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Saturday, April 11, 2026

Russian court criminalizes the activities of the Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial

April 11, 2026
Russian court criminalizes the activities of the Nobel Prize-winning rights group Memorial

Russia's Supreme Court on Thursday effectively criminalized the activities of the Nobel Peace Prize-winningrights group Memorial,the latest step in an unrelenting crackdown on dissent and civil society organizations in the country amidits war in Ukraine.

Associated Press Jan Raczynski, chair of the International Memorial entity that was liquidated in Russia in 2021, speaks during his interview with the Associated Press in front of the Wall of Grief memorial to the victims of Soviet repressions in Moscow, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko) Jan Raczynski, chair of the International Memorial entity that was liquidated in Russia in 2021, stands after his interview with the Associated Press in front of the Wall of Grief memorial to the victims of Soviet repressions in Moscow, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko) A man walks to enter a building where independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta has an office in Moscow, Thursday, April 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Pavel Bednyakov) A man enters a building where independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta has an office in Moscow, Thursday, April 9, 2026. (AP Photo/Pavel Bednyakov) Court judge Vyacheslav Kirillov reads a ruling to outlaw the

Russia Crackdown

Separately, police in Moscow raided the offices of the prominent independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, whose chief editor Dmitry Muratov was a Nobel Peace Prize laureate in 2021. The newspaper said its lawyers were not allowed inside the office.

The ruling against the human rights group followed a closed hearing on a petition from the Justice Ministry to designate what it called “the Memorial international civic movement” as extremist and ban its activities in Russia.

Memorial said in a statement issued earlier in the day that there is no such entity but that the ruling still “would allow the authorities to crack down on any Memorial projects, their participants and supporters.”

A long history of human rights activism

Memorial is one of the oldest and the most renowned Russian human rights organizations. It was awarded the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize, less than a year after President Vladimir Putin launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine, alongsideBelarusian activist Ales Bialiatski,who was imprisoned at the time, and the Ukrainian organization Center for Civil Liberties.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Norwegian Nobel Committee condemned the actions against the group, calling them “an affront to the fundamental values of human dignity and freedom of expression" and urged Russia to “cease all harassment of Memorial and its members.”

Amnesty International's Eastern Europe and Central Asia deputy regional director Denis Krivosheev said in a statement that the court ruling was targeting not just Memorial but “criminalizing human rights work itself.”

Memorial was founded in the late 1980s to ensure that the victims of the Soviet Union's political repression would be remembered, and grew to a network of smaller organizations both in Russia and abroad.

The group had been declared a “foreign agent,” a designation that brought additional government scrutiny and carried strong pejorative connotations, and over the years was ordered to pay massive fines for alleged violations of the ”foreign agent” law. Russian courts ordered its two main entities — the human rights center and the International Memorial — to shut down in December 2021.

Undeterred, the group continued to operate. In 2023, its members founded an international Memorial association in Geneva. Earlier this year, that association was banned in Russia as “undesirable,” a label that exposes anyone involved with it to prosecution.

In February 2024, Memorial's co-chair Oleg Orlov was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison for speaking out against the war in Ukraine. He was released in a massive East-West prisoner exchange in August 2024 along with other imprisoned dissidents.

Increasing pressure on Memorial

An extremist designation puts even more pressure on the group, as involvement with extremist activities is a criminal offense in Russia punishable by prison terms.

Jan Raczynski, chair of the International Memorial that was forced to shut down in 2021, told The Associated Press that he was surprised and bewildered to learn from the news about the Justice Ministry's petition.

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He said Memorial has been well-known for many years on par with “perestroika" and “glasnost” — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s policies of political reform and openness. Raczynski noted that Soviet physicist and human rights advocate Andrei Sakharov, a 1975 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, was its first chairman.

Raczynski likened the Supreme Court's closed hearing to the repressions studied by the group.

“This is very similar to what we’ve been doing for almost 40 years now, these closed trials of people, in absentia, usually without a defense," he said, adding that it was difficult to predict what would happen next.

"I just know that for many hundreds of thousands of people in Russia, this is a very anxious time, because Memorial has helped a lot of people, and now they don’t understand what is happening,” Razcynski said.

He denounced allegations that Memorial was extremist, saying the group has always stood against violence, and vowed that its work will continue “one way or another.”

The Russian state news agency Tass cited the Supreme Court’s press service as saying Memorial’s activities “are clearly anti-Russian in nature, aimed at destroying the fundamental foundations of Russian statehood, violating territorial integrity, and eroding historical, cultural, spiritual, and moral values.”

Memorial said the case against the group “is yet another attempt to intimidate all dissent in the country and silence civil society" that will not succeed.

