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Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) - Politics (3) - Nairaland

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Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by anwe: 11:51am On Jan 24, 2016
Omenkata:
By Obi Nwakanma

The minister for justice just announced that judges found to be corrupt will be tried by this administration. This is problematic. Though this sentiment is much shared, it should not be left to the president and his administration to define “corruption,” or determine which judge is corrupt. For the avoidance of doubt the writ of this republic does not make the president the supreme authority of the land.

The constitution is the governing authority of this republic, and the president is, as are all Nigerians, governed by the Constitution. It would amount to overreach for the president to break the thin glass boundaries that established the separation of powers under the constitution. It would be power-grabbing, and the National Assembly and the courts must keep an eye on this president. In fact, it is about time that the National Assembly moved to reduce some of the powers granted the president, because one of the great sources of corruption in Nigeria is the enormous and almost limitless power granted the executive by this constitution designed by the military. Let me advert the minds of Nigerians to January 1, 1984: a military coup had just sacked the democratically elected Government of President Shehu Shagari. At the head of that coup was a tall, lean, unsmiling General, who came across as a Spartan, no-nonsense, missionary soldier, out to rescue Nigeria from political and economic collapse.

Shagari had just been re-elected in a very controversial election, which had the great Nnamdi Azikiwe spewing fire in his very prophetic, as it turned out, post-election letter to Nigerians, “History Will Vindicate the Just,” published widely in the Nigerian Press. It was clear that the election was riddled with irregularities. Yet, corruption in the politics of those years was the bread and butter kind. It was confined mostly in the political parties. The civil institutions were still intact: the public service; the judicial system; the entire bureaucracy of state governance which could put to check to the excesses of political leadership. And they were still all there in 1984. Then came Buhari and his dark-browed praetorian guard, sacking the civil government, and instituting a rule by decrees. The first order of business was to dismantle the credibility of the elected political leaders the soldiers had sacked. In very elaborate fashion General Buhari and his rubber-stamp Supreme Military Council authorized the arrest, detention, and prosecution of the discredited politicians. His Minister for Justice, Chike Ofodile quickly crafted decrees that established extrajudicial tribunals that evacuated the powers of the civil courts. Some of the trials were in-camera. But it soon became obvious that these arrests and detentions were skewered mostly against politicians from the South, particularly of the group that called itself the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) and by politicians from the Middle Belt. It might have been inadvertent, but the impression it created was of a partisan, regionalist witch-hunt of Southern politicians – some of them the most popular, and in fact, the more credible in their visible achievements in the four years between 1979 and 1983.

One of the most dangerous contributions of Buhari’s era as a military dictator was the erosion of the credibility, dignity and the aura of impartiality of the Nigerian judiciary, until then seen my Nigerians as the bulwark against tyranny; and most credible of the three arms of government, particularly with the sack of the parliament, and the seizure of executive power by military decree. The judiciary lost its independence.

Malleable and second-rate people were rapidly appointed to the bench. As the generation of solid jurists began to leave the scene by the attrition of time, a new generation of judges, the product of a corrupted judicature became more or less judicial executioners of the mandate of anyone in power. The corruption of the Nigerian judicial system, which had been subdued to military decrees began with Muhammed Buhari in 1984. The use to which he put the courts of the land was corrupt. This is the fear that President Buhari’s opponents are currently expressing in the current use of state power, in what is being increasingly seen as a partisan witch-hunt to suppress a political opposition. Again, the same method seems obvious: Buhari is arriving the scene of government again at a time when oil prices have dipped very dangerously, and perhaps more dangerously is that the era of hydrocarbon is rapidly coming to an end, which means, even more financial instability for nations like Nigeria that have long depended on oil to fuel their national economies. To all intents and purposes, as like in October 1984, Nigeria is broke.

