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Macavity IGP and the complicit state

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Deshabandu Tennakoon

by Tisaranee Gunasekara

“Macavity, Macavity, there’s no one like Macavity,
There never was a Cat of such deceitfulness and suavity.
He always has an alibi, and one or two to spare:
At whatever time the deed took place – MACAVITY WASN’T THERE!”

TS Elliot (Macavity: The Mystery Cat)

In Sri Lanka, the borderline between fact and fiction, hard reality and wild fantasy is often porous. So in 2020, the authorities announced that a cat was caught smuggling drugs into the Welikada Prison. Photographs were released of police inspecting the offending feline and the incriminating evidence. “The feline delinquent was detained last week with two grams of heroin, two memory cards, and a memory chip hidden in a plastic bag tied to its collar,” explained The Daily Beast. But within days, the cat did a jail-break, never to be seen again. The cat escaped, revealed VICE, when the guards entered the cell with food. It was Macavity brought to life, the feline master-criminal created by TS Elliot in the poem Macavity: The Mystery Cat and popularised by Andrew Lloyd Weber in the musical, Cats.

From the mystery of the drug-smuggling cat to the mystery of the vanished IGP. On 28 February, the Matara Magistrate Court issued a warrant for the arrest of (temporarily suspended) IGP Deshabandu Tennakoon over the December 2023 shooting incident at WI5 Hotel in Weligama. When CID officials went to his private residence on the same day, they found him gone. Like Elliot’s Macavity, who was “the bafflement of Scotland Yard, the Flying Squad’s despair,” the IGP has been eluding the police ever since.

In July 2024, the Supreme Court issued an interim order preventing Deshabandu Tennakoon from functioning as the IGP due to the allegedly irregular nature of his appointment. President Anura Kumara Dissanayake appointed an acting IGP in September of that year, but Mr. Tennakoon remains the country’s top-cop until he resigns or is removed. Perhaps this nebulous state has addled official minds – for even on 28 February 2024 (more than seven months into his temporary suspension), Mr. Tennakoon retained his state-provided and public-funded 10-member security detail, four from the STF and six from the MSD.

So, not just a fugitive IGP but also a colluding system. Who permitted Mr. Tennakoon to keep such a large security detail, especially at a time when all VIP security is being stringently re-evaluated? Were the political authorities aware of this fact? The NPP/JVP in opposition would have screamed to high heaven about this abuse (and rightly so), but is silent about it in government.

Deshabandu Tennakoon “ran a criminal network, allegedly exploiting police officers under his command for unlawful activities…” (and) turned police officers into a ‘paramilitary force’, the AG’s Department has informed the Appeal Court. This, after all, is the meat of the charge against him, that he used officers from the Colombo Crime Division to attack a hotel owned by a personal enemy. Providing such an individual with a 10-member security team (four of them from the STF) would be foolhardy at best. It also turns the saga of the missing IGP from one individual’s depredations into systemic failure.

The banality of torture?

“The torturers sleep soundly their dreams are rosy,” wrote Zbigniew Herbert (From an Unwritten Theory of Dreams). They do, until they face the possibility of being tortured.

It is safe to assume that for almost 15 years, Deshabandu Tennakoon did not spare a thought for Ranjith Sumangala and his two companions-in-misfortune. Yet, their fate, unlawfully detained and brutally tortured, might be haunting the fugitive IGP’s dreams, waking and sleeping.

This week, Mr. Tennakoon, via his lawyer, filed an application asking the Appeal Court to stay the Matara magistrate’s arrest warrant. Questioned by justices, the lawyer expressed his client’s willingness to surrender to the police if an undertaking is given not to arrest him. The AG’s Department refused to give such a guarantee. The search continues.

The non-functional IGP’s unwillingness to be arrested is understandable given what he himself did to Ranjith Sumangala and two others in December 2010.

The three men were arrested on suspicion of being involved in a series of thefts in the Moragahahena-Padduka area and detained in the Mirihana police. The arrests were made subsequent to an anonymous letter (signed ‘aggrieved villagers/neighbours’) received by the then SSP Deshabandu Tennakoon. The detainees were subjected to beatings and torture (including water torture) and were not produced before a magistrate during the legally stipulated time period. SSP Tennakoon personally visited the place of detention; he ordered the suspects to be stripped, thrashed them with a ‘three-wheeler belt’, and forced them to apply Siddhalepa balm on their own genitalia.

