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An unstable and unusual new world survival strategies for lanka

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by Kumar David

The only crime that is committed in broad daylight is politics, all others are done in secret. This is true whether it be Trump’s America or the ruling cohorts of Sri Lanka. No need to elaborate, it is universally known. Trump brags about his tax evasions and encourages his compatriots to do likewise.

This country is trapped in a strange syndrome. It argued that Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW) may be able to win over the IMF and thereby stabilise the currency, deleverage debt (make it easier to borrow from commercial markets again), improve the import-export trade (on a capitalist basis) and negotiate a compromise between the Treasury and the Central Bank (limit money printing and enforce a degree of fiscal discipline). But at the same time economic pain will be inflicted on the poor and the lower middle-class. His budget proposals include raising income tax, increasing VAT and broadening the company tax but the costs will all filter down. RW hopes to reach a primary surplus (that is excluding interest payment on state debt) of 2.3% of GDP by 2024. This involves raising fuel and electricity prices. At present a part of these are sold far below production cost since they include large subsidies to low income households. The CEB and the Petroleum Corporation show huge losses on their books – it’s all politics.

Social spending and a safety-net m1itigating the impact of the current crisis on the poor and vulnerable by raising social spending is envisaged. However, inflation and high interest rates (spurred by the US Federal Reserve Bank) is beyond control in most countries, therefore achieving price stability is a pipedream. The IMF which has promised technical help and the government say they are both committed to a new Central Bank Act, reducing corruption and achieving good financial management. On the whole these plans can be called a conventional capitalist economic programme and like a curate’s egg is good in parts.

However, here’s the rub. Ranil has from time to time shown himself to be a ruthless opponent of democratic and human rights. In the last three months he has encouraged his goons, several times, to attack peaceful anti-government protesters, human rights campaigners and women’s groups. The Police Minister who urged the force to break up peaceful democratic protests against government policies (some democracy!) continues to ply his ugly trade. You ask me which is the real Ranil? I say both; that is the fact of the matter; that is why there is no set-piece response to Sri Lanka’s paradox. Furthermore, this needs to be placed in the context of a deeply contradictory and fractured global scene. The world is upside down and since the financial crisis of the early 2000s is mostly standing on its head.

A daunting economic scenario faces global capitalism in the wake of the financial crisis of the early 2000s. The theology of the success of uncontrolled free-market capitalism has been shattered. Capitalism is kept alive by the STATE, yes that’s right, the state has diverted trillions of dollars, Euros and Yen into keeping capitalism alive. The principal role of the state in metropolitan nations is not subsidising bankrupt state enterprises, it is bankrolling insolvent capitalism. All this is no longer disputed. In 2008 the US Congress approved a $700 billion bailout known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program and in February 2009 Obama delivered a $787 billion economic stimulus to avert a global depression. This $1.5 trillion has been supplemented by a further $5 trillion post-Covid, post supply-chain-disruption stimulus monies in the US alone. Add the other capitalist nations and the increase is substantial, but I agree that not all of it can be attributed to propping up failed capitalist market economics.

The Great Recession began with a subprime mortgage crisis in 2006 when banks drove American households into rotten Mortgages and fake instruments known as Derivatives. The housing bubble burst and subprime borrowers defaulted. The capitalist state declared banks (Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch) and giant corporations (GM and insurance giant (AIG) “Too big to fail” when they turned worthless. The stock market crash of 2008 was accompanied by one of the largest points drop in the history of the Dow. Global capitalism needed to avert a second Great Depression; this is not disputed. The myth of stable free-market capitalism has been shattered; the state has been exposed as a committee to oversee the activities of the capitalist class to a degree that even Marx did not foresee.

Free-market capitalism not only went belly-up as an economic system but we have now entered an era of extremism and social instability the likes of which we last saw in the 1930s in Europe in the period of the rise of fascism in Italy, Germany, Eastern Europe and Spain. The return of a Trump presidency, near civil war over women’s rights to an abortion in consultation with their doctors, the possible overthrow of Putin (good riddance you are entitled to say) and dangerous instability on the “eastern front” are the setting to a very unstable global situation. Sri Lanka needs to play its cards both wisely and craftily to navigate these waters.