Buhari has suddenly discovered that he is unable to meet the lofty promises of his campaign, and his political strategy now is to beat the drum of corruption ad nauseam, and blame his old political opponents for his own increasingly apparent inabilities to revive the economy, or lead. For a man who spent twelve years seeking the office he now occupies, this president does not seem to have any clear, alternative strategies, or able to deliver on the promises he made. Now, here is my worry: the arrest of the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Olisa Metuh, and his arraignment in handcuffs give negative optics to this government. Yes, Buhari claims to be fighting corruption, and Olisa Metuh is accused of receiving N400 million from Colonel Sambo Dasuki, allegedly from the $2.1 billion approved for the NSA for arms procurement, the question most Nigerians are now asking is: was Olisa Metuh awarded an arms contract which he didn’t deliver, or is it just about receiving money from Dasuki. Why lock him up, and bring him to court in handcuffs, when not even Sambo Dasuki was brought to court in handcuffs? Is this a ploy to intimidate, humiliate, and ultimately punish and silence the PDP’s spokesman who has so far been engaging the current regime and calling some oftheir assertions to question? Because even people like Falae received money, and have publicly declared that they’d not return it because it has nothing to do with arms procurement, and they have not been locked up or brought to the court in chains. While every Nigerian supports the president and his administration’s apparent resolve to investigate, prosecute, and retrieve Nigeria’s stolen funds from whoever embezzled such funds, we must continue to insist that unless it is all for show, the process must not degenerate into illegality of its own. It is both sad and distressing hearing distinguished scholars of the law like Itsay Sagay, and the Criminologist, Professor Femi Odekunle arguing in support of a “limited rule of law,” these days. It points exactly to what went wrong with Nigeria: a shiftless and inferior elite incapable of the hard, long view. If the argument were to be made about a limited rule of law, Abacha would have hanged Odekunle who was brought before a military tribunal accused with Diya of plotting a coup.

But in the convenience of his current elation, the good professor has forgotten. Buhari is not fighting corruption. He is enabling corruption by interfering in the judicial process. If he were fighting corruption he would have addressed the following questions: how did the system fail so much that Sambo Dasuki as the NSA could appropriate and dispose of state fund as though it were personal funds without oversight? What happened to the old system of financial control that required a vast and complex system of inter-departmental coordination?

What happened to the public tenders system? How come the police services, charged with crime prevention, did not anticipate and prevent this financial crime before it happened through its own police intelligence?

How come the EFCC is only just showing interest after the facts? How did the disbursement of this money escape the Federal Audit Department, the government’s official inspectorate arm, which ought to report all transactions and irregularities to both the National Assembly and the Executive, and if need be, to the police, in the event that any government agency is misappropriating state fund. What this president has been unable to do is understand that what happened here is beyond Dasuki, it is systemic failure. It is in part the result of some of the forces Buhari himself unleashed against the system in 1984. Corruption is not only the “looting” of public funds, it is the corruption of the institutions when they are turned to the private, and convenient tools of people in power – and they lose legitimacy and capacity.

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/01/buhari-is-not-fighting-corruption/


This write up is nothing but the truth. A clear case of what President Jonathan tried to explain to Nigerians that corruption is not stealing. ''stealing is stealing'' and Nigerian were to so narrow and limited to understood what he was trying to say. As God would have it, he is being vindicated everyday.

4 Likes

Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by MrAnalyst: 11:54am On Jan 24, 2016
It's been long I saw OP around here. OP how are you doing?
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Lionsclaw: 12:03pm On Jan 24, 2016
booqee:
OK are we in 1984 or 2016? This man should talk about what is happening now at present and how we are already feeling this good change and Stop crying over milk that spilled in 1984..

Wtf is wrong with this $HittY wailers?! angry
Dear lady from this comment you did not read the post to the end. You read the '1984' introduction but was too pissed to read the '2016' conclusion.

I also know you are lying to yourself when you say you are already feeling this good change, except you dont know the change you really need. What you need is a robost economy. Since emperor came in on Msy 1st the naira has not added plus one in moving positively to brace up the dollar rather it is already closing towards minus 100 ie moving negative. So I know by the indices that what you just said is equal to suffering and smiling.