In March 2011, Ranjith Sumangala filed a fundamental rights case in the Supreme Court, naming Deshabandu Tennakoon as the fifth respondent. The judgement finally came in December 2023; the court held with the petitioner and rejecting ‘in toto’ the responses of the respondents. In its ruling, the Supreme Court called the actions of Deshabandu Tennakoon and other respondents a “stark betrayal of the Rule of Law…entirely repugnant to the virtues of a democratic republic.”

It is an open secret that beating and torturing suspects are common police practices in Sri Lanka. Use of excessive force and torture are particularly rampant when the detainees belong to minority communities. A recent case in point was the experiences of poet Ahnaf Jazeem; arrested by the TID on the charge of promoting extremism and terrorism, he was kept handcuffed for two weeks and tied to a chair during nights.

The Supreme Court, in its ruling, focused on this systemic angle. “Violations of the kind we have observed in this case are, unfortunately, all too common. These are by no means isolated one-off events but are symptoms of long-standing institutional failures…” The case reveals “a pattern of grave derelictions which has persisted for a considerable period of time” (https://supremecourt.lk/?melsta_doc_download=1&doc_id=44cb0b15-2cbf-48f1-9ff3-7d6b9c4e7caa&filename=sc_107_2011.pdf).

Perhaps the court hoped that its ruling would be a turning point in ending practices which are as deplorable as they are ineffective in combating crime. The court also would have taken into account the fact that the fifth respondent Deshabandu Tennakoon was the acting IGP, just one step away from permanency. Maybe the court hoped that with this judgement it could prevent a proven torturer from becoming the country’s top cop. So the court not only ordered the state and the respondents to pay compensation to the petitioner but also asked the National Police Commission and other authorities to take appropriate action against the respondents, including acting IGP Tennakoon. “The big fish in the pond are seldom held duly accountable,” the judgement said.

But the court’s attempt to hold a very big fish accountable for his past crimes didn’t succeed. The Police Commission (which, incidentally, is super active currently) remained somnolent. Within days of the judgement, convicted torturer Deshabandu Tennakoon was appointed Inspector General of Police by President Ranil Wickremesinghe, one of the most egregious deeds of a presidency replete with political wrongs and economic rights.

Mr. Tennakoon’s true strength was that he had friends on every side of the political divide. That he was favoured by the Rajapaksas and a protégé of the then minister of public security Tiran Alles were open secrets. He seemed to have had well-wishers even among the political opposition and civil society representatives on the Constitutional Council.

In a revealing incident, in October 2023, the CC unanimously decided not to approve another extension to the then IGP Chandana Wickremeratne, knowing well that they might be opening the door to Deshabandu Tennakoon’s elevation. Bringing Mr. Wickremeratne back from retirement and giving him repeated extensions was the way President Wickremesinghe subverted Mr. Alles’ attempts to make his protégé the next IGP. (https://economynext.com/move-to-oust-sri-lanka-police-chief-backfires-135910). That time, President Wickremesinghe scrapped the CC’s move. But less than two months later, he allowed Mr. Wickremeratne to retire and appointed Deshabandu Tennakoon as the IGP. This eventual capitulation is even more egregious because it happened after the Supreme Court found Mr. Tennakoon guilty of illegally detaining and torturing a suspect. It’s as if the Scotland Yard and the Flying Squad made Macavity the Police Commissioner!

Mr. Tennakoon had powerful patrons not just among politicians of all stripes but also monks. When the Supreme Court imposed a temporary suspension on him, a group of monks organised a procession in support of the IGP Tennakoon (and then minister Tiran Alles). “When Buddhist leaders are appointed they should be supported,” one monk said. The action was led by senior monk Agalakada Sirisumana thero (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nlQD3lLc0k). He and another senior monk, Bellanwila Dhammarathana thero, were amongst three-monk petitioners who in September 2024 asked the Supreme Court to vacate its interim order and allow Deshabandu Tennakoon to resume functions as the IGP. The fact that the man had been found guilty of torture did not matter to these supposed adherents of a teaching based on non-violence.

