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Southern Tagalog protesters lambast China’s intrusion in PH, Duterte’s ‘treachery’

Protesters from Southern Tagalog region hold a protest action in front of the Chinese Embassy in Makati, July 20. (Photo by Justin Umali / Bulatlat)

By JUSTIN UMALI
Bulatlat.com

MANILA – In response to the Duterte administration’s failure to defend Philippine national sovereignty in the West Philippine Sea, progressive groups staged a protest in front of the Chinese Embassy in Makati City, July 20.

The delegation was led by Bagong Alyansang Makabayan–Southern Tagalog (Bayan-ST) as part of the region’s Daluyong 2019 protest caravan building up to the United People’s SONA on July 22.

Speakers from various groups condemned Duterte’s pro-China policies, particularly his insistence that the July 11 incident between 22 fishermen from Occidental Mindoro and a Chinese vessel was “minor” accident and that nothing could be done against China.

A protester represents the plight of Filipino fishermen who were victims of China’s intrusion in the West Philippine Sea. (Photo by Justin Umali / Bulatlat)

Eddie Billones, spokesperson for the Kapisanan ng Magsasaka sa Timog Katagalugan (Kasama-TK), said in his speech in Filipino, “Duterte downplays the issue of our fishermen, because he thinks little of his fellow Filipinos. He treats even the constitution as just toilet paper.” “But we know what the multitude can do. They can topple anybody.”

The groups also condemned the continuation of the Kaliwa-Kanan Dam in Quezon and Duterte’s “gentleman’s agreement” with the Chinese on fishing in the Philippine Exclusive Economic Zone.

Casey Cruz, BAYAN-ST spokesperson, said, “The true Filipino will not let foreigners claim our country. The true Filipino will take care of our sovereignty.” Cruz called Duterte a “dog with two masters”, referring to the president’s subservience to both the United States and China.

“It is time for the people to unite and assert what is rightfully ours! Fight for our sovereignty and remove the traitorous dog from the Palace!” Cruz said.

The Daluyong-TK delegation called on the public to join the United People’s SONA and register the “true state of the nation under Duterte’s tyranny” this Monday, July 22. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

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The Devil we know

Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin, Jr. unwittingly said something at odds with what his boss, President Rodrigo Duterte, has been saying since he came to power in 2016.

The Philippines, “Teddy Boy” declared during a reception last July 4, the 243rd anniversary of American independence from Britain, cannot live without the United States of America because “she is all we have.”

His statement was part of the marriage metaphor he used to describe US-Philippine relations. The Philippines, he said, is like a husband who can’t divorce his wife not because he fears paying alimony, but because the wife is a “dependable presence.”

Belaboring the marriage metaphor to near-absurdity, he described the US as possessing “superior strength.” But in the next breath he undiplomatically claimed that “the ambiguity and indecision” of her commitment to defend her allies “when she gets up on the wrong side of the bed” makes living with her problematic.

Although it did seem that he was merely being cutely indifferent to the need to provide some insight into US-Philippine relations, Sec. Locsin nevertheless partly succeeded in describing the present state of the country’s foreign affairs by, in effect, contradicting his boss of bosses twice.

First, he did say that contrary to Mr. Duterte’s claim that the Philippines under his watch is no longer dependent on any country, it still needs the US. Second, by saying that the US “is all we have,” he was giving the lie to Mr. Duterte’s frequent description of China as another “friend” that has helped the Philippines with the military aid he needed against terrorism in Mindanao and the loans that would help him implement his Build, Build, Build infrastructure program.

At the same time, however, Sec. Locsin’s allusion to the “ambiguity and indecision” of the US commitment to defend its allies was in sharp contrast to recent US declarations emphasizing its readiness to honor its obligations to the Philippines under the terms of the Mutual Defense Treaty.

During his visit earlier this year, US Secretary of State Michael Pompeo assured the Philippines and, at the same time indirectly warned China, that his country stands by its Treaty commitments. US Ambassador to the Philippines Sung Kim had earlier said the same thing at least twice. The first time was after Pompeo’s visit, and the second in the aftermath of the ramming and sinking of the Filipino fishing boat F/B Gem-Ver 1 by a Chinese vessel at the Recto Bank on June 9. Kim indeed again declared, in the same July 4 reception where Locsin was in attendance, that the US will abide by its treaty obligations.