If by good change u mean arresting the thieves cool but that is just 1% of the good change you need and the 99% is the revived economy wh should take the govts priority and not the chase.
By the way what I just said is not from 1984 it is happening right now grin and if you tag me a $HittY wailer well it might interest you to know in the realms were I dwell we use the pounds and euro and maybe I care about a beautiful lady like you who may be using the naira wink

3 Likes

Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by pharmagba: 12:47pm On Jan 24, 2016
vedaxcool:
Foolish piece by a foolish defender of corruption. If judges recieve bribe then it means they havr acted in a way that is corrupt, this means they have a case to answer. Simple. About the Financial Audit Department not doing their work and holding Santasuki well the foolish author should ask clueless Jonathan why nothing worked under him.
If I may add to yours. I'll say the writer of this thread is an informed personality from the currupt class.
1- blaming anticorrupion fight solely on fall oil price
2- he see nothing wrong in corruption and currupt judges
3- trying to point the blame of corruption on every other except GEJ
With his kind still on the loose President Buhari still has lots of work on his shoulders
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by billyG(m): 12:49pm On Jan 24, 2016
Omenkata:
By Obi Nwakanma

The minister for justice just announced that judges found to be corrupt will be tried by this administration. This is problematic. Though this sentiment is much shared, it should not be left to the president and his administration to define “corruption,” or determine which judge is corrupt. For the avoidance of doubt the writ of this republic does not make the president the supreme authority of the land.

The constitution is the governing authority of this republic, and the president is, as are all Nigerians, governed by the Constitution. It would amount to overreach for the president to break the thin glass boundaries that established the separation of powers under the constitution. It would be power-grabbing, and the National Assembly and the courts must keep an eye on this president. In fact, it is about time that the National Assembly moved to reduce some of the powers granted the president, because one of the great sources of corruption in Nigeria is the enormous and almost limitless power granted the executive by this constitution designed by the military. Let me advert the minds of Nigerians to January 1, 1984: a military coup had just sacked the democratically elected Government of President Shehu Shagari. At the head of that coup was a tall, lean, unsmiling General, who came across as a Spartan, no-nonsense, missionary soldier, out to rescue Nigeria from political and economic collapse.

Shagari had just been re-elected in a very controversial election, which had the great Nnamdi Azikiwe spewing fire in his very prophetic, as it turned out, post-election letter to Nigerians, “History Will Vindicate the Just,” published widely in the Nigerian Press. It was clear that the election was riddled with irregularities. Yet, corruption in the politics of those years was the bread and butter kind. It was confined mostly in the political parties. The civil institutions were still intact: the public service; the judicial system; the entire bureaucracy of state governance which could put to check to the excesses of political leadership. And they were still all there in 1984. Then came Buhari and his dark-browed praetorian guard, sacking the civil government, and instituting a rule by decrees. The first order of business was to dismantle the credibility of the elected political leaders the soldiers had sacked. In very elaborate fashion General Buhari and his rubber-stamp Supreme Military Council authorized the arrest, detention, and prosecution of the discredited politicians. His Minister for Justice, Chike Ofodile quickly crafted decrees that established extrajudicial tribunals that evacuated the powers of the civil courts. Some of the trials were in-camera. But it soon became obvious that these arrests and detentions were skewered mostly against politicians from the South, particularly of the group that called itself the Progressive Peoples Alliance (PPA) and by politicians from the Middle Belt. It might have been inadvertent, but the impression it created was of a partisan, regionalist witch-hunt of Southern politicians – some of them the most popular, and in fact, the more credible in their visible achievements in the four years between 1979 and 1983.

One of the most dangerous contributions of Buhari’s era as a military dictator was the erosion of the credibility, dignity and the aura of impartiality of the Nigerian judiciary, until then seen my Nigerians as the bulwark against tyranny; and most credible of the three arms of government, particularly with the sack of the parliament, and the seizure of executive power by military decree. The judiciary lost its independence.