The one issue that I would like to address today instead of ploughing on with generalities is the economic role of the state. Therefore, I will focus of the most important global example of state involvement in economic development at this time, China. China’s economy whether measured by a PPP (Paycheck Protection Program) yardstick or in nominal dollar is likely to surpass that of the United States within a decade. The benefits of competent state direction in the initial decades of post-colonial modernisation are bearing fruit. Decades of high single-digit and some years of two-digit GDP growth pulled 800 million people pulled out of poverty, created a middle-class whose numbers exceed the population of the USA and saw infrastructure improvement that is hard to believe. State-direction built railways, airports, highways, industries and encouraged massive soulless public housing projects by private developers. This is all known; some people call it the greatest economic explosion in history. Nevertheless . . . be patient!

Whether under the leadership of the Communist Party, or in Singapore, Taiwan or South Korea for different reasons, the directive-modernising role of the state has been paramount. Size is not the only attractor; technology, investment, military focus and other crucial aspects. The bread-and- butter technology picture is mixed. China is pulling ahead in Artificial Intelligence and hard technology for industrial expansion. Though the West is hell bent on denying it access to the best in computer-chip and military know-how there were ways round this such as joint-ventures and theft of intellectual property. Russian science-technology is no pushover; China-Russia cooperation can one day yield huge results.

A friend and former professor at the Open University, Nawala known as Eich, sent this pessimistic note to me a few days ago: “There is a major fallacy in your (KD’s) assumptions; given the insatiable desires and greed of people (ordinary people, capitalists and political leaders) this is never going to pass. The present state of technology is sufficiently advanced to allow people to lead decent lives and engage in enjoyable occupations. If you wish to you may speculate how much longer the Chinese capitalists will tolerate the dictatorship of the CPC without taking over decision-making themselves”.

But protests are erupting in Shanghai and other Chinese cities over heavy handed Covid controls. For the first time in decades, thousands of people have defied the authorities at universities and on the streets of major cities, demanding to be freed not only from incessant Covid tests and lockdowns, censorship the Communist Party’s tightening grip over all aspects of life.

Across the country, “We want freedom” has become a rallying cry of a groundswell of protests led by a younger generation too young to have taken part in previous anti-government dissent. As numbers swelled in multiple major cities over the weekend, so too have the range of grievances. Among protesters hundreds have called for the removal of Chinese leader Xi Jinping, who has overseen a strategy of mass-testing, lockdowns, enforced quarantine and digital tracking. Crowds chanted “Give me liberty or give me death!” according to videos circulating online in vigils to mark the death of 10 people in a fire in Xinjiang. By Sunday (27) evening, protests had spread to Beijing, Chengdu, Guangzhou and Wuhan, where thousands called not only an end to Covid restrictions, but remarkably, for political freedoms. Residents in some locked-down neighbourhoods tore down barriers. Protests on campuses included prestigious Peking U, Tsinghua U and the Communication University, Nanjing.

Nevertheless, there remains a nagging question. What after the dirigisme phase has served its purpose and is past its use-by date? How is post-dirigisme society, technology and innovation to organise itself? Productivity in China is falling, innovation is stifled and raises questions about the freedoms essential for the future. Society has to be set free to flourish. What was the great failure of the USSR? The state, far from withering away, became an ever more determining force. But socialism is unimaginable if men are dominated by the state. Somewhere along the road the state must wither away if as envisaged by socialists a society of plenty and freedom is to be realised. Society has to be free to flourish. The lamp illustrates the leap into the sphere of human freedom and innovation that is a precondition for socialism.

This brings me to my closing remarks pertaining to the role of the state in Sri Lanka. At the present time it

Has to play a directive role in economic development but it can do so only if it is not a predator in the hands of corrupt political classes. Marx speculated that “in place of the old bourgeois society, with its class antagonisms, we shall have an association, in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all”. Leave aside the flowery language, in the final analysis the state is only a temporary instrument, human liberation demands that eventually we must be rid of it.

