25 jan 2017

Israeli army bulldozers early on Wednesday launched a limited incursion into southern Gaza Strip at the same time as the navy forces cracked down on Palestinian fishermen in the enclave.
A PIC news reporter said four Israeli military bulldozers deployed at Soufa military base in eastern Rafah moved some 50 meters into the southern border area.
The occupation bulldozers leveled Palestinian lands and set up sand barriers all along the borderline.
At the same time, Israeli navy gunboats unleashed heavy spates of machinegun fire on Palestinian fishermen sailing off northern and southern Gaza shores.
The navy forces chased down Palestinian fishing boats off Beit Lahiya seashore, to north of the Gaza Strip.
The Israeli gunboats further targeted Palestinian fishermen in Rafah and Khan Younis coasts with randomly-shot barrages of machinegun fire.
Over recent years, the Israeli occupation forces have stepped up attacks on Palestinian farmers and fishermen in the besieged coastal enclave of Gaza, in a flagrant violation of the Cairo-brokered ceasefire accord signed in the wake of the 2014 Israeli offensive on the territory.
A PIC news reporter said four Israeli military bulldozers deployed at Soufa military base in eastern Rafah moved some 50 meters into the southern border area.
The occupation bulldozers leveled Palestinian lands and set up sand barriers all along the borderline.
At the same time, Israeli navy gunboats unleashed heavy spates of machinegun fire on Palestinian fishermen sailing off northern and southern Gaza shores.
The navy forces chased down Palestinian fishing boats off Beit Lahiya seashore, to north of the Gaza Strip.
The Israeli gunboats further targeted Palestinian fishermen in Rafah and Khan Younis coasts with randomly-shot barrages of machinegun fire.
Over recent years, the Israeli occupation forces have stepped up attacks on Palestinian farmers and fishermen in the besieged coastal enclave of Gaza, in a flagrant violation of the Cairo-brokered ceasefire accord signed in the wake of the 2014 Israeli offensive on the territory.

The Israeli artillery on Tuesday evening bombed a training site belonging to al-Qassam Brigades of Hamas east of al-Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza.
The Israeli army claimed the shelling was in response to a gunfire attack on one of its military patrols near the border fence.
A Palestinian Information Center (PIC) reporter in Gaza said that sounds of artillery shelling followed by two explosions were heard in the eastern parts of the camp before finding out later that a site belonging to al-Qassam Brigades was the target.
He added that the shelling caused material damage to the site, with no reported casualties.
Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper claimed that a military patrol was exposed to shooting from inside the Gaza Strip during its presence near the security fence, adding that the army responded by targeting a Hamas-owned post.
The Israeli army claimed the shelling was in response to a gunfire attack on one of its military patrols near the border fence.
A Palestinian Information Center (PIC) reporter in Gaza said that sounds of artillery shelling followed by two explosions were heard in the eastern parts of the camp before finding out later that a site belonging to al-Qassam Brigades was the target.
He added that the shelling caused material damage to the site, with no reported casualties.
Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper claimed that a military patrol was exposed to shooting from inside the Gaza Strip during its presence near the security fence, adding that the army responded by targeting a Hamas-owned post.
24 jan 2017

