Selasa, 12 November 2019

In protest-wracked Hong Kong, doubts over election loom as new flash point - Washington Post

Rare weekday fighting in Hong Kong carried into Tuesday night as authorities admitted that the city is on the verge of collapse.

HONG KONG — A university campus turned into a combat zone of police tear gas and pro-democracy protesters hurling bricks and firebombs Tuesday amid a dramatic surge of violence across Hong Kong that could threaten local elections later this month.

The skirmishes at the Chinese University of Hong Kong — among the fiercest clashes since demonstrations began in June — came amid a marathon string of street marches and confrontations that have paralyzed parts of the former British colony.

The clashes escalated this week after police shot and wounded a 21-year-old protester Monday.

The same day, protesters doused a 57-year-old man with liquid and set him alight. Both victims remained in the hospital Tuesday.

Authorities in Hong Kong and Beijing now face a looming decision on whether to go ahead with local elections on Nov. 24. Failure to hold the voting would be seen by many protesters as another sign of their power they wield from the streets.

Vincent Yu

AP

Protesters held up their hands to represent their five demands as protests flared in central Hong Kong on Tuesday.

More questions about the vote were raised Tuesday. The People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s mouthpiece, published a commentary on its social media accounts that backed Hong Kong’s crackdown on demonstrators and said the vote should proceed only if calm is restored in the semiautonomous Chinese territory.

“Only by supporting the police force in decisively putting down the riots can [Hong Kong] return to peace and hold fair elections, to help Hong Kong start again,” it said. Facing escalating threats, it said, Hong Kong’s government is “entitled to regulate the street violence instigated by opposition parties and extremist forces.”

At the Chinese University, a stretch of campus became a no-man’s land.

Black-clad demonstrators, behind umbrellas and table tops, hurled bricks and gasoline bombs. Police fired nonstop volleys of tear gas and rubber bullets from across a narrow bridge, kicking up stinging pink and orange clouds.

At one point, police offered to halt the tear gas if students pulled back.

“If the police don’t retreat, we will not leave,” a masked protester responded. “We have already suffered through hundreds of tear gas and bullets. If we leave, they will arrest us all.”

A university fitness room was converted into a makeshift first aid center to manage injuries.

[Day of rage plunges Hong Kong into turmoil after police shoot protester]

Clashes also flared in other spots around Hong Kong, including the City University and central business districts during midday. Near the City University, protesters rampaged through a shopping mall and set a Christmas tree ablaze, the Reuters news agency reported.

“Our society has been pushed to the brink of a total breakdown,” Senior Police Superintendent Kong Wing-cheung told reporters.

The district elections, if they proceed, will allow a polarized city to cast ballots in Hong Kong’s only relatively free electoral exercise.

District councilors’ responsibilities are largely local, but their seats make up a sizable portion of the committee that selects Hong Kong’s chief executive, with the other half handpicked by the Chinese government. The pro-democracy camp hopes to capitalize on public anger toward the city’s Beijing-backed administration, which has deployed increasing force against protesters demanding full democracy and police accountability.

Hong Kong’s leader, Carrie Lam, whose approval rating has plummeted to a record low of around 20 percent, has received the support of Chinese leader Xi Jinping. But with that backing comes an expectation that Lam will use necessary means to restore order to Hong Kong, now in its six month of demonstrations.

Since Lam invoked emergency powers to ban face masks in public assemblies — which protesters use to protect themselves from surveillance and tear gas — some lawmakers worry the government could use the same powers to postpone the election, citing political turmoil, said Dennis Kwok Wing-hang, a lawmaker representing Hong Kong’s legal sector.

Vincent Yu

AP

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam listens to a question during a news conference on Tuesday.

Fears of cancellation are not unfounded. In recent weeks, authorities have arrested several pro-democracy lawmakers and candidates running for district council seats. Democracy activist Joshua Wong was barred from running. Violence against councilors has increased: Pro-establishment figure Junius Ho was stabbed while campaigning, and a pro-democracy district councilor had his ear bitten off during a tussle involving a knife-wielding assailant. Jimmy Sham, an organizer of pro-democracy marches and a candidate in the election, was attacked by a gang with hammers.

Asked Tuesday whether she would consider postponing the vote, Lam told reporters that the government “hopes that the elections can continue as planned.”

[Buffeted by trade war and Hong Kong protests, China’s Xi Jinping seeks to project stability]

In recent days Hong Kong’s Electoral Affairs Commission called on the public to “stop all threats and violence to support the holding of elections in a peaceful and orderly manner.”

Justin Chin

Bloomberg

Riot police stand guard outside a Tiffany & Co. store during a protest in central Hong Kong on Tuesday.