A few days ago, I polled my liberal and intellectual friends about who will they would vote for in a presidential election in 2023/24. I gave them a wide choice; Sajith, Ranil, any Sajith-Ranil combo, various Rajapaksa options such as Dullas and Namal, the JVP/NPP and Peratugami (Front Line Socialists). Believe me I am not saying this because I am an NPP member, but over half choose the NPP/JVP while the other half distributed themselves all over. The challenge then is to take forward the debate within the JVP (the NPP is fine) on the longer-term economic role of the state and my “The nagging question, what after the dirigisme phase as served its purpose and is past its use-by date?” Looks like we have a busy work schedule cut out for years to come.



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New mediation law for smarter dispute resolution of civil and commercial disputes – I

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The Mediation (Civil and Commercial Disputes) Bill  was passed by the Parliament on Thursday, June 11, 2026.  Harshana  Nanayakkara, Minister of Justice and National Integration, introduced the Bill, and explained its provisions and value for Sri Lanka and global developments in the use of mediation. Encouragingly, it was passed unanimously.

Sri Lanka’s commitment to provide legislative support for the use of mediation is timely and most welcome. Given that the backlog of cases pending before courts is over a staggering 1.1 million, it is clear that Sri Lanka is yet another country that remains challenged to find responses to make  dispute resolution more efficient. The impact of laws delays is serious and damaging not only to the disputants personally, but also for businesses and the economic development of the country. The delays in concluding cases impacts the economy adversely, both directly and indirectly,  but are often seen only as an access to Justice concern. This is unfortunate. In many jurisdictions across the globe, alternative dispute resolution processes (ADR), such as mediation, have been introduced to alleviate laws delays. While Sri Lanka enacted legislation (1988) to provide for mediation in respect of minor community disputes of a low monetary threshold, the enactment of the new law heralds a commitment to provide for the recognition of a disciplined regime for its use for higher value civil and commercial disputes.

The new law provides for the recognition of mediation as a dispute resolution option that can be voluntarily selected by parties, and for a governance regime to ensure that mediations are conducted in compliance with certain standards which are globally accepted. It provides statutory recognition to the principle that a mediated settlement agreement that has been signed by the disputants, is valid in law. It does not provide for any management control by government or establish entities. In addition to the voluntary reference by parties, a  court can also refer a dispute in an action before it, to mediation, at its discretion, after considering all  circumstances and if considered appropriate.  The voluntary nature of the process is not affected because, while the court can refer the dispute to mediation and the parties must then engage in the mediation, there is no compulsion for the parties to settle against their will.

The law sets out the obligations of Mediators, disputants and the Service Provider. Certain categories of disputes cannot be referred  to mediation.  These are disputes the settlement of which requires the inclusion of terms that can be given effect to, only on a decree of court, such as the termination of a marriage or a declaration of nullity of marriage or the adoption of a child or the partition of land to obtain rights in rem.  A schedule sets out eleven (11) categories of actions that cannot be settled by mediation. However,  matters relevant to such disputes may be mediated for the purpose of submitting terms of settlement to court for consideration of incorporation in a judgement, decree or order in compliance with applicable law.

The new law also provides that in a mediation, certain  key principles of the process must be complied with. These include the  confidentiality and the without prejudice rule in respect of matters discussed at the mediation; the  rule that Mediators must be neutral and impartial; the party centric nature of the process that provides primacy to the wishes of the disputants including that it is they that determine the outcome and that a settlement is reached only if all disputants agree to the terms; the noncoercive role of the mediator whose duty is to facilitate and manage the process using mediation specific skills and techniques, but is debarred from imposing a decision. Although a settlement agreement is valid in law, provision is included to obtain a decree of court, based on the terms of the settlement. A mediated settlement agreement can be set aside on an application made to court, on specific limited grounds which are provided for, including that it is offensive to the public policy of the country. If the parties are unable to agree on a settlement, a certificate of non-settlement is issued. The provisions of the law are based on international best practices and principles articulated in the 1988 UN Mediation Convention  (the Singapore Convention) and the UNCITRAL model law.