Ambassador Kim was in fact far more serious and far more diplomatic on that occasion. He said US friendship with the Philippines “remains very strong” and that he is “very optimistic about the future of the Philippines-US relationship.” Kim tactfully did not directly say so, but he was minimizing the impact on US-Philippine relations of Mr. Duterte’s declared “separation” from the US, his profanity-laced rants against it, and, above all, his incredibly supine allegiance to and support for China at the expense of the country’s fisherfolk and its long-term interests in the West Philippine Sea.

Kim correctly based his optimism for the future on the fact that the US experiment in colonial rule and imperialist dominance in the Philippines — although he couched it in both countries’ “shared values” — was, and still is, the most successful in all of human history.

Despite “independence,” the Philippines remains tied to the US militarily, and not only through its dependence on the US security umbrella under the terms of the Mutual Defense Treaty. There is as well the Visiting Forces Agreement (VFA) that was signed during President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s shameless drive to assure US support for her remaining in power, and the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA) signed during the incurably pro-US Benigno Aquino III regime.

The first allows the US to send troops to the Philippines on a rotational basis, which makes their “temporary visits” permanent despite the Constitutional ban on foreign troops on Philippine territory without a treaty. The second provides the same troops the use of Philippine military bases to house them and store their equipment. Both assure the perpetration of US military influence and the holding of the periodic Philippines-US joint military exercises Mr. Duterte said he would stop but which are still continuing.

Support for the US is also assured by the dominance in Philippine governance of the descendants of the Spanish period principalia and its surrogates, agents, and allies, whom the US trained in “self government” during the nearly 50 years of its colonial rule. Their fidelity to common interests is deeply embedded in what passes for these dynasts’ minds, and so is the determination to preserve and defend, with US help, the political system that has so benefitted them. Towards that end, US military aid to the Duterte regime has even increased despite the human rights crisis its “war” on drugs and against dissent has fomented.

Meanwhile, US companies are among the biggest foreign investors in the Philippines. The US is also the country’s third largest trading partner. In 2016 over $27 billion in goods and services were traded between the two countries. Philippine “exports” — most of them actually by foreign companies based in the country — include semiconductor devices and auto parts, textiles, coconut oil, etc. The terms of US-Philippine trade and investments are governed by the 1989 Trade and Investment Framework Agreement and a tax treaty.

Trust in, and support for, the US remains strong among both high and low and rich and poor despite such past issues as the murderous, near-genocidal conduct of US troops during the Philippine-American War and the abuses that were rampant in, and in the vicinity of, the now defunct US military bases that constituted the major “irritants” in the relations between the two countries for four decades.

The special place of the US in many Filipinos’ hearts is not solely based on military, political, and economic relations but on the power of US culture. That culture emphasizes, among other supposed values, individual freedom, human rights, and independence rather than the US’ first loyalty to the preservation and expansion of its global empire in furtherance of its economic and strategic interests.

The dominance today of US political and ideological values was first assured through the forcible education of Filipinos in the English language, which made US culture accessible to the colonized. It is sustained today by the monopoly over information and entertainment of the handful of Western, mostly US, conglomerates that preside over the global culture industry. These corporations — among them Disney and News Corp. — grind out the movies, songs, publications, television programs, and trillions of bytes of information that on a daily basis deluge billions of men and women across cultures and throughout the planet.

The main weakness of Mr. Duterte’s Chinese friends is that, as latecomers in the imperialist game, they don’t have the same advantages as the US, among which political and ideological influence through cultural dominance is primary. China is still an unknown entity — and even the subject of far from subtle prejudice — among most Filipinos despite contacts that go back to pre-Hispanic times, and even many Filipinos’ Chinese roots.

Despite himself, Locsin did manage to say something meaningful last July 4. The US is indeed “all we have” in these troubling and troubled times. But rather than a marriage made in heaven, Philippine-US relations are based on a preference for the devil Filipinos know over the devil they don’t.