Although pro-Beijing politicians are likely to face electoral losses, postponing this month’s vote would only make this worse, said Ma Ngok, a professor of Hong Kong politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

“Voters would see this as manipulation and may come out in bigger numbers,” he said, adding that there is no legal provision to cancel elections, only to postpone them for a short period.

Although moderates in the pro-Beijing camp see the election as a means to vent public anger peacefully and want it to go ahead, Ma sees a power struggle in which hard-liners want emergency powers used to cancel the election entirely and thus maintain their grip on power. But declaring a state of emergency to do so would “send a major shock through the international community” that would irreparably damage Hong Kong’s reputation, Ma said.

[Hong Kong bars democracy activist Joshua Wong from elections]

A recent survey by the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute found that 70 percent of respondents opposed delaying the election.

“It’s more important than ever to have this election,” said a 20-year-old engineering student manning a protest barricade at the University of Hong Kong. He asked to remain anonymous for fear of retribution. If the elections don’t go ahead, he said, “the government will be cutting off yet another avenue of political reform and will push people to take more radical action.”

Anna Fifield contributed reporting from Beijing.

Read more

Day of rage plunges Hong Kong into turmoil after police shoot protester

Buffeted by trade war and Hong Kong protests, China’s Xi Jinping seeks to project stability

China’s ominous warning to Hong Kong: Less tolerance, more patriotic education

Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia-pacific/in-protest-wracked-hong-kong-election-looms-as-a-new-flash-point/2019/11/12/283ffe38-0516-11ea-9118-25d6bd37dfb1_story.html

2019-11-12 16:43:00Z
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Evo Morales Flies to Mexico but Vows to Return to Bolivia ‘With Force’ - The New York Times

LA PAZ, Bolivia — Evo Morales, the former president of Bolivia who resigned under pressure from street protests and the military, flew to Mexico on Tuesday, but not before recording an audio message promising Bolivians, “I will return soon with force.”

Mr. Morales, who stepped down on Sunday, left his country deeply polarized and leaderless, and his resignation, along with those of other top officials, touched off a new surge of violence as his supporters took to the streets in protest.

Opposition leaders hope to assemble a quorum of the Legislative Assembly on Tuesday to choose an interim president, but it is unclear whether Mr. Morales’s political party, which holds majorities in both chambers, will allow that to happen. Mr. Morales, who was granted refuge by Mexico “for humanitarian reasons,” has described his ouster as an illegitimate coup.

Image
Credit...Mexican Foreign Ministry, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mr. Morales left office after weeks of growing unrest over a disputed presidential election and after the military indicated it would support the people in the streets calling for him to step down.

Hundreds of his supporters took to the streets of central La Paz late on Monday, some of them armed with sticks and chanting “here we go, civil war.” Officials said demonstrators had attacked police officers, and some frightened residents barricaded doorways to homes and stores with old furniture.

The military and the police took up positions throughout La Paz and several other cities Monday night to stop vandalism.

In his audio message, which was released by the Mexican news media and broadcast in Bolivia, Mr. Morales called on the military to “stop the massacre.” Photographed draped in a Mexican flag aboard a Mexican Air Force plane, Mr. Morales also told his supporters: “We’ll work together for Bolivia.”

Early Monday, Mr. Morales urged resistance to attempts to form a temporary government, but by later in the day he had softened his tone, urging Bolivians to resolve their differences with dialogue, not force.

Mr. Morales was not able to fly directly to Mexico, after Peru prohibited his plane from flying over its airspace. Instead, the aircraft refueled in Paraguay before taking off for Mexico early Tuesday.

Jeanine Añez Chavez, the Senate’s second vice president, an opposition politician who is the highest remaining elected official in the line of succession, has said she is ready to assume power as interim president.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/12/world/americas/evo-morales-mexico-bolivia.html

2019-11-12 11:55:27Z
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Evo Morales Flies to Mexico but Vows to Return to Bolivia ‘With Force’ - The New York Times

LA PAZ, Bolivia — Evo Morales, the former president of Bolivia who resigned under pressure from street protests and the military, flew to Mexico on Tuesday, but not before recording an audio message promising Bolivians, “I will return soon with force.”

Mr. Morales, who stepped down on Sunday, left his country deeply polarized and leaderless, and his resignation, along with those of other top officials, touched off a new surge of violence as his supporters took to the streets in protest.

Opposition leaders hope to assemble a quorum of the Legislative Assembly on Tuesday to choose an interim president, but it is unclear whether Mr. Morales’ political party, which holds majorities in both chambers, will allow that to happen. Mr. Morales, who was granted refuge by Mexico “for humanitarian reasons,” has described his ouster as an illegitimate coup.