The popularity of mediation has grown for its value in being time efficient, cost effective and party centric. Parties have control over the outcome and have the space to discuss their concerns, fears and interests and need never agree to settle unless fully satisfied that settlement terms address their interests. Disputants are free to walk out of a mediation process at any time, if dissatisfied with the progress. The discussions are confidential and a valuable feature is that the process offers an opportunity to reduce acrimony which is prevalent in most disputes, and to restore fractured relationships which is very important in family  and  business related disputes. This benefit and the prospects for governments to reduce the cost of the administration of justice, by using mediation,  is articulated in the preamble to the 2018 UN Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation (2018) which states that the use of mediation results in significant benefits.

 Pursuant to the interest generated within the country regarding the value of using Mediation for commercial dispute resolution, and heralding what we like to see as the initial steps of a Mediation boom in the country, several positive advancements have taken place –

*    Parties have opted to include mediation in the dispute resolution clause in contracts;

*    Given that mediating disputes requires  very specialised techniques and skills, many professionals, including predominantly Lawyers, have engaged in training programmes offered by international training bodies that offer accreditation;

*    Trained Mediators are engaged in an effort to form themselves as a professional Organisation;

*    Mediation  Advocacy training programmes have been held to train Lawyers on their niche role in the mediation process. That role is distinctly different to that of a court Lawyer who’s obligations are centred on an adversarial approach where the dispute is adjudicated in terms of the law alone.  Hence lawyers need training to be useful within a non-adversarial process which is party centric and has a focus on reaching a settlement, based on the interests of disputants.

*    Sri Lanka enacted the Recognition and Enforcement of International Mediated Settlement Agreements Act No. 5 of 2024 (the UN Mediation Convention Act) and ratified the Convention becoming the 14th country to do so. Sri Lanka will be seen as an investor friendly country in respect of dispute resolution where mediation is used, since it offers an enforcement regime which is recognised universally.

*    The landmark determination of the Supreme Court (SC SD 22 of 2025) in the challenge by the Bar Association to the constitutionality of the Mediation (Civil and Commercial Disputes) Bill, found that none of the provisions of the Bill were unconstitutional and gave a judicial sign off to statutory provisions that seek to ensure that mediation services are provided in this country, in a disciplined manner in compliance with universally accepted standards.

*    Perhaps, inspired by the statutory obligation imposed on judges to attempt pretrial settlement of disputes, in terms of the Small Claims Court Act and the Small Claims Court Procedure Act (both of 2022) and the Civil Procedure Code provisions on Pretrial Conference and Pretrial Orders, 125 District Judges were recently trained (with support from the ADB) in Mediation. The training provided a dual benefit – it provided training in  skills that are required to settle disputes and equally importantly, provided a comprehensive understanding of how mediation will function when judges themselves refer disputes for settlement by private mediators.

*    Trained Mediators are already conducting mediations with success.

*    A not-for-profit guarantee company, the International ADR Centre – www.iadrc.lk ) was established in 2018  as a joint venture of the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce and the Institute for the Development of Commercial Law & Practice (ICLP) to promote ADR and is actively engaged in promoting mediation through training, disseminating information and creating awareness among stakeholders, including the business sector.   In addition to the International ADR Centre, “Udecide”  is a project that promotes training of mediators and other activities that enrich the mediation culture.

*    Commercial Mediation has been included in the Masters level programme at the Colombo University;

*    The Sri Lanka Law College offers a component on Mediation in the Post Attorney Diploma programme, which commenced recently.

The private sector was actively engaged in the drafting of the  Mediation Bill under the leadership of the International ADR Centre, which held many stakeholder consultations to obtain feedback from those that were conversant with the subject. The Centre had previously assisted the government to draft the UN Mediation Convention Act (Act No. 5 of 2024).

Several international Organisations that previously provided for resolution of disputes by arbitration, have provided for institutional rules to provide mediation services. These include WIPO and the ICC. Specifically, in relation to Investor State dispute resolution (ISDR), the  International Bar Association (IBA) adopted its  Mediation  Rules in 2012 and ICSID (of the World Bank group) adopted its Mediation Rules in 2022.  UNCITRAL, which is currently working on reforming  ISDR, promotes mediation, observing that the use of mediation could reduce the costs of ISDS and also preserve relationships between the investor and the State. UNCITRAL has formulated provisions on and Guidelines for, Mediation for investor state dispute resolution.

