her name means the Universe), is another victim of Malala’s assassins. How ironic! 
These brutes not only hurt Malala (the Wise), but also, hurt Kainat (the Universe), and Shazia (the Unique). How true, they hurt the whole human family, by attacking our wisdom, hurting our universe, and trying to destroy our unique yearning for peace. We humans forgot our differences of religion, race, class, or social status around the globe. We were all hurt. Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, and Seculars were one in our grief. A little Gul Makai from remote corner of Swat, united whole of Mankind, because she was an Ambassador for Peace and reflected the best in Humanity. If you take away the clayers which divide us like nationality, race, religion, underneath lies our humanity. We all wept as one race, the only race, the Human Race. One for All and All for One. Let this be Malala’s Legacy for Humanity. She is our Princess of Peace.
Military says Malala is making “satisfactory progress”, as teenage activist shot by Taliban struggles for life.

Our Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by the Taliban is in critical condition and has slim chances of recovering, a source in the hospital where she is being treated has told Al Jazeera.

The source said on Sunday the next 12 hours were critical for 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai, who is hospitalised in the city of Rawalpindi.

Yousafzai has “very limited chance of life left”, said the source, declining to be identified because he is not authorised to speak to the media.

“[The] face and head swelled alot. Face complexion [has] become dark. She could be removed from ventilator within a few hours,” he said.

The Pakistani military said on Saturday that Malala’s condition was stable. The military spokesperson said that “she was making steady and satisfactory progress, and possibilities of transfer overseas were still being considered”.

A specially equipped air ambulance provided by the UAE has been kept as a contingency in case, board of doctors overseeing her, decide to shift her abroad.

The shooting of Yousafzai, who campaigned for the right for women to have an education, has been denounced worldwide and by the Pakistani authorities, who have offered a reward of more than $100,000 for the capture of her attackers.

‘Satisfactory’ progress

The military earlier said Yousafzai’s “vitals are okay” although they said she was on ventilator.

“A board of doctors is continuously monitoring her condition,” the army said.

Raja Pervez Ashraf, prime minister, visited Malala on Friday, paying tribute to her and two friends who were also wounded when a gunman boarded their school bus on Tuesday and opened fire.


“It was not a crime against an individual but a crime against humanity and an attack on our national and social values,” he told reporters, pledging renewed vigour in Pakistan’s struggle with fanatical militancy.

Kainat (the Universe), one of the other two girls injured in the attack, is in a stable condition and is expected to make a full recovery within two weeks. She was shot in her upper right arm.

Shazia (the Unique), the third victim, is due to be released from the combined military hospital in Peshawar and return to swat soon, her family told Al Jazeera.

The attack has sickened Pakistan, where Malala won international prominence with a blog that highlighted atrocities under the Taliban who terrorised the Swat valley from 2007 until a 2009 army offensive.

Activists say the shooting should be a wake-up call to those who advocate appeasement with the Taliban, but analysts suspect there will be no seismic shift in a country that has sponsored radical Islam for decades.

Schools opened with prayers for Malala on Friday and special prayers were held at mosques across the country for her speedy recovery at the country’s top military hospital in the city of Rawalpindi.

Schools open

Local police officials told Al Jazeera that the investigation into who was responsible for the attack was ongoing. The perpetrators were witnessed escaping into a nearby slum.

Police had taken in 60 to 70 suspects for questioning, but all were subsequently released. No one is currently being held in the Swat region in connection to the shooting.

Schools in Afghanistan opened Saturday with special prayers for the quick recovery of Yousafzai, in a move officials said was to show solidarity with her.

 

Witness: A documentary on Malala’s work in Swat

“To show sympathy to Malala Yousafzai around 9.5 million students all over the country in 15,500 schools and education centres offered prayers for her quick recovery,” education ministry spokesman Amanullah Iman told the AFP news agency.

“The students also expressed their solidarity to their sister [Malala] because the attack on her was an attack on education,” he said.

“Malala is just a girl and student like us, she shouldn’t have been shot,” Freshta, a 10 grade pupil told AFP.