Image
Credit...Mexican Foreign Ministry, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Mr. Morales left office after weeks of growing unrest over a disputed presidential election and after the military indicated it would support the people in the streets calling for him to step down.

Hundreds of his supporters took to the streets of central La Paz late on Monday, some of them armed with sticks and chanting “here we go, civil war.” Officials said demonstrators had attacked police officers, and some frightened residents barricaded doorways to homes and stores with old furniture.

The military and the police took up positions throughout La Paz and several other cities Monday night to stop vandalism.

In his audio message, which was released by the Mexican news media and broadcast in Bolivia, Mr. Morales called on the military to “stop the massacre.” Photographed draped in a Mexican flag aboard a Mexican Air Force plane, Mr. Morales also told his supporters: “We’ll work together for Bolivia.”

Early Monday, Mr. Morales urged resistance to attempts to form a temporary government, but by later in the day he had softened his tone, urging Bolivians to resolve their differences with dialogue, not force.

Mr. Morales was not able to fly directly to Mexico, after Peru prohibited his plane from flying over its airspace. Instead, the aircraft refueled in Paraguay before taking off for Mexico early Tuesday.

Jeanine Añez Chavez, the Senate’s second vice president, an opposition politician who is the highest remaining elected official in the line of succession, has said she is ready to assume power as interim president.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/12/world/americas/evo-morales-mexico-bolivia.html

2019-11-12 11:53:00Z
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Israel hit by 50 rockets from Gaza after airstrike kills Islamic Jihad leader - NBC News

Around 50 rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip into Israel after an Israeli airstrike targeted and killed a senior Islamic Jihad commander in Gaza early on Tuesday in the most serious escalation of violence in months.

In northern Gaza, an Israeli strike killed Bahaa Abu el-Atta and his wife, as Islamic Jihad vowed further revenge.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a press conference on Tuesday that Abu el-Atta was the mastermind of many recent rocket attacks against Israel.

The home of Palestinian Islamic Jihad commander Bahaa Abu el-Atta after it was hit by an Israeli strike that killed him in Gaza City on Tuesday.Mohammed Salem / Reuters

After the strike, sirens sounded in central and southern Israel. The IDF said its "Iron Dome" aerial defense system had intercepted about 20 rockets. The military released footage of a rocket hitting an Israeli highway and narrowly missing two cars. Schools and businesses were closed across southern Israel.

"The barrage of rockets being fired by Islamic Jihad in #Gaza at Israeli civilians after our surgical strike on their commander shows exactly why he was targeted in the first place," the Israel Defense Forces said on Twitter.

Later in the morning, the IDF announced on Twitter that Israeli jets began striking further Islamic Jihad targets in Gaza. The Israeli Air Force also said that it killed two fighters from the organization's rocket launching unit.

The Islamic Jihad said Abu el-Atta, 42, was undergoing "a heroic act" when he was assassinated.

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In a statement, the militant group said: "These terrorist crimes are aggression and a declaration of war against the Palestinian people, and the enemy bears full responsibility for them."

Islamic Jihad is the second-largest militant group in Gaza and is supported by Iran. It and Hamas, which runs Gaza, vow to destroy Israel and are considered terrorist groups by the U.S.

A spokesman for Hamas warned that Israel's actions could provoke more violence.

"The Zionist enemy's assassination of the leader Mujahid Bahaa Abu al-Atta is a dangerous escalation, and the continuation of the series of aggression and criminality against our people and its valiant resistance," said Fawzi Barhoum.

Syrian municipality workers clear debris from building in Damascus following an air strike on Tuesday.Louai Beshara / AFP - Getty Images

Syrian state media accused Israel of an attempted separate attack on another Islamic Jihad leader, Akram Al-Ajouri, in Damascus. He survived but Islamic Jihad claimed that the attack killed one of his sons.

An Associated Press reporter at the scene said the attack destroyed the three-story building in Damascus, located on a main highway about 50 yards across from the Lebanese Embassy.

In his statement, Netanyahu appealed to the Israeli public for patience and said that the operation could take time.

"Israel is not interested in escalation, but we will do everything required to protect ourselves," Netanyahu said.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a military spokesman, told reporters that Abu el-Atta was a "ticking time bomb," saying he had been responsible for a number of recent rocket attacks on southern Israel and claimed that he was actively planning new attacks.

"We essentially over the last week have been waiting for the opportune moment to conduct this surgical strike," he said.