“Memorial and other civil society organizations, which are being destroyed in Russia, will continue their work abroad,” it said. “Memorial will outlive the Putin regime and will be able to openly return to Russia.”

A criminal case reported against Novaya Gazeta

After news emerged about the police raid against Novaya Gazeta, the Russian news agency Interfax, citing law enforcement officials, reported that a criminal case has been launched against the renowned newspaper on charges of illegal collection and use of personal data.

Tass cited law enforcement as saying the raid was connected to a case against Novaya Gazeta journalist Oleg Roldugin, who also co-founded another independent Russian newspaper, Sobesednik. Novaya Gazeta on social media said it couldn't confirm or deny whether this is the case, but noted that Roldugin's home also was raided, he has been taken in for questioning, and a lawyer was later allowed to see him.

The newspaperhas faced growing pressuresince Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Its website has been blocked in Russia, its media license was revoked in 2022, and many of its journalists fled abroad and regrouped in a separate publication called Novaya Gazeta Europe. That publication has been banned in Russia as “undesirable.”

Muratov, Novaya Gazeta's longtime editor who still lives in Russia, shared the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize with Maria Ressa, a journalist from the Philippines. He was declared a “foreign agent” by Russian authorities.

The newspaper was itself born from the legacy of Gorbachev's Nobel Peace Prize in 1990. He used part of his prize money to fund what later became Novaya Gazeta, which launched in 1993.

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Brazil and US launch joint action to fight organized crime

April 11, 2026
Brazil and US launch joint action to fight organized crime

SAO PAULO/BRASILIA, April 10 (Reuters) - The Brazilian government on Friday announced a joint initiative with the U.S. to combat organized crime, involving the ‌integration of data from Brazil's federal tax authority with U.S. Customs and ‌Border Protection (CBP).

Reuters

The move comes as President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva steps up efforts on public security, ​a key issue in Latin America's largest economy, as he seeks a new term in October's general election.

Lula has seen his lead in opinion polls evaporate, with surveys now pointing to a run-off tie with his main rival, right-wing Senator Flavio Bolsonaro.

Since last ‌year, Brazil’s tax authority has ⁠played a central role in major operations uncovering money laundering schemes linked to criminal organizations in the fuel sector, identifying multiple ⁠operations abroad.

Lula has publicly called on U.S. President Donald Trump to arrest the owner of Refit, one of the main companies involved in the scheme, who resides in the ​United States.

Still ​there are tensions between the U.S. and ​Brazilian governments regarding the best approach ‌to tackle organized crime.

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Last year, U.S. officials had asked Brazil to label major gangs terrorist organizations, but Brazilians refused to do so.

According to a government statement on Friday, the joint initiative aims to integrate intelligence efforts to intercept illicit shipments of weapons and narcotics.

Brazil’s tax revenue secretary, Robinson Barreirinhas, said more than 1,100 weapons arriving ‌from the United States had been seized over ​the past 12 months, adding that authorities confiscated ​more than 1.5 tons of ​drugs in the first quarter alone, mainly synthetic drugs and hashish.

Finance ‌Minister Dario Durigan said the agreement ​was made possible after ​talks between Lula and Trump gained momentum.

The Brazilian government had hoped the announcement would coincide with an in‑person meeting between Lula and Trump, originally expected ​in March. The meeting did ‌not materialize and now has no clear timeline following the outbreak ​of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran.

(Reporting by Isabel Teles and Marcela Ayres; ​Editing by Toby Chopra and Andrea Ricci )

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Medvedev smashes his racket 7 times during double bagel loss to Berrettini in Monte Carlo

April 11, 2026
Medvedev smashes his racket 7 times during double bagel loss to Berrettini in Monte Carlo

MONACO (AP) — Former No. 1Daniil Medvedevlost his temper, smashed his racket on the red clay court seven successive times, and then deposited the mangled frame in a trash bin midway through a 6-0, 6-0 loss to Matteo Berrettini at theMonte Carlo Masterson Wednesday.

Associated Press Daniil Medvedev, of Russia, reacts after losing a point against Jannik Sinner, of Italy, during a final match at the BNP Paribas Open tennis tournament, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Indian Wells, Calif. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill) Daniil Medvedev, of Russia, returns a shot against Jannik Sinner, of Italy, during a final match at the BNP Paribas Open tennis tournament, Sunday, March 15, 2026, in Indian Wells, Calif. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Indian Wells Tennis

Medvedev, who is currently ranked 10th, received a code violation for unsportsmanlike conduct and will also likely be hit with a hefty fine for his actions early in the second set.