“Today we recited Quran and prayed for her recovery,” she said.

Clerics on Friday declared the attempt on her life, made by Pakistani Taliban gunmen while the 14-year-old girl was on her way home from school in the Swat valley, to be “un-Islamic”.

The joint fatwa, or religious edict, was issued by at least 50 scholars associated with the Sunni Ittehad Council, and appealed to worshippers to observe a “day of condemnation” on Friday.

“Islam holds the killing of one innocent person as killing the entirety of humanity,” Hamid Saeed Kazmi, a former religious affairs minister in Pakistan,

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My conversations with Malala Yousafzai, the girl who stood up to the Taliban

Pakistani journalist Owais Tohid recalls his conversations with Malala Yousafzai, the outspoken 14-year-old girl whose shooting by the Taliban has outraged the world.

“Which one of you is Malala? Speak up, otherwise I will shoot you all,” a hooded, bearded Taliban militant asked a bus full of schoolgirls on their way home earlier this week. “She is propagating against the soldiers of Allah, the Taliban. She must be punished,” the Taliban militant shouted louder. Then, recognizing her, he shot her at a point blank range.

Malala Yousafzai gained fame when it came out that she was the girl who was highly critical of the Taliban’s ban on girls’ education in theSwat valley, and blogging about her views and about the atrocities of Islamic militias controlling the valley from 2007-2009. The BBCblog, which was written in Urdu under a pen name, was nominated for several awards.

“I wanted to scream, shout and tell the whole world what we were going through. But it was not possible. The Taliban would have killed me, my father, my whole family. I would have died without leaving any mark. So I chose to write with a different name. And it worked, as my valley has been freed,” she told me when I invited her for an interview for the TV station I am heading now, ARY News.

RELATED: Who are the Taliban and what do they want?

Doctors treating Malala now say bullets have been removed from her head and neck, but her condition is still critical. The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) have claimed responsibility for the attack and have a $100,000 government bounty against them.

Malala’s friend, Shazia, who was also injured that day, recounted the event to me as her eyes filled with tears.

“They stopped our school van. They were riding on a bike. The masked man kept pointing guns at us and the other was shouting ‘where is Malala?!’ I froze with a flashback to the old dark days: I remembered the headless bodies, slaughtering of rivals – merely on dissent or slightest doubt of spying –the grotesque violence.”

Just a few moments before, she said, the girls had been singing a traditional Pushto folk song on their way back from school, its lyrics vowing sacrificing their lives for their motherland, the beautiful valley of Swat.

“With a drop of my sweetheart’s blood, Shed to defend the motherland, I will put a beauty spot on my forehead, Such would put to shame the rose in the garden,” they sang. The song was made famous by Malala’s namesake, Malalai of Maiwand. The 19th century national folk hero fought against the British troops in the Second Anglo-Afghan War.

WHAT’S IN A NAME?

The first time I met Malala, a couple of years ago, I asked her what her name signified. She answered: “Probably, a hero like the Afghan heroine Malalai [of Maiwand] or Malalai Joya. I want to be a social activist and an honest politician like her,” she said, smiling. Ms. Joya, a 30-something activist, politician, and writer who was bitterly critical of both the Taliban and the Karzai regime, was at one point dubbed the bravest woman of Afghanistan.

Malala Yousafzai certainly was well on her way for a 14-year-old. She was awarded the National Peace Award in Pakistan last year. At the time, she said: “My life is like a movie, full of dreams. I used to dream of becoming famous, to see my valley freed from the clutches of Taliban, to see girls flying like butterflies, free from any restrictions. It is becoming as a reality so I am happy, happy, and very happy,” she said. “I want to change the political system so there is social justice and equality and change in the status of girls and women. I plan to set up my own academy for girls,” she said, ever with confidence and a maturity beyond her years.

I remember thinking it was her love for life that made countering the Taliban possible.