Luis V. Teodoro is on Facebook and Twitter (@luisteodoro).

www.luisteodoro.com

Published in Business World
July 18, 2019

The post The Devil we know appeared first on Bulatlat.

Everyone loses if schools shut down

The Department of Education’s order to suspend the operations of 55 lumad schools, mostly in Davao del Norte, is the latest challenge in the Mindanao indigenous people’s struggle to keep running their own schools as an expression of their cultural autonomy and identity.

Should the DepEd order lead to the total shutdown of the schools – as scores of them have already been closed in the last few years, “forcibly” as averred by school administrators and IP community leaders – it would mean a loss not only to the lumad but to everyone else involved in this issue. Let me show why.

The order was issued against schools owned and run by a nongovernment organization, the Salugpungan Ta’Tanu Igkanogon Community Learning Center Inc. The much-criticized decision was made by the DepEd’s regional officer-in-charge, based on a report by National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon Jr. that the Salugpungan schools were “using” the schoolchildren in rallies and that they were being taught “ideologies that advocate against the government.” To support his claim, Esperon attached to his report an affidavit by Melvin Loyod, a recent Salugpungan school graduate and former volunteer teacher in Talaingod, Davao del Norte.

Protests, criticisms, and condemnations of the DepEd order have been raised by various sources.

An editorial by the Philippine Daily Inquirer asked if Esperon’s charges were “true in the first place” and if the DepEd had conducted “an independent investigation to verify them before it made a decision to shutter the schools.” Thus far, PhilStar.com has reported DepEd Undersecretary Nepomuceno Malaluan as claiming the suspension order is not yet final as they await the school administrators’ compliance with the “show-cause order” (arguing why their operations shouldn’t be suspended). But it also quoted Secretary Leonor Briones as saying that DepEd would be “accountable and vulnerable if we don’t act on this very serious charge [of Esperon].”

I have a copy of Melvin Loyod’s affidavit, which Esperon attached to his report. It appears that Loyod signed it on Dec. 6, 2018.

On that same date, Talaingod police chief Rogaciano R. Gara submitted Loyod’s affidavit (along with that of Loyod’s father) to the Davao del Norte provincial prosecution office as “additional evidence” to the complaint he had filed, on Nov. 28, against this columnist and 17 others. The original complaint was about “kidnapping and failure to return a minor” in relation to a National Solidarity Mission I joined which responded to the call for help of Salugpungan school children and teachers forced out of their school at sundown on Nov. 28.

In his affidavit, Loyod claimed the Salugpungan schools “required its students to join rallies against the government,” that without the parents’ knowledge and consent “we go to different places and schools, like in Manila, to perform cultural shows for the school’s benefactors and to solicit donations.” He also claimed that a module used for teaching didn’t cover subjects in the DepEd curriculum but “topics against the government [armed] forces.” Worse, he implicated his younger sister, a Salugpungan student, by alleging that on Nov, 23, 2018, she had told him “in confidence that they were already being taught to use firearms and that they were set for a ‘test mission’ against the government by attacking military/police outpost in ComVal province in December 2018.”

What led Loyod to sign an affidavit making such allegations? Up to early November 2018 he was still a volunteer teacher of Salugpungan (starting in September after graduating from Grade 12). Before that he was very critical of the military incursions in the lumad communities and in the Salugpungan schools.

In October 2014 he had joined 12 other Grade 8 students in a caravan from Mindanao to Manila as part of a “Save our Schools” campaign calling for the pullout of military forces occupying their communities. News reports at the time said that aerial bombings in Talaingod forced 1,700 residents to march all the way to Davao City to seek sanctuary.

Interviewed by Bulatlat.com at the time, Loyod said that earlier, in March, soldiers entered into their communities in Talaingod and “disrupted our school graduation.” He also said that the soldiers (which news reports then said were from the 60th and 68th IB of the Philippine Army and augmenting forces), warned Salugpungan’s Grade 7 students not to study there “because it is an NPA school.”

Now, in his December 2018 affidavit, Loyod said his father ordered him to stop teaching in Salugpungan in early November, “when the tribal chiefs are discussing for the closure the school in Nasilaban.” “I obeyed,” he said.