A trail of Iniquities

The disaster of the Macavity IGP was a disaster foretold. The political leaders who promoted/enabled Mr. Tennakoon would have known his unsuitability to wear the police uniform, let alone to become the senior-most guardian of the law. For he had left a trail of iniquities behind him. Study them, and a veritable pattern is discernible of an official willing to bend/break the law for his own benefit and/or to satisfy his patrons.

In June 2009, journalist Poddala Jayantha was white-vanned in broad daylight near Embuldeniya junction, a hop and a skip away from the Mirihana police station. He was tortured and then dumped by the roadside near the IDH hospital (https://www.dailymirror.lk/dbs-jeyaraj-column/Journalist-Activist-Poddala-Jayantha-s-White-Van-Ordeal/192-128823). The Mirihana police arrested and remanded two unrelated persons. The investigations didn’t proceed beyond this, naturally. Deshabandu Tennakoon was then the SSP in charge of Nugegoda area. In 2019, the CID took a statement from him about the blotched investigation (Lankadeepa – 20.1.2019). Once Gotabaya Rajapaksa became president, the investigation into the blotched investigation and the abduction was abandoned.

In July 2021, investigative journalist Tharindu Jayawardane complained that Mr. Tennakoon threatened him, stating that he will meet the same fate as Vellupillai Prabhakaran and criminals. The police recorded a statement from him more than a year later. The matter ended there.

In January 2023, SSP DS Wickremesinghe, Director of the Special Investigation Unit, informed the Fort Magistrate Court that Deshabandu Tennakoon threatened him for reporting to the court the facts relating to the July 9th discovery of 17.8million rupees by Aragalaya activists in the President’s House. Mr. Tennakoon wanted him to hand over the money not to the court but to Minister of Public Security Tiran Alles, SSP Wickremesinghe said. When he refused, Mr. Tennakoon reportedly called the SSP and threatened him saying, “I will take care of you in the future” (https://www.dailymirror.lk/breaking_news/SIU-Director-informs-Court-he-was-threatened-by-Deshabandu-Tennakoon/108-252145).

He was as good as his word. In July 2023, SSP Wickremesinghe was transferred to the Research and Development Division of the police (https://srilankabrief.org/the-director-of-siu-sri-lanka-police-who-complained-against-sdig-deshabandu-transferred).

Sri Lanka’s Human Rights Commission noted that 24 custodial deaths happened in the Western Province involving the police between January 2020 and August 2023. Deshabandu Tennakoon was the senior DIG in charge of the Western Province during this period.

Now the man himself is on the run, fearing the police he had contributed in no small measure to subvert and corrupt.

In its December 2023 judgment, the Supreme Court stated, “The kind of conduct on display, judged even by the lowest standards, amounts to a magnificent failure of all that the Rule of Law stands for.” That sentence itself should have sufficed to suspend Deshabandu Tennakoon from his position as senior DIG. Instead, the Police Commission looked on while politicians protected and promoted him.

Unfortunately, this unsavoury past is not even the past. Last week, the Supreme Court expressed “strong displeasure” about the non-implementation of its orders regarding five police officers including Senior DIG Ranmal Kodituwakku. The five men are respondents in another fundamental rights case. The petitioner, Mishara Ranasinghe, has alleged that the senior DIG and other officials assaulted him after he overtook a vehicle. Even the petitioner’s bed ticket from the Mulleriyawa base hospital is missing, the lawyer for the petitioner informed the court.

Clearly, neither the state nor the government has learnt anything from the ongoing debacle of our Macavity IGP. The SC order remains unimplemented seven months after it was given. The rot in the system obviously runs too deep. Deshabandu Tennakoon represents not the past we escaped but the present we live in and the future waiting for us.



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‘The devil is in the details’ in West Asian peace

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President Donald Trump at the current G7 summit in France. Evelyn Hockstein/Getty Image

It is obviously too early for an outpouring of joy over the seeming cessation of hostilities between the main antagonists in West Asia. While the prospect of there being a measure of calm in the region is being welcomed by considerable sections of the international community, what is ‘on the table’ currently is only a Memorandum of Understanding between the US and Iran to give peace a chance. The hard part in the peace effort remains to be achieved.