ENGRAVED IN MEMORY

Under their control of the Swat valley, the turbaned militants burned schools and banned girls’ education, and forced women to wear burqas or stay inside their homes, turning Malala’s colorful valley of Swat colorless. That period is engraved in people’s memories through her diary.

“Saturday January 3, 2009: Today our headmistress announced that girls should stop wearing uniform because of Taliban. Come to schools in casual wear. In our class only three out of 27 attended the school. My three friends have quit school because of Taliban threats.”

“January 5, 2009: Today our teacher told us not to wear colorful dress that might make Taliban angry.”

“Tuesday March 2009: On our way to school, my friend asked me to cover my head properly, otherwise Taliban will punish us.”

“Thursday, March 12, 2009: I had a sore throat. My father took me to the doctor. There a woman told us about a boy named Anis, ‘Anis was with Taliban.’ His Taliban friend told him that he had a dream that he is surrounded by heavenly virgins in Paradise. The boy then asked his parents if he could become a suicide bomber to go to the Paradise. The parents refused. But Anis exploded himself at a check post of security forces, anyway.”

When the security forces carried out the operation to oust the Taliban in the Swat valley, Malala had to leave her valley, as did almost a million other displaced people. I met her while she was teaching children under a tent, as most of the schools were destroyed by Taliban in Swat. “I want to see every child getting education and our whole country freed from Taliban,” she told me, gesturing to the surrounding mountains.

Archives: A special report from Swat Valley in 2007

Today, security officials say her attackers might have come down from those same mountains, either across the border where Mullah Fazlullah who had occupied Swat valley and now believed to have been in hiding in Nooristan and Kunnar provinces in Afghanistan, or from North Waziristan, which is considered to be a haven for Al Qaeda and Taliban militants.

Three years ago, a military operation followed the flogging of a girl from Swat, Chand Bibi, at the hands of Taliban, which triggered anger across the country. Now the attack on Malala has triggered nationwide anger and international condemnation, and there is some hope that it will effect a change again.

Pakistan’s military chief visited the military hospital Wednesday to see Malala. “Such inhuman attacks clearly expose the extremist mindset the nation is facing,” Gen. Pervez Ashfaq Kayani said in a statement. “We refuse to bow before terror, we will fight. Regardless of the cost, we will prevail, inshallah,” the military chief said, triggering speculation that this attack might spur Pakistan’s military to go into North Waziristan.

UNFLAGGING DETERMINATION

Malala, with her rosy complexion, twinkling eyes, and unflagging determination, charmed everybody with her courage and confidence in her public appearances. Fluent in Urdu, English, and Pushto, she had a flair for communication.

Her father, Zia Yousafzai, a Pashtun left-wing educator, almost always accompanied her on outings and interviews. He runs a chain of schools in Swat valley, the Khushal Public School, named after a famous Pashtun poet. I met father and daughter many times, and discussed with Malala the possibility of her hosting a show to interview leading politicians and dignitaries for the TV channel where I work.

“That will be fun, countering mullahs,” she replied, but said she wanted to focus on her studies. Her father, bursting with pride, was cautious. “It’s not the right time. She has already been in limelight in the national and international media. Her life can be under threat and she has to go a long way,” her father told me.

The last time that I was with Malala, my 9-year-old daughter, Risa, called me to ask when I was coming home.

“I am with a hero, a very courageous girl. She has defeated the Taliban,” I told her.

“The horrible Taliban? She must be so brave. Can I talk to her?” my daughter asked, and the girls chatted on the telephone for a few minutes.

On Tuesday, when my daughter called me, Malala was being rushed to the hospital. When I spoke to Malala’s father, he said he was standing next to her, holding her hand. “Don’t worry, Baba. I am going to be fine and victory will be ours,” he said Malala told him in broken words before falling unconscious.

I came home that day heartsick and angry. My daughter had fallen asleep on top of her book titled “Mulan,” a folk tale we have read together about a heroic Chinese girl who fought against Mongols and saved her village. I held her tight, trying not to wake her because she had school the next day – which was Malala’s drea

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“Malala, May Allah protect you and give you a long and happy life. Ameen!”