His father, Toting Loyod, appears to be illiterate. A “supplemental affidavit-complaint” allegedly executed by him was signed – not by him but by Melvin (with the note “Assisted by:”). A thumbprint (presumably of Toting} appears over his name as affiant.

The affidavit, which generally affirms Melvin’s claims in his own affidavit, is oddly prepared: Toting’s alleged statements are written in English, and the Visayan translations follow in parentheses. (In Melvin’s affidavit, the sequence is the reverse, which is the usual way.)

Noticeably, Toting began by affirming that he is “the same and identical person who executed a complaint-affidavit against” 17 persons that included myself, Rep. France Castro, several religious pastors, and Salugpungan teachers and staff.

Thus, the ludicrous case of “child abuse” against our group – we had merely responded to an urgent call for help in the middle of the night – relies for “evidence” mainly on these two affidavits, which were probably executed under duress, under conditions of martial law in the whole of Mindanao. We can only sympathize with the poor Loyod family.

And Esperon, too, shielding himself with the martial law excuse, seems to rely on Melvin Loyod’s perjured affidavit to force the issue on shutting down the Salugpungan schools.

Will DepEd do the same? It should instead do a careful reading and evaluation of the “evidence” and reconsider its order, in the interest of upholding justice and the right to education of the indigenous people.

* * *

Email: satur.ocampo@gmail.com

Published in Philippine Star
July 20, 2019

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Dapol tan Payawar

Ni RENE BOY ABIVA

Sa bawat paghalik
ng labi ni Goring
ay napuno ang iyong puso
ng pagnanasa
gaya sa kung paano
o gaano ka
kasabik at nanabik
mahalikan ng mamasa-masa’t malamig
na butil ng hamog
ang tuyo’t nag-aagawbuhay
mong bibig.

At sa unang hatinggabi
sa Ridgewood sa Kalye Gibraltar
-nang pinutol ng mga alulong
ng aso at tangis ng mga inang balo
ang iyong parnasong panaginip-
nakadama ng kaba ang iyong dibdib
na wari noong si Zaitsev
habang nakadapa’t sinisikap
pigilin ang hininga habang
nakasipat ang kanang mata
sa iskopyo ng kanyang springfield
sa ilalim ng mga guho
ng Dakilang Stalingrad.

At sa ikalawang hatinggabi
sa Ridgewood sa Kalye Gibraltar
nawasak ang lahat
nang gumalaw-luminaw ang imahen,
nasipat ng lenteng sinlaki ng piso
si Bugan na waring si Inang Maria
-na madalas gumambala kay Pedro Calosa
noon sa mga misteryosong burol, bundok
baryo, at libingan ng Tayug-
na duguan sa ilalim ng malakas-bumabayong
buhos ng ulan.

At sa ikatlong hatinggabi
sa Ridgewood sa Kalye Gibraltar
‘di ka nakuntento
sa mga aparisyong kumikiwal-umuukilkil
sa mga kuweba ng iyong damdamin at guniguni,
nagkusot ka ng mata
at nakita mo ang pag-iisa
ng kaluluwa at abo
at inasalto mo ang hagupit ni Goring
kahit pa ang tingin sa iyo ng ila’y
mayroon ka ng tililing
na waring bunga ng banal na katas
ng pinagbabawal na talampunay. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

Dapol tan Payawar- nangangahulugang “ang mga abo at multo” sa wikang Pangasinense.
Zaitsev- mahusay na soviet sniper; lumaban sa Stalingrad noong Ikalawang Digmaang Pandaigdig..
Springfield- isang klase ng baril pang-isnayp noong Ikalawang Digmaang Pandaigdig.
Bugan- si Eba ng Ifugao.
Pedro Calosa- lider ng kolorum sa Pangasinan na namuno sa pag-aalsa sa Tayug noong 1931.

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2 political prisoners convicted of trumped-up charges

Former peasant organizer Lilia Bucatcat (Contributed photo)

“It is infuriating that the Duterte government wrongfully convicts activists and human rights advocates while the government forces behind human rights violations are parading free.”