Lieberman addressed the possibility of an additional conflict during an INSS conference: "The IDF's orders are to go in full force.' Lieberman also addressed the approval to construct thousands of housing units in the West Bank and said of the Palestinians: 'There is no legitimate leader with whom to make peace.'
At a conference held by the Institute for National Security Studies on Tuesday, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that the IDF's orders are to "go in full force." "If the other side doesn't yield and raise a white flag, we don't stop."
Lieberman also addressed the decision to approve the construction of about 2,500 housing units in Judea and Samaria and connected it to Donald Trump's taking office as the president of the United States: "There is nothing new about it, we have always constructed, including under the Obama administration."
Lieberman criticized Palestinian President Mahmoud "Abu Mazen" Abbas, saying, "There is no one there to actually sign a dramatic agreement with that would change reality. We need a powerful leadership with sway in the field, but Abu Mazen is not a legitimate leader."
He continued to say that "there is no Palestinian Authority. It doesn't exist. We keep forgetting the fact that the Gaza strip is ruled by Hamas and not by the PA."
"There were many good people who worked on an agreement. Why couldn't they work out the problem? It would be impossible to offer Abu Mazen more than what Olmert offered him in Annapolis, including dividing Jerusalem, rehashing the refugee issue, and the evacuation of the West Bank—everything. And what did we end up getting? A no."
Liberman was asked what he would advise President Donald Trump. "It isn't right to advise Americans. Let's not exaggerate. We are a small country and they are a world power," said Liberman and verbally attacked the European countries: "I advise the Europeans, Americans and Russians to first of all steer clear of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Whoever wants to help solve the conflict should first forget the excessive involvement of the rest of the world powers, mainly that of Europe. It is mostly disruptive."
Regarding the Elor Azaria case, Lieberman said, "I don't know whether the soldier did the right thing or not. That is not my job. Again, I advise everyone to accept and respect the military court's decision even if we are not very comfortable."
At a conference held by the Institute for National Security Studies on Tuesday, Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that the IDF's orders are to "go in full force." "If the other side doesn't yield and raise a white flag, we don't stop."
Lieberman also addressed the decision to approve the construction of about 2,500 housing units in Judea and Samaria and connected it to Donald Trump's taking office as the president of the United States: "There is nothing new about it, we have always constructed, including under the Obama administration."
Lieberman criticized Palestinian President Mahmoud "Abu Mazen" Abbas, saying, "There is no one there to actually sign a dramatic agreement with that would change reality. We need a powerful leadership with sway in the field, but Abu Mazen is not a legitimate leader."
He continued to say that "there is no Palestinian Authority. It doesn't exist. We keep forgetting the fact that the Gaza strip is ruled by Hamas and not by the PA."
"There were many good people who worked on an agreement. Why couldn't they work out the problem? It would be impossible to offer Abu Mazen more than what Olmert offered him in Annapolis, including dividing Jerusalem, rehashing the refugee issue, and the evacuation of the West Bank—everything. And what did we end up getting? A no."
Liberman was asked what he would advise President Donald Trump. "It isn't right to advise Americans. Let's not exaggerate. We are a small country and they are a world power," said Liberman and verbally attacked the European countries: "I advise the Europeans, Americans and Russians to first of all steer clear of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Whoever wants to help solve the conflict should first forget the excessive involvement of the rest of the world powers, mainly that of Europe. It is mostly disruptive."
Regarding the Elor Azaria case, Lieberman said, "I don't know whether the soldier did the right thing or not. That is not my job. Again, I advise everyone to accept and respect the military court's decision even if we are not very comfortable."

Israeli planes Tuesday morning sprayed pesticides over Gaza crops and homes located in the border line area in Khuzaa, Wadi al-Salka, east of al-Buraij and south of Gaza.
Eyewitnesses told the PIC reporter that Israeli troops torched rubber tires along the border fence in order to determine the direction of wind for preventing pesticides from reaching Jewish settlers’ crops to the east of the separation fence. Israeli authorities claim that spraying pesticides in that area aims at killing weed plants at the border line.
A number of Palestinian farmers told the PIC reporter that the pesticides' bad effects appear on plants two days after being sprayed.
Eyewitnesses told the PIC reporter that Israeli troops torched rubber tires along the border fence in order to determine the direction of wind for preventing pesticides from reaching Jewish settlers’ crops to the east of the separation fence. Israeli authorities claim that spraying pesticides in that area aims at killing weed plants at the border line.
A number of Palestinian farmers told the PIC reporter that the pesticides' bad effects appear on plants two days after being sprayed.
23 jan 2017

Adham Bassiouni, head of Integrated Pest Management Department at the Ministry of Agriculture in Gaza, said that Israeli planes Monday morning sprayed the border line east of Rafah and Khan Younis with toxic pesticides which damaged a large number of green crops.
In an exclusive statement to the PIC, Engineer Bassiouni condemned the Israeli violation revealing that the ministry has no accurate data on the losses yet.
The Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture had previously appealed to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in order to get acquainted with the Israeli pesticides spray dates.
Israeli authorities claimed that it would be conducted in the period between December 25, 2016 and January 05, 2017. However, it was done again on Monday suddenly without a prior notice, Bassiouni highlighted.
In an exclusive statement to the PIC, Engineer Bassiouni condemned the Israeli violation revealing that the ministry has no accurate data on the losses yet.
The Palestinian Ministry of Agriculture had previously appealed to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in order to get acquainted with the Israeli pesticides spray dates.
Israeli authorities claimed that it would be conducted in the period between December 25, 2016 and January 05, 2017. However, it was done again on Monday suddenly without a prior notice, Bassiouni highlighted.