Live Malala live! Don’t die for believing in the prayer you sang at school: “May I love the lamp of knowledge, O God (lab pe aati hai doa).” Live for Iqbal’s dua that we all grew up singing at our schools. Live for Pakistan. Pakistan Zindabad, Malala’s Pakistan Paindabad!


This was not the first entry in the diary. It started with a simple prayer for a 14-year old girl struggling for her life after she was shot in the head for demanding the right to attend school.

“Malala, may Allah protect you and give you a long and happy life. Amen!”

The prayer led to the recognition of what an innocent girl had achieved at such a tender age.

“What you achieved at this young age, people do not n their entire lives. You brought love and compassion to millions of hearts. You tried to bring light to those living in perpetual darkness,” it said.

“Today, the entire nation prays for you. Our eyes are wet. Our hearts are heavy. But the light you lit in this darkness cannot be extinguished. You are what a true Muslim should be.”

As it happens with electronic diaries, about a dozen people liked it. But this was not enough. So an appeal followed: “Liking is not enough. Please share your emotions too.”

The first person to respond was Munir Pervaiz, a Pakistani living in Canada. “All friends who are not apologists for the Zaliman; resolve that we will prevent these cowards from killing our innocent daughters in the name of religion,” he wrote.

“Let’s remember the bravery of a child who tried to stop the tyranny that the ignorant are trying to impose on our poor motherland.”

Asif Alam, a Pakistani New Yorker, wrote he could “no longer stand Zaliman apologists after this incident. Amazing that some leaders are still reluctant to criticise the Zaliman! Shame, shame, shame! Get well soon Malala”

Wajih Shah, who did not disclose where he lived, said it was wrong to say that such people were Muslims because they had a strange obsession: Killing innocent children.

When one commentator, N.T. called Malala “an enemy because she liked an enemy (President Barack Obama),” the person who initiated the diary urged him not to do so.

“Our hearts are heavy with sorrow. Our eyes are wet. We are in pain, N.T. Have mercy on us. We will fight you another day. Today, we pray.”

“Really sorry sir if you got hurt,” N.T. responded but continued to attack Malala and praise the Zaliman.

This forced the diarist to urge his friends to “stand up and be counted. Let the world know Malala is not alone.”

Michael Siddique, another Pakistani Canadian, urged Pakistani politicians to come out and condemn the Zaliman.

“Malala’s fault was that she didn’t agree with your and the Zaliman’ version of Islam,” wrote Siddique in a message for Imran Khan.

“CODE PINK, do your homework the next time, you go out to protest along with a politician,” said he while referring to American peace activists who joined Imran Khan’s rally.

“Not just me, most Pakistanis are hurt today. If you have an honest heart, you will acknowledge that the Zaliman are a minority in our nation,” wrote the diarist when another Zaliman supporter asked why he was so upset.

“But let’s not fight today. Let us pray for her life. May Allah save her, Amen,” he wrote.

N.T., J.A. and I.B. asked why were the liberals so upset over Malala? “Are those killed in drone attacks in Fata not Pakistanis?”

“If Malala dies, ‘ilm,‘ dies, resistance to tyranny dies, the will for progress dies, the desire for redemption dies, the nation dies,” came a response.

Tahira Mussarat Hussain, a Pakistani-American, noted that “Malala is everywhere today. She touched everyone’s heart. She will be fine insha Allah and we will see more Malalas.”

“When hundreds of innocent girls were burned in the Red Mosque, where were you?” asked J.A.

“The attack on Malala is an attack on humanity. Humanity must speak out in one voice against this cowardly attack,” wrote Ahmar Mastikhan.

“As the poet Iqbal prayed, I want our kids – both boys and girls – to pray for knowledge for generations. I want them to express their desire for knowledge without any fear,” wrote the diarist while explain why the attack on Malala hurt him so much.

“This is not about the diarist. This is not about an individual. The whole nation is crying over and praying for this little girl and you have to bring in other issues into it,” wrote Wasim Sajid, while responding to N.T. and J.A.