By ANNE MARXZE D. UMIL
Bulatlat.com

MANILA – Seventy-three-year old Lilia Bucatcat was walking her dog along Marikina River Banks on March 9, 2017 when elements of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group-National Capital Region arrested her without a warrant.

More than two years later, Bucatcat, a former peasant organizer in Samar, was convicted of frustrated homicide. On July 3, the Regional Trial Court, Branch 30 in Basey, Samar sentenced Bucatcat to a minimum of four to a maximum of eight years of imprisonment. Other charges filed against her including frustrated murder and robbery were dismissed.

Cristina Palabay, Secretary General of human rights alliance Karapatan, condemned the decision.

“Time and again, we are confronted with cases that expose the flaws and double standard of the country’s justice system. The elderly are not exempt in the government’s vindictive campaign against activists, even as Bucatcat has already retired from organizing work and was spending time with her family when she was arrested,” Palabay said.

Another political prisoner, Billy Morado, was convicted on June 28 of illegal possession of firearms and explosives. Branch 128 of the Regional Trial Court in Caloocan City promulgated its decision in the case of Felimon Tuba, Jr. and Morado. Tuba was acquitted but Morado was sentenced to six years to eight years of imprisonment.

“It is infuriating that the Duterte government wrongfully convicts activists and human rights advocates while the government forces behind human rights violations are parading free,” Palabay said, referring to the recent acquittal of military generals involved in the illegal arrest of the health workers collectively called as the “Morong 43” in 2010.

Palabay said there was also no warrant presented during the arrest of Morado and Tuba. Karapatan said CIDG forced their way inside their residence in search of firearms but found none. The CIDG instead took a handful of belongings, including a motorbike, blood pressure equipment, brand new laptop and watch, cell phones, and cash. All of these were never returned, according to Karapatan.

“If there are criminals worthy of conviction in this scenario, it is none other than the police who violated the rights of both Tuba and Morada, and planted evidence in their belongings,” Palabay said.

“Contrast this with the way this government handled the cases of Imelda Marcos and Gloria Arroyo, and we see a clear picture of injustice and doling out of political favors,” Palabay added.

Data gathered by Karapatan shows there are now a total of 545 political prisoners in the country, of whom 288 were arrested under the Duterte regime.

Early this month, Maoj Maga, a trade unionist was also convicted of illegal possession of firearms.

Karapatan maintained that the arrest and detention of activists are are all part of a systematic policy to jail and silence critics, in line with the Inter-Agency Committee on Legal Action (IACLA) and government’s counterinsurgency program.

Amid the conviction of political prisoners, Karapatan vowed to continuously demand immediate release of those imprisoned over groundless accusations, planted evidence, perjured testimonies and trumped-up charges.

“There is a structure of impunity that jails the innocent and the critics, and frees the criminals. This government has actively perpetuated a culture of gross impunity. There is no justice for the families and victims of rights violations under Duterte’s leadership, only impunity and continuing injustice,” Palabay added.

The group called on the public to join the relatives of political prisoners along with various groups and human rights advocates on July 22, the fourth State of the Nation Address of President Duterte and call for the release of all political detainees. (http://bulatlat.com)

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Resort owner sues Camiguin gov for misconduct

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A resort-hotel owner in Camiguin has filed charges against two members of the local ruling political family for ordering her establishment’s closure because of the latter’s political vendetta.

Morong 43 vow to continue fighting for justice

L-R Jane Balleta, Dr. Merry Mia Clamor, Dr. Alexis Montes, Atty. Ephraim Cortez, Mercy Castro and Dr. Julie Caguiat vow to continue fighting for justice after the Sandiganbayan acquitted military and police officers involved in the arrest, detention and torture of the Morong 43.

By RONALYN V. OLEA
Bulatlat.com

MANILA — When they heard the Sandiganbayan ruling acquitting their tormentors, members of the Morong 43 were so enraged they cried.

In a decision dated July 1, the Sandiganbayan 7th Division dismissed the last criminal case — violation of the right to counsel — filed by the health workers against Army and police officers who arrested them on Feb. 6, 2010. The court said the victims failed to provide the names of their lawyers at the time of their arrest, and failed to identify the accused.