(To be continued)

by Dhara Wijayatilake
Attorney-at-Law; Former Secretary to the Ministry of Justice; Director and Secretary General of the International ADR Centre.

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A Testament to the Sri Lankan family

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The passing of Dr. Devanesan Nesiah a few days ago brought back memories that spanned more than four decades. Devanesan signed the witness register at my marriage in 2002. It was a year of hope. The Ceasefire Agreement between the government and the LTTE had brought a respite from a war that had devastated the country for nearly two decades. The possibility of peace seemed real. It was fitting that Devanesan should be present on that occasion because his entire life was dedicated to building bridges across divides and seeking rational and humane solutions to conflict. He was a friend, mentor, and guide whose life embodied values that Sri Lanka, indeed the world, needs today.

In reflecting on Dr. Nesiah’s life, we need to be reminded that the forces that unite us as a people in Sri Lanka are stronger than those that divide us, and that the bonds of human affection can transcend even the deepest divisions of ethnicity, history and politics. I first met him in 1984. I had just had my very first newspaper article published in the Jaffna-based Saturday Review. The editor was Gamini Navaratne, a Sinhalese. This was a reminder that even during the darkest period of ethnic conflict, the bonds between communities remained strong. The article I had written was based on my encounters with the anti-Tamil violence of July 1983.

At that time, Dr Nesiah was the Government Agent of Jaffna. Tens of thousands of Tamil people who had fled violence in the south had been transported to the north by a government that had failed to protect them. He came up to me at an event, introduced himself, and told me that he liked what I had written. He also said that he would soon be leaving for Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and that we could meet there. Over the next three years, Devanesan and his wife Anita adopted me into their family.  I used to visit them two or three times a week, not only to be given meals by Anita but to discuss matters with Devanesan.  These included the academic papers and newspaper articles that were written. Later, Anita earned her PhD in religion and served on the boards of many civic organisations, including the National Peace Council.

Practical Solution

In 1992, we had both returned to work in Sri Lanka when Devanesan invited me to accompany him to Jaffna to celebrate the eightieth birthday of his father, K Nesiah, the distinguished educationist affectionately known as Professor Nesiah. The older Nesiah had been a leading member of the Jaffna Youth Congress. This remarkable movement championed complete independence from British rule, national unity, and the eradication of social inequalities based on caste and communal identity.

At a time when many feared that independence would lead to majoritarian domination, the leaders of the Youth Congress chose instead to place their faith in a shared Sri Lankan future. They believed that people from different communities could build a common nation while preserving their distinctive identities. So did Devanesan.  This vision remains relevant today. It needs to be actualized.

The tragedy of Sri Lanka’s post-independence history is not that diversity exists. Diversity exists in every society. The tragedy is that we often allow diversity to become a source of fear, though we share many of the same values of family, hospitality, respect for elders and compassion towards others. During our visit to Jaffna in 1992, we met representatives of the LTTE administration, including Raheem. The discussion turned to the controversial issue of merging the Northern and Eastern Provinces. Dr Nesiah argued that if the merger could not be achieved due to political opposition, it might be more rational to seek greater powers for provincial councils instead. Raheem disagreed.  Devanesan was interested in finding practical ways to achieve justice and coexistence. That was characteristic of him.

Devanesan Nesiah was a student of conflict and strategy. He became a doctoral student of Professor Thomas Schelling, who would later receive the Nobel Prize for his pioneering work on conflict and cooperation. Schelling’s insight was that even in the midst of conflict, there are usually common interests that adversaries share. Even adversaries locked in a struggle usually depend on each other for the outcome they each want. The challenge is to identify those common interests and build upon them. Conflict is not simply a contest between enemies. It is also a search for ways to coexist. Together as students and peace practitioners, we applied those theories to the Sri Lankan context to understand what was going on and to share that understanding with the Sri Lankan people.