An Israeli missile is launched from the Iron Dome system designed to intercept and destroy incoming short-range rockets and artillery shells on Tuesday. Jack Guez / AFP - Getty Images

Conricus added that the airstrike had been carried out with a warplane that destroyed only the floor of the building where Abu el-Atta was hiding in order to minimize "collateral damage."

Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005 but keeps it under a blockade, citing security concerns. Aid officials warn that the 2 million Palestinians living in the narrow strip of land face imminent humanitarian collapse.

Netanyahu is currently Israel's caretaker prime minister. His rival is now attempting to form a coalition government after Netanyahu failed to do so following an election in September.

The attacks also come at a tense moment for Islamic Jihad's Iranian patrons, who are struggling under crippling U.S. sanctions.

Iran's regional influence is also being challenged by unprecedented, economically-driven mass protests in Iraq and Lebanon — two countries where Tehran wields major influence. The protests are creating unrest that Tehran fears would spark a backlash against Iran-backed proxy militias in those countries. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has accused the U.S. and its regional allies of fomenting the Iraq and Lebanon unrest.

Associated Press contributed.

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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/israel-hit-50-rockets-gaza-after-airstrike-kills-islamic-jihad-n1080391

2019-11-12 10:54:00Z
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Gaza militants fire rockets into Israel after Islamic jihad leader killed - Fox News

TEL AVIV—Militants in Gaza fired at least 50 rockets into Israel early Tuesday, setting off sirens and forcing people into bomb shelters across the country including in Tel Aviv, after Israel’s military killed a senior leader of the second-largest militant group in the Palestinian territory.

ERDOGAN THREATENS EU WITH ISIS PRISONERS

Israeli authorities said schools across southern Israel and the Tel Aviv region were closed after rockets reached the area. The officials also asked that nonessential work be suspended. Israeli authorities reported at least two injuries in Israel from the rockets, including an 8-year-old girl who is in critical condition after losing consciousness while running to a bomb shelter.

Nov. 12: Smoke rises after an Israeli forces strike in Gaza City. Israel killed a senior Islamic Jihad commander in Gaza early Tuesday in a resumption of pinpointed targeting that threatens a fierce round of cross-border violence with Palestinian militants. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

Nov. 12: Smoke rises after an Israeli forces strike in Gaza City. Israel killed a senior Islamic Jihad commander in Gaza early Tuesday in a resumption of pinpointed targeting that threatens a fierce round of cross-border violence with Palestinian militants. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)

The rocket fire comes after Israel’s military said it killed the Iranian-backed Palestinian Islamic Jihad’s senior leader Baha Abu Al-Ata in a targeted airstrike. It accused the militant commander of orchestrating numerous rocket attacks against Israel in recent months and of planning another imminent attack.

Israeli military spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said Mr. Abu Al-Ata was a “ticking bomb,” who was planning an attack that included sniper fire, IEDs and ground units against Israeli soldiers and possibly civilians.

“We have been looking for the opportune moment for a week. We were waiting for...when he was not surrounded by human shields,” Conricus said.

Conricus added that Israel had sent a message to Hamas and Islamic Jihad that it doesn’t want an escalation following the assassination.

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“The response to this crime will have no limits,” Islamic Jihad said in a statement, referring to Mr. Abu Al-Ata’s killing.

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2019-11-12 09:41:50Z
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Israel hit by 50 rockets from Gaza after airstrike kills Islamic Jihad leader - NBCNews.com

Around 50 rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip into southern Israel in retaliation after a senior Islamic Jihad commander in Gaza was killed in Israeli airstrikes early on Tuesday, intensifying violence with Palestinian militants.

In northern Gaza an Israeli strike killed Bahaa Abu el-Atta and his wife, setting off a barrage of rockets, some of which reached as far as the Tel Aviv heartland as Islamic Jihad vowed further revenge.

The Israeli military says Abu el-Atta was the mastermind of recent attacks against it, and responsible for most of the rocket, sniper and drone fire from the region.

The home of Palestinian Islamic Jihad commander Bahaa Abu el-Atta after it was hit by an Israeli strike that killed him in Gaza City on Tuesday.Mohammed Salem / Reuters

After the strike, sirens sounded in central and southern Israel. The IDF said its "Iron Dome" aerial defense system had intercepted about 20 rockets. Schools and businesses were closed across southern Israel.

"The barrage of rockets being fired by Islamic Jihad in #Gaza at Israeli civilians after our surgical strike on their commander shows exactly why he was targeted in the first place," the Israel Defense Forces said on Twitter.

The Islamic Jihad said Abu el-Atta, 42, was undergoing "a heroic act" when he was assassinated.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings.