“Her strength is evident – the ‘powerful men’ feared her enough to target her. That is true power from a 14-year-old,” wrote Orna Wiseman.

“Those rejoicing at Malala’s plight should know that what may happen to them can be worse,” wrote Behroz Khan.

“I do not know much about her apart from what I have read today. Her greatest contribution yet might be that this ghastly incident galvanises the long suffering common people into protesting and fighting the scourge of Zaliman in a way that they never did before,” wrote Samir Gupta.

“I also prayed for her,” wrote Ramanuj Ghosh. “As far as I know, Islam never taught this. They are giving a bad name to the religion.”

“Hope she and everybody in this tragedy survive,” wrote Sajjad Haider.

“Let us all donate money so she can get the best care in the world, gets well and once again resists the forces of darkness. We can collectively defeat the evil. I will try to find out where to send money for her treatment,” suggested Mohsin Masood, a US educationist of Pakistani origin.

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NEWSFLASH ;Bullet lodged near Malala’s neck removed: Express News

الحمد لله

Published: October 10, 2012

Doctors at CMH to decide whether to fly abroad Malala for treatment. PHOTO: RASHID AJMERI/EXPRESS/FILE

PESHAWAR: The bullet lodged near 14-year-old child activist Malala Yousufzai’s neck was removed during an operation done early Wednesday morning around 2am, Express Newsreported while quoting sources.

According to Express News correspondent Eshtisham Bashir, a doctor who was part of the team of surgeons who operated on Malala, verified that the bullet had been removed.

Doctors were to decide Wednesday whether to fly abroad 14-year-old child activist Malala Yousufzai, who is reported to be in critical condition after being shot in the head by the Taliban.

The security guard of Khushaal Public School and the driver of the van in which Malala was travelling when the attack took place have been detained by the police for investigations.

Malala was shot on a school bus with two friends in Swat on Tuesday, then flown to Peshawar to be admitted to Combined Military Hospital (CMH).

She spent Tuesday night in intensive care, where doctors at CMH described her condition as critical.

A military officer told AFP that a team of top doctors had flown to Peshawar to assess her condition on Wednesday.

“They have a two-point agenda – to determine if Malala Yousafzai’s condition allows her to be shifted abroad for treatment or if she needs surgery here,” the officer said.

Last night, a doctor at CMH told AFP that the bullet had travelled from her head and then lodged in the back shoulder, near the neck.

“She is in the intensive care unit and semi-conscious, although not on the ventilator,” he told AFP on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to speak to the media.

The next three to four days would be crucial, he added.

Khushal Public School, where Malala studies, has announced that it will remain closed for three days, while private schools have decided to remain closed, today.

Students will protest the attack in front of Mingora Press Club, today, while the Awami National Party will stage a demonstration in Swat.

The Peshawar High Bar Association has called an emergency meeting.

Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani arrived in Peshawar to see Malala and enquire about her health.

Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) told AFP that it had a Boeing 737 ready at Peshawar airport to fly Malala abroad if necessary, most probably to Dubai.

“We are waiting for new orders and as soon as we get the instruction she will be flown abroad,” PIA chief Junaid Yusuf told AFP.

Malala won international recognition for highlighting Taliban atrocities in Swat with a blog for the BBC three years ago, when the militants burned girls schools and terrorised the valley.

Her struggle resonated with tens of thousands of girls who were being denied an education by militants across northwest Pakistan, where the government has been fighting local Taliban since 2007.

She received the first-ever national peace award from the Pakistani government last year, and was nominated for the International Children’s Peace Prize by advocacy group KidsRights Foundation in 2011.

Tuesday’s shooting in broad daylight raises serious questions about security more than three years after the army claimed to have crushed a Taliban insurgency in the valley.

The Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed the attack in a series of telephone calls to reporters and then issued a strongly-worded statement justifying the attack on a child on the grounds that Malala had preached secularism “and so-called enlightened moderation”.

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