In the Middle East of today we have one of the most complex conflicts to break out in modern international politics and the observer would be naive in the extreme to expect a facile and early closure to the tangle. Yet, for the sake of the world’s publics who have been hurting badly in the prolonged hostilities one could only hope that the US-Iran MoU that is expected to be signed by the sides on Friday would lead eventually to a substantive peace. The world’s thanks are due to Pakistan in this connection for its sustained support in the peace drive.

While the sides have agreed to a ceasing of hostilities in the most general terms and have reached accord on the facilitation of uninterrupted oil and gas supplies to the rest of the world, for instance, the ‘devil will prove to be in the details’ in an envisaged comprehensive peace settlement. It is these details that would make or break peace if the negotiations go on in earnest.

Nevertheless, the details would need to be worked out consensually in a spirit of compromise with an eye to the greater good of the world community. Realpolitik or a narrow focus on solely the national interest among the protagonists, for example, would need to give way to a measure of humanity that would encompass within it a consideration of the overall well being of the world. In other words, it is statesmanship that would crucially matter.

The next few weeks would establish whether humanists are ‘asking for far too much’ when they broach the questions at issue in these terms. Yet it is essentially self interest and national security considerations of the first importance that drove the conflict from even prior to February this year and these questions would need to be taken up and resolved to the satisfaction of the US and Iran in the main if some headway is to be made towards a durable settlement.

The nuclear issue would prove to be the proverbial Gordian Knot. From a realistic viewpoint, Iran could not be expected to be without a potential nuclear deterrent in the face of perceived nuclear threats emanating for it from the West and Israel. In the short term, Iran would need to possess this deterrent to a measure, within a mutually agreed international legal framework maybe, until wide agreement is reached on the nuclear tangle. Specifically, Iran’s immediate threat perceptions with regard to her nuclear-powered rivals would need to be defused during initial negotiations.

Ideally it is a world free of nuclear weapons that must be aimed at but since this goal cannot be achieved in the near or medium terms, unfolding negotiations would need to ensure Iran’s absolute security in a world of powers that continue to swear by the nuclear deterrent, if it is to give up the suspected latter capability.

However, it is to the degree to which the present nuclear powers divest themselves of this capability that Iran could be put at ease on this score. Accordingly, it is nothing short of a complete elimination of nuclear weapons from the world that could dissuade keenly security conscious states from developing nuclear weapons of their own with a mass destruction capability.

This is the number one dilemma the international community needs to grapple with going forward and it is to the extent to which it resolves it that a nuclear weapons free world could be envisaged. No doubt, an uphill challenge.

Compelling Israel to support the present negotiatory process constitutes another grueling challenge for the US. Currently the Iranian position essentially is that a Middle East peace is inseparable from a normalization of the security situation in Lebanon. That is, the present Israeli attacks on the Hezbollah presence in Lebanon must cease if a comprehensive peace is to be realized in West Asia.

However, Israel is showing no signs of drawing back from its attacks on Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon since the security of the Israeli state is being seen as threatened by the militant group. Co-opting Israel into the negotiatory effort therefore would turn out to be a matter of paramount concern for the US.

Moreover, elements in the rightist administration in Israel are seeing the current peace efforts as a ‘sell out’ to the enemies of Israel. They would have none of it. It is left to be seen how the US would be managing these virtual storm centres in the diplomatic process that could very well bring down the overall purported peace drive.

A recent pronouncement by US Vice President J.D. Vance points to yet another problem area in the US’ current peace overtures. He said that, ‘Regional peace and stability includes stopping the funding of terrorist organizations.’ He was obviously referring to the support extended by Iran to Hezbollah when he mentioned ‘terrorist organizations’ but he has given fresh life to the age-old conundrum of ‘Who is a terrorist?’ by these words.

To the Netanyahu government the Hezbollah and other militant organizations fighting Israel are ‘terrorists’ but from the viewpoint of the Iranian regime they are ‘freedom fighters’. This seemingly insurmountable definitional issue would not only stubbornly bedevil the peace effort but could even figure in bringing about its collapse, unless judiciously handled.