The 30-year-old Russian was already struggling when he landed a forehand in the net to drop his opening service game of the second set and fall behind 2-0 and he slammed his racket near the baseline. Then he picked the racket up and threw it toward a tarp at the end of the court.

Still not through, Medvedev then continually picked his frame up and kept on smashing it until it was destroyed enough to fit through an opening in a courtside trash can as the crowd sarcastically cheered him on.

Medvedev, whowon the U.S. Open in 2021, lost the match in 49 minutes. He had five double-faults to Berrettini’s none; put only 36% of his first serves in play to Berrettini’s 65%; and won only 17 of the 67 points.

It was quite a turnaround from the previous three meetings between the players — which were all won by Medvedev.

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According to statistics providerOpta, Berrettini became only the fifth player since the ATP Rankings started in 1973 to defeat a top-10 opponent 6-0, 6-0 — a score otherwise known as a double bagel — with the last time it happened being a decade ago when David Goffin routed Tomas Berdych at the Italian Open.

“I wouldn’t expect to win like that and it doesn’t happen that often,” Berrettini said.

Medvedev was playing his first match on clay this year, having recentlybeaten top-ranked Carlos Alcarazto reach a final on hard courts in Indian Wells, California.

Berrettini, a Wimbledon finalist in 2021 who has struggled with injuries in recent years, is ranked 90th. The Italian received a wild card invitation for Monte Carlo.

“It was definitely one of the best performances of my life,” Berrettini said. “I think I missed three shots in the whole match.”

AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

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UK pauses its plan to cede Chagos Islands after US opposition

April 11, 2026
UK pauses its plan to cede Chagos Islands after US opposition

LONDON, April 11 (Reuters) - Britain's government said on Saturday it had put on hold its deal to cede sovereignty of the ‌Chagos Islands - home to the U.S.-British Diego Garcia air base - which ‌has been criticised by U.S. President Donald Trump.

Reuters

The Times newspaper said planned legislation underpinning the ​deal to cede the islands to Mauritius, which needs the backing of Washington, would not be included in the government's next parliamentary agenda.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office said London would try to persuade Washington to give its formal ‌approval.

Trump said in February that ⁠the deal was a "big mistake" nL1N3ZE0XS, having previously said it was the best that Starmer would get.

Under the deal, ⁠Britain would retain control of the strategically important military base on Diego Garcia on a 99-year lease that preserves U.S. operations there.

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A British government spokesperson said ​ensuring the ​long-term operational security of Diego Garcia ​would remain a priority.

"We continue ‌to believe the agreement is the best way to protect the long-term future of the base, but we have always said we would only proceed with the deal if it has U.S. support. We are continuing to engage with the U.S. and Mauritius," the spokesperson said.

The alliance between Washington and ‌London has come under strain in recent ​weeks over Starmer's reluctance to get involved ​in the U.S.-Israeli war on ​Iran https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/ and his refusal at the start of the ‌conflict to allow Trump to use ​British air bases ​to launch attacks.

U.S. forces have since been permitted to carry out what the prime minister calls defensive strikes.

Trump has also repeatedly criticised the ​British leader, saying he ‌was "not Winston Churchill L8N3ZR0JI" and had ruined what is often ​called a "special relationship" between Britain and the U.S.

(Writing by William Schomberg ​and Suban AbdullaEditing by Gareth Jones)

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Friday, April 10, 2026

Florida investigates ChatGPT, OpenAI over alleged role in FSU shooting

April 10, 2026
Florida investigates ChatGPT, OpenAI over alleged role in FSU shooting

TALLAHASSEE, Florida ‒ Florida’s attorney general announced April 9 that he is launching an investigation intoChatGPT and its parent company, OpenAI, in part because of the AI chatbot's alleged role in a mass shooting at Florida State University last year.

USA TODAY

In avideo statementposted on X, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier said his office hasformally opened a probe into OpenAIand cited growing concerns over artificial intelligence's potential impacts to public safety and national security. He noted that ChatGPT has been linked to criminal behavior, including child sex abuse material used by child predators and the encouragement of suicide and self-harm.

Uthmeier said his office also learned that the chatbot "may likely have been used to assist" the suspect in the shooting at Florida State University (FSU) that lefttwo people dead and six others injuredin April 2025. The suspect, Phoenix Ikner, who was a 20-year-old student at the university at the time, is facing charges of first-degree murder and the death penalty.

"We support innovation, but that doesn't give any company the right to endanger our children, facilitate criminal activity, empower America's enemies or threaten our national security," Uthmeier said in the video statement. "Companies that do so will be held accountable to the fullest extent."