Ahmad Hassan Shubeir 17
A 17-year-old Palestinian died last week after Israeli authorities refused to allow him to leave the besieged Gaza Strip to undergo treatment for a congenital heart defect, the Gaza-based al-Mezan Center for Human Rights said in a report on Sunday.
Israeli authorities had denied Ahmad Hassan Shubeir from Gaza City, permission to cross into Israel to receive life-saving medical treatment from a hospital after the teen “refused to serve as a collaborator for the Israeli authorities, a coercive measure regularly employed on Palestinian patients in need of permits,” according to the center.
After being repeatedly denied permission by Israel to cross, despite securing a number of appointments at Israeli hospitals as his health declined, Ahmad died at approximately 4 a.m. on Jan. 14.
Ahmad’s father told al-Mezan that his son had been suffering from a congenital heart defect since birth. The father said that he accompanied Ahmad several times to Israeli hospitals, including Tel Hashomer Hospital, Schneider Children’s Medical Center, as well as al-Makassed Hospital in the occupied West Bank, and that Ahmad’s condition remained relatively stable throughout the treatment.
After Ahmad fell into a critical condition, his family applied for a crossing permit in February 2016 with supporting medical documents attached.
According to the report, Israeli authorities responded to the request by attempted to blackmail and coerce Ahmad’s mother into cooperating with the authorities in exchange for her child’s permit during an interview at the Erez crossing.
Though she refused, authorities ultimately allowed her and Ahmad to pass after being held several hours.
A subsequent permit request in September received no reply from authorities, and after the family obtained a new hospital appointment, the applied again in October, again without reply.
In November, Israeli authorities replied to another permit application with a refusal.
“The Israeli security services then summoned Ahmad for an interview at the crossing; during the interrogation, he was pressured to serve as a collaborator for the Israeli authorities in exchange for his permit. The child refused and was denied a permit,” al-Mezan’s report continued.
Finally, the family again obtained an appointment at a hospital for Jan. 30, 2017, as Ahmad’s health continued to decline. He died two weeks before the appointment.
“Al-Mezan strongly condemns Israel’s ill-treatment of Palestinian patients of Gaza and expresses remorse at the death of Ahmad Shubeir,” they wrote in their report.
The group warned of the continued “abuse” of critically ill Palestinian patients sealed inside the enclave, where health care services are crippled due to Israel’s ongoing blockade of the small territory that will enter its tenth year this coming June.
“The denial of adequate medical care, which amounts to ill-treatment, is in violation of treaty and customary international law, and amounts to a prohibited collective punishment,” al-Mezan stressed, noting that the Israeli hospitals Palestinians are attempting to reach are in close proximity to Gaza.
According to the center, 2016 represented a steep decrease in the number of permits granted to Palestinian patients wishing to pass through the Erez crossing: In 2015, 77.66 percent of patients were granted access, whereas 61 percent were granted in 2016.
Israeli authorities have also expanded the age group of those subjected to increased security checks from 16 to 35 years old to 16 to 55 years old, "which subsequently expanded waiting times and resulted in increased rejection of permits."
Between 50 and 60 percent of the patients who were refused permits in 2016 by Israeli authorities were people with cancer, with al-Mezan noting a trend that developed over the year, "whereby cancer patients were granted up to three permits, but not more, resulting in unfinished cancer treatment, and greatly diminished effectiveness of cancer care."
Furthermore, Palestinians who were finally granted permits were nevertheless subjected to measures that al-Mezan said amounted to “cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment,” including long-waiting periods, intense interrogations, invasive searches, blackmail, and coercion, all of which that were greatly strenuous for the sick patients who were not given sufficient rest amid the procedures.
The center further noted that obtaining a permit did not even guarantee a successful crossing for Gazans, reporting that Israeli forces arrested at least nine patients in addition to five Palestinians accompanying patients at the Erez crossing in 2015 and 2016.
A 17-year-old Palestinian died last week after Israeli authorities refused to allow him to leave the besieged Gaza Strip to undergo treatment for a congenital heart defect, the Gaza-based al-Mezan Center for Human Rights said in a report on Sunday.
Israeli authorities had denied Ahmad Hassan Shubeir from Gaza City, permission to cross into Israel to receive life-saving medical treatment from a hospital after the teen “refused to serve as a collaborator for the Israeli authorities, a coercive measure regularly employed on Palestinian patients in need of permits,” according to the center.
After being repeatedly denied permission by Israel to cross, despite securing a number of appointments at Israeli hospitals as his health declined, Ahmad died at approximately 4 a.m. on Jan. 14.
Ahmad’s father told al-Mezan that his son had been suffering from a congenital heart defect since birth. The father said that he accompanied Ahmad several times to Israeli hospitals, including Tel Hashomer Hospital, Schneider Children’s Medical Center, as well as al-Makassed Hospital in the occupied West Bank, and that Ahmad’s condition remained relatively stable throughout the treatment.
After Ahmad fell into a critical condition, his family applied for a crossing permit in February 2016 with supporting medical documents attached.
According to the report, Israeli authorities responded to the request by attempted to blackmail and coerce Ahmad’s mother into cooperating with the authorities in exchange for her child’s permit during an interview at the Erez crossing.
Though she refused, authorities ultimately allowed her and Ahmad to pass after being held several hours.
A subsequent permit request in September received no reply from authorities, and after the family obtained a new hospital appointment, the applied again in October, again without reply.
In November, Israeli authorities replied to another permit application with a refusal.
“The Israeli security services then summoned Ahmad for an interview at the crossing; during the interrogation, he was pressured to serve as a collaborator for the Israeli authorities in exchange for his permit. The child refused and was denied a permit,” al-Mezan’s report continued.
Finally, the family again obtained an appointment at a hospital for Jan. 30, 2017, as Ahmad’s health continued to decline. He died two weeks before the appointment.
“Al-Mezan strongly condemns Israel’s ill-treatment of Palestinian patients of Gaza and expresses remorse at the death of Ahmad Shubeir,” they wrote in their report.
The group warned of the continued “abuse” of critically ill Palestinian patients sealed inside the enclave, where health care services are crippled due to Israel’s ongoing blockade of the small territory that will enter its tenth year this coming June.
“The denial of adequate medical care, which amounts to ill-treatment, is in violation of treaty and customary international law, and amounts to a prohibited collective punishment,” al-Mezan stressed, noting that the Israeli hospitals Palestinians are attempting to reach are in close proximity to Gaza.
According to the center, 2016 represented a steep decrease in the number of permits granted to Palestinian patients wishing to pass through the Erez crossing: In 2015, 77.66 percent of patients were granted access, whereas 61 percent were granted in 2016.
Israeli authorities have also expanded the age group of those subjected to increased security checks from 16 to 35 years old to 16 to 55 years old, "which subsequently expanded waiting times and resulted in increased rejection of permits."
Between 50 and 60 percent of the patients who were refused permits in 2016 by Israeli authorities were people with cancer, with al-Mezan noting a trend that developed over the year, "whereby cancer patients were granted up to three permits, but not more, resulting in unfinished cancer treatment, and greatly diminished effectiveness of cancer care."
Furthermore, Palestinians who were finally granted permits were nevertheless subjected to measures that al-Mezan said amounted to “cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment,” including long-waiting periods, intense interrogations, invasive searches, blackmail, and coercion, all of which that were greatly strenuous for the sick patients who were not given sufficient rest amid the procedures.
The center further noted that obtaining a permit did not even guarantee a successful crossing for Gazans, reporting that Israeli forces arrested at least nine patients in addition to five Palestinians accompanying patients at the Erez crossing in 2015 and 2016.