Thus, it’s the thorny details that need to be watched to keep the West Asian peace process afloat, once it gets going in earnest. There is no doubt that US President Trump would be receiving a considerable amount of support from the G7 in this historic peace undertaking and his personal appeals to the grouping currently meeting in France for continuous support are likely to elicit a positive response from it.

Likewise, Trump would need to appeal to also the BRICS countries if almost total global support is to be garnered for the peace drive in West Asia. BRICS’ solidarity with the US and the West is likely to carry considerable weight with Iran and other Eastern actors who are key to a sustained peace drive in the Middle East.

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Sri Lanka’s elephant paradox: Govt. counts tourism dollars while playing a dangerous numbers game: Expert

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At a time when Sri Lanka is enjoying a resurgence in wildlife tourism, with elephants remaining the undisputed stars of the country’s national parks and one of its most marketable natural assets, elephant conservationist Supun Lahiru Prakash has sounded a stark warning: the nation is in danger of losing the very species that helps attract millions of tourism dollars while sustaining some of the island’s most important ecosystems.

Supun says repeated claims by authorities that Sri Lanka’s elephant population is increasing, despite the absence of a final survey report and amid continuing elephant deaths, risk creating a misleading narrative that could undermine conservation efforts and encourage retaliation against elephants.

According to Supun, the issue is not merely about numbers. It is about political priorities, scientific credibility and the future of one of Sri Lanka’s most iconic species.

“Repeatedly claiming that the elephant population is increasing appears to be an attempt to hide the Government’s inability to manage the rising annual elephant death rate and the complications of human-elephant conflict,” Supun said.

For decades, the Sri Lankan elephant has been a symbol of the country’s rich natural heritage. It is the centrepiece of wildlife tourism, drawing visitors from across the globe to national parks such as Yala, Udawalawe, Minneriya, Kaudulla and Wilpattu. International wildlife documentaries, tourism campaigns and social media promotions frequently place elephants at the heart of Sri Lanka’s nature tourism brand.

Yet, according to Supun, the country’s conservation policies do not reflect the value of the species.

“On one hand, the Government is enjoying increasing tourism revenue, and elephants remain one of Sri Lanka’s most important wildlife attractions. On the other hand, narratives are being promoted that could encourage retaliation against the very species that contributes significantly to the country’s tourism industry,” Supun said.

According to the First Countrywide National Survey of Elephants conducted in 2011, Sri Lanka had 5,879 elephants. However, official statistics show that 4,167 elephants died between 2012 and 2024.

Supun stressed that these figures represent only the deaths officially recorded by the Department of Wildlife Conservation.

“In a context where more than 70 percent of the country’s elephant population reported in 2011 has died within 13 years, it is difficult to accept claims that the population has increased,” Supun said.

The conservationist pointed out that elephants have the longest gestation period among land mammals and that scientific studies have reported increasing interbirth intervals among female elephants together with high calf mortality.

“When such biological realities are taken into consideration, claims of a dramatic increase in elephant numbers become difficult to understand,” Supun said.

Supun believes that repeated references to increasing elephant populations risk fuelling public hostility towards elephants, particularly among farming communities already affected by crop raids and property damage.

“Such claims can create the impression that elephant populations are exploding and thereby promote retaliation against elephants as well,” Supun said.

According to Supun, Sri Lanka’s elephant crisis cannot be understood solely through population estimates. The real issue lies in the country’s failure to address human-elephant conflict through long-term, science-based solutions.

Sri Lanka continues to record among the highest levels of human-elephant conflict in the world. Every year, hundreds of elephants and dozens of people lose their lives as competition for land and resources intensifies.

Despite the scale of the crisis, Supun says authorities continue to rely on strategies that have repeatedly failed.

Lahiru Prakash

These include driving elephants into protected areas, strengthening electric fences to confine them there and allocating additional manpower to maintain fencing systems.

Supun was also critical of several proposals that emerged from district-level discussions on conflict mitigation, including the sowing of paddy and corn using Air Force drones and the planting of fruit orchards within protected areas.

“Such proposals fail to address the real ecological and social dimensions of the conflict,” Supun said.