Malleable and second-rate people were rapidly appointed to the bench. As the generation of solid jurists began to leave the scene by the attrition of time, a new generation of judges, the product of a corrupted judicature became more or less judicial executioners of the mandate of anyone in power. The corruption of the Nigerian judicial system, which had been subdued to military decrees began with Muhammed Buhari in 1984. The use to which he put the courts of the land was corrupt. This is the fear that President Buhari’s opponents are currently expressing in the current use of state power, in what is being increasingly seen as a partisan witch-hunt to suppress a political opposition. Again, the same method seems obvious: Buhari is arriving the scene of government again at a time when oil prices have dipped very dangerously, and perhaps more dangerously is that the era of hydrocarbon is rapidly coming to an end, which means, even more financial instability for nations like Nigeria that have long depended on oil to fuel their national economies. To all intents and purposes, as like in October 1984, Nigeria is broke.

Buhari has suddenly discovered that he is unable to meet the lofty promises of his campaign, and his political strategy now is to beat the drum of corruption ad nauseam, and blame his old political opponents for his own increasingly apparent inabilities to revive the economy, or lead. For a man who spent twelve years seeking the office he now occupies, this president does not seem to have any clear, alternative strategies, or able to deliver on the promises he made. Now, here is my worry: the arrest of the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Olisa Metuh, and his arraignment in handcuffs give negative optics to this government. Yes, Buhari claims to be fighting corruption, and Olisa Metuh is accused of receiving N400 million from Colonel Sambo Dasuki, allegedly from the $2.1 billion approved for the NSA for arms procurement, the question most Nigerians are now asking is: was Olisa Metuh awarded an arms contract which he didn’t deliver, or is it just about receiving money from Dasuki. Why lock him up, and bring him to court in handcuffs, when not even Sambo Dasuki was brought to court in handcuffs? Is this a ploy to intimidate, humiliate, and ultimately punish and silence the PDP’s spokesman who has so far been engaging the current regime and calling some oftheir assertions to question? Because even people like Falae received money, and have publicly declared that they’d not return it because it has nothing to do with arms procurement, and they have not been locked up or brought to the court in chains. While every Nigerian supports the president and his administration’s apparent resolve to investigate, prosecute, and retrieve Nigeria’s stolen funds from whoever embezzled such funds, we must continue to insist that unless it is all for show, the process must not degenerate into illegality of its own. It is both sad and distressing hearing distinguished scholars of the law like Itsay Sagay, and the Criminologist, Professor Femi Odekunle arguing in support of a “limited rule of law,” these days. It points exactly to what went wrong with Nigeria: a shiftless and inferior elite incapable of the hard, long view. If the argument were to be made about a limited rule of law, Abacha would have hanged Odekunle who was brought before a military tribunal accused with Diya of plotting a coup.

But in the convenience of his current elation, the good professor has forgotten. Buhari is not fighting corruption. He is enabling corruption by interfering in the judicial process. If he were fighting corruption he would have addressed the following questions: how did the system fail so much that Sambo Dasuki as the NSA could appropriate and dispose of state fund as though it were personal funds without oversight? What happened to the old system of financial control that required a vast and complex system of inter-departmental coordination?

What happened to the public tenders system? How come the police services, charged with crime prevention, did not anticipate and prevent this financial crime before it happened through its own police intelligence?

How come the EFCC is only just showing interest after the facts? How did the disbursement of this money escape the Federal Audit Department, the government’s official inspectorate arm, which ought to report all transactions and irregularities to both the National Assembly and the Executive, and if need be, to the police, in the event that any government agency is misappropriating state fund. What this president has been unable to do is understand that what happened here is beyond Dasuki, it is systemic failure. It is in part the result of some of the forces Buhari himself unleashed against the system in 1984. Corruption is not only the “looting” of public funds, it is the corruption of the institutions when they are turned to the private, and convenient tools of people in power – and they lose legitimacy and capacity.