In a press conference, July 20, Mercy Castro broke into tears as she said, “We have suffered so much and now we’re the ones being blamed.”

“It’s like a wound that has not healed and has become fresh again,” Castro said in Filipino.

The 43 health workers were arrested nine years ago while undergoing a training in Morong, Rizal. They were charged with illegal possession of firearms and explosives, and publicly branded as members of the New People’s Army (NPA).

Lack of evidence and public pressure compelled then President Benigno Aquino III to order their release after ten months in detention. The Morong 43 filed torture, robbery and violations of Miranda doctrine against several military and police officers. The torture and robbery charges were dismissed by the Ombudsman in October 2015.

What do we have to prove?

Dr. Alexis Montes said he could not believe that the Sandiganbayan junked their complaint for “insufficiency of evidence.”

“I asked Zaragosa to allow me to contact my family. I even gave him a number. He just smirked,” Montes said, referring to Cristobal Zaragoza, then the intelligence officer of the 2nd Infantry Division of the Philippine Army.

Montes said denying them access to lawyers and their families constitutes violation of their rights.

The community doctor recalled the long hours of interrogation, how he was blindfolded and handcuffed for many hours. “And they’d say there was no torture?”

Dr. Merry Mia Clamor did not hide her frustration with the ruling. “What do we have to prove? We were illegally arrested, tortured, incarcerated for more than 10 months but the burden of proof is still on us.”

Jane Balleta pointed out that they were released because there was no evidence against them.

“We were freed because our rights were violated. The perpetrators have to be accountable,” Balleta said.

Appeal

Ephraim Cortez, secretary general of the National Union of Peoples’ Lawyers (NUPL) and counsel of the Morong 43, said they will question the decision.

Cortez explained that the jurisprudence cited by the Sandiganbayan could not be applied to the Morong 43 case.

Sandigandbayan cited People vs. Rapeza in its decision, saying that the arrested should have a counsel of his choice.  Cortez said that in that ruling, the arrested person was made to execute a confession and the police provided him a lawyer, which he said, is very different with the circumstances of the Morong 43.

“The Morong 43 were held incommunicado for several days. They were denied access to their relatives and lawyers.” Cortez said.

Cortez, along with colleagues and families of the Morong 43, went to Camp Capinpin in the afternoon of Feb. 6, 2010. They were denied access to the detainees. Cortez was able to talk to his clients on Feb. 11, or five days after the arrest.

Fight not over

Despite the legal setback, the Morong 43 are determined to pursue justice.

“We could not move until we get justice,” Castro said.

The civil case they filed against former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and military officials is pending with a Quezon City local court.

Clamor said their fight is a fight against impunity. “The military is emboldened to violate our rights because no one is being punished,” she said.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines welcomed the Sandiganbayan ruling. In a report, AFP Public Affairs Chief Colonel Noel Detoyato said the decision “will serve as an inspiration to our officers and men in the field that being true and passionate in their tasks will protect them from unscrupulous groups and personalities whose objective is to slow down the momentum towards peace and order.”

Dr. Geneve Rivera of the Health Action for Human Rights (HAHR) said Detoyato’s statement “appears to encourage the AFP to commit more human rights violations.”

Rivera said she could not forget Detoyato. “He was the one who denied us access to our colleagues. He denied having custody of the Morong 43 while he was still in Camp Capinpin,” Rivera said.

Rivera said they are also inspired to fight for justice for all victims of human rights violations. (https://www.bulatlat.com)

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Rights group slams wrongful conviction of two political prisoners

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“We condemn the wrongful conviction of political prisoners Lilia Bucatcat, 72, and Billy Morada. Accused with trumped-up charges by the government, they have been languishing in prisons in different parts of the country for crimes they did not commit. Both are peasant organizers in the Eastern Visayas region. It is infuriating that the Duterte government wrongfully convicts activists and human rights advocates while the government forces behind human rights violations are parading free,” said Karapatan Secretary General Crisitina Palabay, referring to the recent acquittal of military generals involved in the illegal arrest of the “Morong 43” health workers back in 2010.

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