While welcoming reports that the Government intends appointing a national-level mechanism to tackle human-elephant conflict, Supun said the challenge required intervention at the highest level of government.

“Given the gravity, complexity and geographical spread of human-elephant conflict, appointing any committee other than a Presidential Task Force is not useful,” Supun said.

He argued that a Presidential Task Force chaired by either the President or the Secretary to the President would be better positioned to overcome the bureaucratic delays and institutional fragmentation that have hindered previous efforts.

Supun also stressed the urgent need to restore and protect elephant corridors and home ranges that allow elephants to move safely across landscapes.

He cited the Koholankala elephant corridor in Hambantota as one example where removing obstacles could help reduce conflict while improving habitat connectivity.

At the same time, Supun questioned policies that permit the allocation of forest lands in areas identified by environmental assessments as crucial elephant ranges and movement corridors.

“The opening of elephant corridors and the protection of elephant home ranges must be carried out scientifically and consistently if they are to succeed,” Supun said.

Beyond tourism, Supun emphasised the ecological importance of elephants.

“Elephants are ecosystem engineers. Through their feeding habits and movements, they help maintain habitats that support numerous other species. In many ways, they create safer and healthier environments for wildlife,” Supun said.

According to Supun, protecting elephants means protecting entire ecosystems and the biodiversity upon which Sri Lanka’s wildlife tourism industry depends.

“By protecting elephants, we are also protecting the biodiversity that makes Sri Lanka one of the world’s premier wildlife tourism destinations,” Supun said.

As Sri Lanka seeks to expand tourism earnings and strengthen its reputation as a wildlife destination, Supun believes the country faces a defining choice: continue with policies that have failed to stem elephant deaths and human-elephant conflict, or embrace a science-based conservation strategy that safeguards both people and wildlife.

Without a fundamental shift in policy and political will, Supun warned, Sri Lanka risks losing not only one of its most iconic species but also the ecological and economic benefits that elephants continue to provide.

“The suffering of both farmers and elephants will only intensify unless meaningful action replaces rhetoric,” Supun said.

 

By Ifham Nizam

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Top Model of the World 2026

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Back-to-back victory for Colombia

Katherine Castaño of Colombia claimed the Top Model of the World 2026 crown, securing a historic back-to-back victory for her country. Angelica Sanchez of Puerto Rico was named first runner-up, and Eunice Deza of the Philippines finished as second runner-up.

Katherine was crowned by outgoing titleholder Natalia Garizabal Vera of Colombia.

Several special category awards, and subsidiary titles, were also presented during the Top Model of the World 2026 pageant.

These awards recognised excellence in modelling, peer support, and regional representation.

Primary Subsidiary Titles

Sri Lanka’s Netalie Withanage: Top 16 at
the grand finale

Miss Globe 2026: Valentina Tabares (Ecuador) — Awarded to the contestant who perfectly balances fashion modelling with traditional beauty queen qualities.

Queen of Europe 2026: Mia Danielle Williams (United Kingdom) — Given to the highest-ranking candidate from a European nation.

Special Awards Recognition

Audience Iconic Award: Charly (Dominican Republic) — Won via the official public online vote, granting her a fast-track direct entry into the Top 6.

Exotic Model of the World: Angel Emeka (Nigeria) — Awarded for exceptional editorial presence and strong runway performance.

Best Body Award: Thailand — Voted directly by fellow contestants at the Flow Spectrum Hotel. The highest-ranking runners-up for this category included Zambia, South Africa, Colombia, and Ghana.

Angelica Sanchez (Puerto Rico): 1st Runner-up

Final Placement

Winner: Katherine Castaño (Colombia)

1st Runner-Up: Angelica Sanchez (Puerto Rico)

2nd Runner-Up: Eunice Deza (Philippines)

Top 6 Finalists: Included contestants from the Dominican Republic, Romania, and Germany.

The pageant, known for focusing on professional modelling careers over just beauty, brought together 36 models from around the globe for two weeks of runway, photoshoots, and cultural events.

Sri Lanka’s Netalie Withanage walked among 36 of the world’s best and powered her way into the Top 16 at the grand finale.

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