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/01/buhari-is-not-fighting-corruption/
Abeg this ethnic champion shld go & rest,did dasuki or olisa metuh gav him any money.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Johnsinia(m): 1:19pm On Jan 24, 2016
Does this fool of a president even know what corruption is all about? Can he even spell it? Mitwww!
That's why I will continue to blame the majority FOOLS that pushed this "thing" to aso rock.

1 Like

Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by akinsbaba2015: 1:47pm On Jan 24, 2016
Johnsinia:
Does this fool of a president even know what corruption is all about? Can he even spell it? Mitwww!
That's why I will continue to blame the majority FOOLS that pushed this "thing" to aso rock.
. Just to remove your imminent doubts "you are the bigger fool" So, we should have continued with monumental looting of the treasury and gross incompetence under GEJ. You need to have your head examined. GEJ remains the worst President of the last 16years and his image is forever dented. Once upon a lootocratic President.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Standing5(m): 1:59pm On Jan 24, 2016
tuniski:
zombie! Let buhari strengthened the institutions and stop the diversionary tactics of hyping d arrest of last admin stalwarts while corruption continue to grow as the economy suffers!
What is he going to strengthen institution with? Even at that, it is a gradual process and can't only probe or fix every weak-link in our institution in even a year. He has done well in going after the bulky and open doors through which corruption is being perpetrated. Your attempt to pressurize Buhari is an effort wrongly channelled.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by victorazy(m): 2:09pm On Jan 24, 2016
Buhari is rather a traditional ruler than president
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by soldierdollar(m): 2:16pm On Jan 24, 2016
vedaxcool:
Foolish piece by a foolish defender of corruption. If judges recieve bribe then it means they havr acted in a way that is corrupt, this means they have a case to answer. Simple. About the Financial Audit Department not doing their work and holding Santasuki well the foolish author should ask clueless Jonathan why nothing worked under him.

So if nothing worked under GEJ, it shouldn't work under pmb ?

I am beginning to align my thought with those who call you guys zombies
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by pinardave: 3:21pm On Jan 24, 2016
shamecurls:
Article of an IPOD wailing wailer
The problem is that you didnt make any point instead of fooling yourself.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by pinardave: 3:37pm On Jan 24, 2016
Good Job from the writer..Obi Nwakanma is always on point and one of the columnists that aspires me to always buy Sunday Vanguard. The dullard from Katsina is an illiterate and does not even know the constitution..I know my Yoruba brothers will call it wailing but this is nothing but the truth.
This administration has no direction and things are getting harder by the day
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by edupedia: 3:38pm On Jan 24, 2016
greatiyk4u:
Buhari as the president is the custodian of the constitution..

This man is only appealing to pity because certain people of his interest are involved.......from his write up, he sees erudite scholars like SAGAY and ADEKUNLE as been partisan and getting it all wrong cos they differ from his opinion


This current fight against corruption is holistic enough to address all the institution reorganization and transformation to address the root cause of the rot....

For now, Buhari's actions and in actions are still within the tolerable limit

...and 98% of disagreements are from a particular part of Nigeria...and instead of starting their yeye write-ups with I AM IGBO AND I HATE BUHARI they try to hoodwink us with useless jargons like the title of this write-up...or with legalistic references like he is not obeying the court...but none of them can EVER tell u what needs to be done when some of the accused jump bail or simply run away from Nigeria to hide...
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by skot: 3:39pm On Jan 24, 2016
I quite appreciate the level of ur intellect, that being said a lot of educated illiterates have been fond of advertising their ignorance in Nigeria. We have gone past listing problems, we are interested in sound solutions.

Questions for the writer: you said we need strong institutions, how do you strengthen institutions and when you finish strengthening it who mans it, is it the same criminally inclined individuals or how do you go about getting the individuals who will man these so called strong institutions.