Rational Empathy

Dr Nesiah spoke his mind, truth to power. He was a man of logic, rationality, and principle. His integrity came at a cost. His public service career experienced many ups and downs because he refused to accommodate irrational or corrupt demands. There were periods when he was sidelined into that administrative limbo known as the “pool” and assigned no substantive responsibilities for refusing to give in to political demands. Like the rest of his larger family, most notably the Hoole family of Jaffna, he would not abandon his principles. In 2018, to protest the action of President Maithripala Sirisena in sacking the then government he returned his Deshamanya Award (Pride of the Nation) national civil honourn which was soon thereafter overturned by the Supreme Court as being unconstitutional. His commitment was not to personal advancement, but to what he believed was right.

My wife Sumadhu recalls a story he told her. One day, while travelling on official duty, he told her how he had seen a thalagoya, a monitor lizard, trussed up and being taken away for slaughter. The sight of the creature’s suffering affected him deeply. He said he saw tears in its eyes and described the moment of awakening. From that day onwards, he gave up eating meat.

The story brings to mind the biblical story of the conversion of St Paul on the road to Damascus and the Buddhist exhortation, “May all living beings be well and happy.” But the deeper significance lies not in religious comparison. It lies in the awakening of empathy.

That was the essence of Dr Devanesan Nesiah’s worldview. The prejudices that society often imposes through ethnicity, religion, caste, or gender had little hold on him. He saw them as human constructs that often served to privilege some while excluding others. Such were his values that made him an extraordinary human being. Dr. Nesiah lived according to that understanding. He showed that integrity can survive amidst conflict. He reminded us that reason and compassion are not opposites but partners, that what unites us as Sri Lankans inhabiting our common island home has always been greater than what divides us, and we need to build our institutions accordingly.

I am proud that he was my friend. I am grateful that he was my mentor.

by Jehan Perera

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City of Dreams …Heartbeat of Colombo

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Enroute

If Colombo’s nightlife had a pulse, you’d find it 23 floors up, at Gatz, City of Dreams, Cinnamon Life.

The entertainment lounge has shed its old skin and stepped out supper-club style — think dim lights, clinking glasses, and live music that doesn’t ask you to choose between dinner and a show. You get both.

What’s more, at the new look Gatz the music never stops and it’s all happening seven nights a week … with live entertainment, and this is the scene, beat by beat:

Monday and Tuesday: Top Hats with Daniella/Naomi, from 7.00 pm onwards.

Sohan, Kamal Munasinghe (GM, Cinnamon Life) and Imran of
Funtime Entertainments

One of Colombo’s most sought-after bands is now a Monday-Tuesday ritual.

With a super repertoire, Top Hats can swing from lounge jazz to dancefloor fire. Big venues love them. Now Gatz gets to claim them.

Wednesday: Enroute with Gananath & Debbie – from 7.00 pm onwards.

Want New York at sunset? This is it. Gananath & Debbie transport you straight to the heady days of Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Ray Charles …old-school cool, live and unfiltered.

Thursday to Sunday: Terry & the Big Spenders – from 8.00 pm onwards.

Terry & The Big Spenders

The crowd favourite. A super big band sound that owns the 70s, 80s and 90s.

If you’ve been waiting for horns, harmonies, and nostalgia with volume, Terry & the Big Spenders deliver it nightly. No wonder they’re a huge hit.

Gatz is now an entertainment lounge, in Supper Club style, with Happy Hour very day, from 6.00 pm to 8.00 pm because the night, they say, should start with a toast.

And, from July, weekends at the Gatz go global. Local and foreign guest stars will be around to entertain you. Gatz is certainly booking big.

Wow! That would be another exciting experience for those patronising the most talked about venue in town.

In charge of the new setup is our legendary entertainer/singer Sohan Weerasinghe, along with Imran of Funtime Entertainment.

The twosome, with invaluable assistance from the General Manager, Kamal Munasinghe, and the entire team at Cinnamon Life, have built Gatz into more than a venue. They have turned it into the “Heartbeat of the City.”

So come for happy hour. Stay for Terry’s horns, Sing-along with Enroute and Dance with Top Hats, all on the 23rd floor, and while Colombo sparkles below the bands will take you higher.

Remember, the heartbeat is loudest at Gatz.

Top Hats

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