The announcement came just three days after the Tallahassee Democrat, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported that the widow of one of the men killed in the rampageplans to sue OpenAI and ChatGPTover its alleged ties to Ikner.

Ryan Hobbs, an attorney representing Betty Morales, whose husband,Robert Morales, was killed in the shooting, told the Democrat that alawsuit will be filed “very soon”against ChatGPT in connection with the shooting. Hobbs said the shooter was in "constant communication" with ChatGPT leading up to the shooting and that ChatGPT "may have advised the shooter how to commit these heinous crimes."

USA TODAY has reached out to OpenAI for comment.

Suspect's chat logs show he asked about potential shooting at FSU

Records from the State Attorney’s Office obtained by the Tallahassee Democrat showed that Ikner had raised the possibility of a mass shooting at FSU in a conversation with ChatGPT on the day of the attack.

“If there was a shooting at FSU, how would the country react?” Ikner asked the chatbot.

ChatGPT replied that reaction “would likely follow a pattern seen with other high-profile mass shootings,” including major television networks and cable channels breaking regular programming to cover it live. Ikner then followed up by asking when the last school shooting was and after learning an incident occurred two days earlier at a Dallas, Texas, high school, he asked why it wasn’t on TV.

“Great question,” the chatbot said, “and one that cuts into how media works in the U.S. right now.”

“By how many victims does it usually get on the medi,” Ikner asked with a couple of typos.

ChatGPT said there was “no official threshold” but that “3 or more people killed (excluding the gunman) is often the ** unofficial bar ** for widespread national media attention.”

“What about 3 plus at fsu,” Ikner asked.

“Yes, a shooting at Florida State University (FSU) involving three or more victims would almost certainly receive national media attention,” the chatbot replied. “This was evident in the November 20, 2014, incident at FSU’s Strozier Library, where a gunman shot three individuals before being killed by police.”

In that shooting,Myron May, an FSU graduate whobelieved he was a “targeted individual,”shot three people, including Ronny Ahmed, a student who was left paralyzed.

“Would a 9mm Luger work for a Remington 12 gauge,” Ikner asked.

ChatGPT said it wouldn’t work, explaining a Luger is a handgun and a Remington is a shotgun that is much larger and uses shells instead of bullets. Ikner then uploaded a photo of 12-gauge shotgun shells.

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“Are they really lethal in close range,” he asked.

“Yes 12 gauge shotgun shells are extremely lethal at close range,” the chatbot said.

California ICE shooting:Family, lawyer of man shot by ICE say he isn't a gang member

Suspected FSU shooter's online history showed far-right views

Some of Ikner's classmates have said he espoused white supremacist and far-right views. Screenshots of Ikner’s online history captured by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) andshared with USA TODAYalso showed that the suspect, who was an active gamer, appeared to have a fascination with with Adolf Hitler, Nazis and other hate groups.

On one of Ikner's online gaming accounts, he used a drawing of Hitler as a profile picture, according to the ADL. On another account, Ikner used "Schutzstaffel," the name of the paramilitary group under Hitler and the Nazi Party.

Ikner also previously spent more than an hour on his YouTube channel defending afar-right racist conspiracy theory‒ the same one that motivated some of thebloodiest mass shootings in history, theTallahassee Democratpreviously reported.

In 2022, Ikner dedicated one video entirely to the "great replacement" conspiracy theory, adebunked but increasingly mainstreamed beliefthat liberal immigration policies in the West are part of an effort to supplant White people with non-whites, particularly Muslims.

In the video, Ikner mentioned two attacks: the2011 Norway terrorist attacksthat killed 77 people and a2022 shooting at a Buffalo, New York, supermarketthat left 10 Black people dead.

'I just need to play dead':FSU shooting victim recounts horrific ordeal as campus mourns

What happened in the FSU shooting?

Authorities said a suspect opened fire near FSU's student union at about 11:50 a.m. local time on April 17, 2025, striking multiple people and triggering a campus-wide lockdown as students ran for cover.

Campus police arrived at the scene "almost immediately" and shot the suspect, who did not respond to commands, Tallahassee Police Chief Lawrence Revell said at the time. The suspect was taken into custody and transported to Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare with "serious but non-life-threatening injuries," according to Revell.

Morales andTiru Chabba, who were not students, were pronounced dead at the scene, authorities said. Six people were hospitalized in fair condition.

Ikner allegedly brought two firearms to campus the day of the shooting, a 12-gauge shotgun and a .45 caliber Glock, according to a Leon County grand jury report. Both were taken from the home of his stepmother, a veteran deputy with the Leon County Sheriff's Office, and his father.