In a statement, the militant group said: "These terrorist crimes are aggression and a declaration of war against the Palestinian people, and the enemy bears full responsibility for them."

Islamic Jihad is the second-largest militant group in Gaza and is supported by Iran. It and Hamas, which runs Gaza, vow to destroy Israel and are considered terrorist groups by the U.S.

A spokesman for Hamas warned that Israel's actions could provoke more violence.

"The Zionist enemy's assassination of the leader Mujahid Bahaa Abu al-Atta is a dangerous escalation, and the continuation of the series of aggression and criminality against our people and its valiant resistance," said Fawzi Barhoum.

Later in the morning, the Israeli Air Force said that it killed two Islamic Jihad fighters from the organization's rocket launching unit. The military also released footage of a rocket hitting an Israeli highway and narrowly missing two cars.

Syrian municipality workers clear debris from building in Damascus following an air strike on Tuesday.Louai Beshara / AFP - Getty Images

Syrian state media accused Israel of an attempted separate attack on another Islamic Jihad leader, Akram Al-Ajouri, in Damascus. He survived but Islamic Jihad claimed that the attack killed one of his sons.

An Associated Press reporter at the scene said the attack destroyed the three-story building in Damascus, located on a main highway about 50 yards across from the Lebanese Embassy.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is due to give a press conference Tuesday morning.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a military spokesman, told reporters that Abu el-Atta was a "ticking time bomb," saying he had been responsible for a number of recent rocket attacks on southern Israel and claimed that he was actively planning new attacks.

"We essentially over the last week have been waiting for the opportune moment to conduct this surgical strike," he said.

Conricus added that the airstrike had been carried out with a warplane that destroyed only the floor of the building where Abu el-Atta was hiding in order to minimize "collateral damage."

Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005 but keeps it under a blockade, citing security concerns. Aid officials warn that the 2 million Palestinians living in the narrow strip of land face imminent humanitarian collapse.

Netanyahu is currently Israel's caretaker prime minister. His rival is now attempting to form a coalition government after Netanyahu failed to do so following an election in September.

The attacks also come at a tense moment for Islamic Jihad's Iranian patrons, who are struggling under crippling U.S. sanctions.

Iran's regional influence is also being challenged by unprecedented, economically-driven mass protests in Iraq and Lebanon — two countries where Tehran wields major influence. The protests are creating unrest that Tehran fears would spark a backlash against Iran-backed proxy militias in those countries. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has accused the U.S. and its regional allies of fomenting the Iraq and Lebanon unrest.

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https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/israel-hit-50-rockets-gaza-after-airstrike-kills-islamic-jihad-n1080391

2019-11-12 09:25:00Z
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Turkey’s Erdogan warns that it can release ISIS prisoners back to Europe - Fox News

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday issued a chilling threat to Europe over looming sanctions over Ankara's unauthorized drilling in the Mediterranean: penalize us and we'll release ISIS prisoners back to European countries.

IS THIS THE FUTURE LEADER OF ISIS?

"You should revise your stance toward Turkey, which holds so many IS members in prison and controls them in Syria," he told reporters.

The Associated Press reported that his comments were in response to the European Union’s unveiling of a system for imposing sanctions on Turkey over drilling off Cyprus.  He made the comments while speaking to reporters prior to a trip to the U.S. to meet with President Trump.

Erdogan also said Turkey would continue repatriating foreign Islamic State militants to their home countries, even if these countries decline to take them back.

His move to use ISIS prisoners as a bargaining chip is a troubling turn. Turkey's motivation for the offensive has been debated and Ankara has been accused of poor planning and security standards at these so-called prisons.

Early in the invasion, more than 100 ISIS fighters who were being held in Kurdish prisons in the country are now on the loose in the days after the invasion.

Trump gave Ankara a green light for an offensive in Syria last month. The decision sent shockwaves through the region and Washington, with U.S. officials telling Fox News that top Pentagon officials were “completely blindsided” and “shocked” by the order to pull back hundreds of U.S. troops, a move that effectively green-lights the Turkey operation.

Sen. Chuck  Schumer, D-N.Y., took to Twitter last week to criticize Trump for rolling out the welcome mat for Erdogan, "an autocrat whose actions threaten our allies & partners."

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“You still haven’t told us your plan to contain ISIS prisoners who escaped a fter Erdogan’s invasion of northern Syria!” he wrote.

Fox News' Greg Norman and the Associated Press contributed to this report

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https://www.foxnews.com/world/turkeys-erdogan-warns-that-it-can-release-isis-prisoners-back-to-europe

2019-11-12 09:20:15Z
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