The fact simply is that whether you choose to acknowledge it or not this president is on track regarding the fight against corruption.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by obiak4(m): 3:55pm On Jan 24, 2016
You guys can keep d debate on or make money from this govt. Failure by using your money to buy dollar outside nigeria in countries like togo,benin rep, or ghana and sell in a mmonths or two months,
the way things are now expect a dollar to exchange @ #400 before march this year, simply because no clear cut policy on the economy,crude price all time low


since baba no want make we use treasury bill chop we go use him lack of economy policy hammer lolz
quit apc,pdp blame game, a word they say is enough for the wise
blessed be.

1 Like

Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by wtfCode: 5:04pm On Jan 24, 2016
mr. change
the most clueless nigerian ever...booharii

Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Johnsinia(m): 6:01pm On Jan 24, 2016
akinsbaba2015:
. Just to remove your imminent doubts "you are the bigger fool" So, we should have continued with monumental looting of the treasury and gross incompetence under GEJ. You need to have your head examined. GEJ remains the worst President of the last 16years and his image is forever dented. Once upon a lootocratic President.
If you are not a born FOOL and a SLAVE, you will notice that I did not mention Gej anywhere in my post. Your hatred for Gej is making you foolisher and a big FOOL for being among other FOOLS who voted this illterate fool of a president over millions of qualified candidate in Nigeria as your leader. Shame to you and every level of education and qualifications you have acquired.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Splashme: 7:26pm On Jan 24, 2016
digoster:
Buhari is just being clueless and hypocritical
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Legitbaba(m): 8:12pm On Jan 24, 2016
greatiyk4u:
Buhari as the president is the custodian of the constitution..

This man is only appealing to pity because certain people of his interest are involved.......from his write up, he sees erudite scholars like SAGAY and ADEKUNLE as been partisan and getting it all wrong cos they differ from his opinion


This current fight against corruption is holistic enough to address all the institution reorganization and transformation to address the root cause of the rot....

For now, Buhari's actions and in actions are still within the tolerable limit

So if corruption is brought down in his 4 yrs or mayb 8yrs...wahs next whn he finally leaves office... Corruption starts again??.. Dont u think that will b just running around a circle? ?
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by greatiyk4u(m): 8:20pm On Jan 24, 2016
Legitbaba:


So if corruption is brought down in his 4 yrs or mayb 8yrs...wahs next whn he finally leaves office... Corruption starts again??.. Dont u think that will b just running around a circle? ?

Learn to read in between the lines
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by Ezelinks(f): 8:27pm On Jan 24, 2016
knightsTempler:
For those who care to know: Oil boom is over! The cost of a metal barrel (drum) is more expensive than the cost of crude oil of one barrel volume now! Even large pizza is more expensive than crude oil! The cost of three bottles of Guinness is more expensive than a barrel of crude oil! Is like many people have no idea of the gravity of the trouble at all. Many people that know should try enlighten those on self-denial of the reality of global economic crisis! Stout bottles expensive pass crude oil now...And still Nigeria senators want to spend N115bn in 2016 for their luxurious burden on the economy with N4.7bn set to buy imported 2016 SUVs to fight corruption....LMAO@@@~ #MMA
may God have mercy . buhari have useless these country . woah to APC and there supporters .... fighting corruption my foot
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by mcee1(m): 11:10am On Jan 26, 2016
TheLastIdiot:
Ignoramus!!! Quote me make I disgrace u small today!
thunder fire ur olosho mama there Bring it on u bastard.
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by TheLastIdiot: 8:09am On Jan 28, 2016
mcee1:
thunder fire ur olosho mama there Bring it on u bastard.
U are a condemned fool! I pity ur wretched father who couldn't give u education! Goat!
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by mcee1(m): 2:18pm On Jan 28, 2016
TheLastIdiot:
U are a condemned fool! I pity ur wretched father who couldn't give u education! Goat!
thunder fire your drunkard father there Omo Igbo tout jati jati. Gindin uwarka
Re: Buhari Is Not Fighting Corruption (vanguard) by TheLastIdiot: 3:23pm On Feb 14, 2016
mcee1:
thunder fire your drunkard father there Omo Igbo tout jati jati. Gindin uwarka
Ur papa na village goat!

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