The suspect’s stepmother has served the sheriff’s office for over 18 years, Sheriff Walt McNeil said at the time. Authorities identified the suspect as Ikner, an FSU student majoring in political science, who previously attended trainings held by the sheriff's office and was a member of its youth advisory council.

"He has been steeped in the Leon County Sheriff’s Office family, engaged in a number of training programs that we have," McNeil said. "So it’s not a surprise to us that he had access to weapons."

Tallahassee police later revealed that Ikner"was shot once, in the jaw"and had been"neutralized" by an FSU police officerearly in his attack. Ikner wasreleased from the hospitalon May 12, 2025, "following an extended stay and multiple surgeries to treat injuries he sustained during the April 17 shooting," police said.

Contributing: Michael Loria and Christopher Cann, USA TODAY

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Florida investigates ChatGPT, OpenAI over alleged role in FSU shooting

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Pink to host the 2026 Tony Awards on June 7 at Radio City Music Hall

April 10, 2026
Pink to host the 2026 Tony Awards on June 7 at Radio City Music Hall

NEW YORK (AP) — TheTony Awardshave turned to a singer with a reputation for a high-energy, physical live show to be the next telecast host — Pink.

Associated Press

The three-time Grammy Award winner will make her debut as MC for the awards on June 7 at its familiar home of Radio City Music Hall.

“It is the honor of an entire lifetime to host a night celebrating the literal hardest working people in showbiz,”Pink saidin a statement. “Broadway has shaped my life and how I put my own shows together — it is a community that is supportive, and inclusive, and full of talent and love. These people give magic every single day, and I cannot wait to celebrate them with the entire world.”

While Pink hasn't yet made an appearance on Broadway, she has had 15 Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, including four No. 1s and is known for her acrobatic, ceiling-swinging live sets.

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Tony Award executive producers Raj Kapoor, Sarah Levine Hall and Jack Sussman in a statement hailed Pink as “a fearless artist whose powerhouse voice, electrifying stage presence, and undeniable authenticity embody the very spirit of live performance and theatre.”

The 2026 awards will air live on CBS and stream on Paramount+. Getting buzz from appearing on the telecast can dictate a show’s future, both on Broadway and on tour.

Last year's show drew 4.85 million viewers to CBS, its largest broadcast audience in six years, according to Nielsen data. CBS also said the awards show drew its largest streaming audience on Paramount+ but did not disclose those viewership numbers.

The awards are presented by The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing.

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China's car exports surge as expectations grow for EV pivot on Iran war energy shock

April 10, 2026
China's car exports surge as expectations grow for EV pivot on Iran war energy shock

HONG KONG (AP) —China’sexports of passenger cars accelerated in March, an industry association said Friday, as Chinese automakers stepped up their push to grow overseas markets.

Associated Press

Passenger car exports jumped 82.4% year-on-year last month to around 748,000 vehicles, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, up from the 586,000 vehicles exported in February.

Exports of new energy passenger vehicles — including battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids — surged more than 140% in March from a year ago to 363,000 units. That’s also up 31% from the about 276,000 units of such vehicles exported in February.

The biggest Chinese automakers, includingBYDand Geely Auto, have been increasing their efforts in boosting sales abroad, including expanding production facilities outside China. There have also been growing expectations that the global energy shock and higher fuel prices due to the Iran war could prompt more drivers to want to switch to EVs.

Chinese car brands have made inroads over the past months in regions such as Europe, Latin America andSoutheast Asia.

“The impact of the Iran conflict hasn’t fully shown up in March data yet, but it can act as a trigger,” said Chris Liu, a Shanghai-based senior analyst at advisory group Omdia.

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“In many markets that are structurally well suited for EVs, adoption has been slow simply because consumers lacked urgency," he said. “A sharp rise in fuel prices changes that.”

The Chinese carmakers’ strong overseas push also came at a time when domestic vehicle sales in China have come under pressure fromscaled-back government supportthis year to encourage drivers to switch to new energy vehicles.

Fiercecompetitionin China among car brands and a prolonged property sector slump that has weighed on consumers' desire for big purchases also impacted Chinese automakers.

Domestic passenger car sales fell 19.2% last month from a year earlier to nearly 1.7 million units. It was thefifth consecutive monthof year-on-year declines for passenger car sales at home, based on data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

UBS auto analyst Paul Gong believes that the domestic sales weakness will not be too long lasting and that the surge in overseas sales among Chinese carmakers could help with the weaker demand at home.

“For the overall industry, the overseas market’s sales volume growth is more than enough to offset domestic decline on a full-year basis,” said Gong, head of China autos research at UBS investment bank.

Overseas passenger car sales by units for Chinese automakers might grow by 20% or more this year compared with last year, he predicted.

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