A Palestinian fisherman sustained critical injuries early on Monday after he was hit with Israeli machinegun fire off Beit Lahia shores, in northern Gaza Strip.
Speaking to PIC, Head of Gaza’s Fishermen Union, Nizar Ayyash, said the Israeli occupation navy attacked Palestinian fishermen sailing off western Beit Lahiya with randomly-shot spates of machinegun fire.
Palestinian fisherman Oranes Sherif al-Sultan was shot and injured with an Israeli rubber bullet in the head, close to his eyes.
The injured fisherman was rushed to the Indonesian hospital then transferred to the Shifaa medical complex after his health took a critical downturn.
Last week, al-Sultan was arrested by the occupation forces at sea and released following long hours of intensive questioning.
A few weeks earlier, machinegun fire unleashed by Israeli gunboats took away the life of the Palestinian fisherman Mohamed al-Hissi.
Speaking to PIC, Head of Gaza’s Fishermen Union, Nizar Ayyash, said the Israeli occupation navy attacked Palestinian fishermen sailing off western Beit Lahiya with randomly-shot spates of machinegun fire.
Palestinian fisherman Oranes Sherif al-Sultan was shot and injured with an Israeli rubber bullet in the head, close to his eyes.
The injured fisherman was rushed to the Indonesian hospital then transferred to the Shifaa medical complex after his health took a critical downturn.
Last week, al-Sultan was arrested by the occupation forces at sea and released following long hours of intensive questioning.
A few weeks earlier, machinegun fire unleashed by Israeli gunboats took away the life of the Palestinian fisherman Mohamed al-Hissi.
21 jan 2017

Israeli forces opened live fire on Palestinian land in eastern Khan Younis of the southern Gaza Strip on Saturday.
No injuries were reported.
An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an she would look into reports on the incident.
On Friday, a six-year-old girl in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip was injured in the stomach with a bullet by Israeli forces deployed at towers on the border area in northern Beit Lahiya. While her injuries were initially reported as medium, she was transferred to the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza city after her condition became critical.
Palestinians who work near the unilaterally declared “buffer zone” between the Palestinian enclave and Israel often come under fire from military forces, as the Israeli military has not made clear the precise area of the designated zone. The practice has in effect destroyed much of the agricultural sector of the blockaded coastal enclave.
On Friday, Israeli forces shot and injured a Palestinian fisherman with a rubber bullet off the coast of the northern Gaza Strip after Israeli forces opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats.
The al-Mezan Center for Human Rights condemned Israeli army violations against Palestinian fishermen, saying that they posed a real threat to the rights of civilians in the Gaza Strip.
Al-Mezan said that fishermen had a right to exercise their profession in Gaza, and that Israeli forces were breaching international humanitarian law by preventing fishermen from gaining their livelihood.
The group added that Palestinian fishermen were continuously at risk of being killed, injured or arbitrarily detained, and called upon the international community to intervene.
No injuries were reported.
An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an she would look into reports on the incident.
On Friday, a six-year-old girl in Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip was injured in the stomach with a bullet by Israeli forces deployed at towers on the border area in northern Beit Lahiya. While her injuries were initially reported as medium, she was transferred to the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza city after her condition became critical.
Palestinians who work near the unilaterally declared “buffer zone” between the Palestinian enclave and Israel often come under fire from military forces, as the Israeli military has not made clear the precise area of the designated zone. The practice has in effect destroyed much of the agricultural sector of the blockaded coastal enclave.
On Friday, Israeli forces shot and injured a Palestinian fisherman with a rubber bullet off the coast of the northern Gaza Strip after Israeli forces opened fire at Palestinian fishing boats.
The al-Mezan Center for Human Rights condemned Israeli army violations against Palestinian fishermen, saying that they posed a real threat to the rights of civilians in the Gaza Strip.
Al-Mezan said that fishermen had a right to exercise their profession in Gaza, and that Israeli forces were breaching international humanitarian law by preventing fishermen from gaining their livelihood.
The group added that Palestinian fishermen were continuously at risk of being killed, injured or arbitrarily detained, and called upon the international community to intervene.
20 jan 2017

A five-year-old Palestinian girl was shot and injured when Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) opened their machinegun fire Friday evening at a group of people in Beit Lahia town, north of the Gaza Strip.
According to Quds Press, the child Rimas Hamdouna, 5, was deliberately shot and injured in her abdomen during the shooting.
She was immediately taken to hospital in very critical condition, the sources added.
Palestinians living along the border areas between the Palestinian enclave and Israel often come under fire from military forces in violation of a ceasefire agreement that ended Israel’s 2014 war on Gaza.
According to Quds Press, the child Rimas Hamdouna, 5, was deliberately shot and injured in her abdomen during the shooting.
She was immediately taken to hospital in very critical condition, the sources added.
Palestinians living along the border areas between the Palestinian enclave and Israel often come under fire from military forces in violation of a ceasefire agreement that ended Israel’s 2014 war on Gaza.

The Israeli occupation army early on Friday opened heavy machinegun fire on Palestinian farmers in eastern Rafah and Khan Younis cities, in southern Gaza Strip.
Reporting from the scene, a PIC news correspondent said Israeli army troops deployed in the Kissufim military base, to the south of the blockaded Gaza Strip, opened heavy machinegun fire on Palestinian farmers.
No injuries were reported in the attack.
The Israeli occupation army and naval forces have often targeted Palestinian farmers and fishermen in the blockaded Gaza Strip with randomly-unleashed spates of machinegun fire, in a flagrant violation of the ceasefire accord struck with the Palestinian resistance factions following the 2014 offensive on the besieged coastal enclave.
Reporting from the scene, a PIC news correspondent said Israeli army troops deployed in the Kissufim military base, to the south of the blockaded Gaza Strip, opened heavy machinegun fire on Palestinian farmers.
No injuries were reported in the attack.
The Israeli occupation army and naval forces have often targeted Palestinian farmers and fishermen in the blockaded Gaza Strip with randomly-unleashed spates of machinegun fire, in a flagrant violation of the ceasefire accord struck with the Palestinian resistance factions following the 2014 offensive on the besieged coastal enclave.

A Palestinian fisherman was shot, on Thursday morning, after Israeli navy ships opened fire on several fishing boats, near the shore of Beit Lahia, in the northern part of the coastal region.
Medical sources said the wounded fisherman has been identified as Abed Hisham Sultan, and that the man was shot with a rubber-coated steel bullet.
The fishers said the navy ships fired many live rounds and rubber-coated steel bullets, targeting many fishing boats, causing damage and forcing them to sail back to shore in fear of additional escalation.
Zakariyya Bakr, the head of the Fishermen’s Committees at the Palestinian Fishermen Syndicate, said the assault is the latest of ongoing and escalating Israeli violations.
He added that the navy is constantly harassing and assaulting the fishers and their boats in areas designated for fishing, in Gaza terrestrial waters.
Medical sources said the wounded fisherman has been identified as Abed Hisham Sultan, and that the man was shot with a rubber-coated steel bullet.
The fishers said the navy ships fired many live rounds and rubber-coated steel bullets, targeting many fishing boats, causing damage and forcing them to sail back to shore in fear of additional escalation.
Zakariyya Bakr, the head of the Fishermen’s Committees at the Palestinian Fishermen Syndicate, said the assault is the latest of ongoing and escalating Israeli violations.
He added that the navy is constantly harassing and assaulting the fishers and their boats in areas designated for fishing, in Gaza terrestrial waters.
18 jan 2017

Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF), on Wednesday morning, opened fire at Palestinian farmers and fishermen during separate incidents in the Gaza Strip.
Israeli navy forces opened their machinegun fire at fishermen sailing off the Gaza City shores.
Israeli forces deployed at borderline military outposts east of Juhr al-Deik village, in the central Gaza Strip, also opened fire at farmers who were working on their land.
There were no reports of casualties in both attacks.
People of Gaza come under daily attack from Israeli army and naval forces, who interfere in their daily quest for livelihood.
Israeli navy forces opened their machinegun fire at fishermen sailing off the Gaza City shores.
Israeli forces deployed at borderline military outposts east of Juhr al-Deik village, in the central Gaza Strip, also opened fire at farmers who were working on their land.
There were no reports of casualties in both attacks.
People of Gaza come under daily attack from Israeli army and naval forces, who interfere in their daily quest for livelihood.
Truce violations List of names Pictures of martyrs
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