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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Fri Oct 20, 2006 7:33 pm Post subject: Oaxacan Teacher and Leader Assassinated |
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| Quote: | La Jornada
October 19, 2006
Pánfilo Hernández, teacher and leader of the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO), was assassinated at 9:45 last night in Oaxaca City by gunmen who were travelling in a blue Tsuru automobile.
Hernández died when the APPO group he was travelling with in a private car after finishing an assembly in the Jardín neighbourhood, was fired upon.
This is the ninth homicide committed against members of the Popular Assembly since they began demanding the removal of Governor Ulises Ruiz. |
From: http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2191.html
Oaxaca is a state in Southern Mexico, and is one of the poorest regions in the country. For months now an alliance of social movements including section 22 of the National Teachers’ Union (SNTE) and several indigenous organizations including Consejo Indigena Popular de Oaxaca (CIPO-RFM) has been calling for the resignation of the state governor Ulises Ruíz (PRI). These civil society organizations have set up the Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca (APPO) which has been manning barricades throughout the state capital of Oaxaca. Ulises Ruíz has been a governor in exile while the police, and now military, have surrounded the city, making periodic forays into the city attacking the citizens who stand at the barricades night and day.
Currently members of CIPO-RFM are touring southern Ontario and Quebec speaking about the oppression they face from the government forces supporting the governor. I was able to attend their presentation at Carleton this Tuesday (organized by OPIRG Carleton). They expressed their growing fears of the spreading violence supported by the government of Ulises Ruíz. Their fears have once again proved to be well founded, as another member of APPO was assassinated by supporters of the government. There has been a growth of paramilitary activity in the region, supported by the police and army, against the peaceful (“sin armas”) resistance of APPO and the people of Oaxaca.
For more information:
APPO (español): http://www.asambleapopulardeoaxaca.com/
CIPO-RFM (español): http://www.nodo50.org/cipo/
NarcoNews: http://www.narconews.com/
ZNet: Paramilitary attacks continue in Oaxaca |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Fri Oct 20, 2006 8:34 pm Post subject: |
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| Found the limitations of the front page to put up spanish characters... |
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steve Grand Techno God

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Posts: 1416 Location: Northern BC
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 1:48 am Post subject: |
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| elmateo wrote: | | Found the limitations of the front page to put up spanish characters... |
Do the characters look better for you now? I'm no wiz at character sets, but I noticed that the forums were using ISO-8859-1 and the front page was using UTF-8. I changed the front page to ISO-8859-1 as well. |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 2:17 am Post subject: |
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Gracias amigo! (you might as well have just spoken russian to me though ) |
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TS. Delicious schadenfreude

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Posts: 14585 Location: Toronto, ON
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 2:40 am Post subject: |
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| steve wrote: | | elmateo wrote: | | Found the limitations of the front page to put up spanish characters... |
Do the characters look better for you now? I'm no wiz at character sets, but I noticed that the forums were using ISO-8859-1 and the front page was using UTF-8. I changed the front page to ISO-8859-1 as well. |
Now there are a few weird characters showing up in my piece about homelessness. A few capital "a"s with the little hats over them seem to have shown up after the change. _________________ "Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason, than that of blind-folded fear." - Thomas Jefferson |
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Cartman Beyond cuddly

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Posts: 8676 Location: OMG! They killed Jason Kenney!
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 2:43 am Post subject: |
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| Quote: | | Now there are a few weird characters showing up in my piece about homelessness. A few capital "a"s with the little hats over them seem to have shown up after the change. |
I just figured you were being dramatic. |
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TS. Delicious schadenfreude

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Posts: 14585 Location: Toronto, ON
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 2:52 am Post subject: |
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Nope, there really are strange new characters in my piece on homelessness. _________________ "Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason, than that of blind-folded fear." - Thomas Jefferson |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 2:59 am Post subject: |
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Well now you can comment on the article . |
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thwap Fulltime enMasse Member

Joined: 12 Apr 2006 Posts: 4564 Location: Hamilton
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 3:11 am Post subject: |
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I'll comment: Mexico has 90 million people. Canada has 30 million.
Your post points to one assasination out of almost 10 (?) a year.
Mike Harris had Dudley George killed in 1995. That's 1.
How far along the road of neo-liberal hell do we have to go before we achieve proportional levels of state-sanctioned murder? _________________ Man! I hate them fancy-lads! |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 3:35 am Post subject: |
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I don't actually understand what you are trying to say. But this has a lot deeper implications than another dead body in terms of government oppression.
Effectively the state government has lost control of the capital and other areas of the state. The APPO is the defacto 'government' right now in the capital organizing the barricades and the civil organizations. The assassenation of a leading member of the APPO is a serious crime, and this 'situation' has the potential of becoming much worse - as I said the state police and military have been making forays into the city periodically, but have not launched a full scale 'attack' like when they got kicked out of the city August 22nd.
The significance is rather large - beyond just another dead body for neoliberalism - this is a demonstration of civil society taking control of the political apparatus and setting up a minimal violence resistance to the neo-liberal economic model. And this is most definately a continuation of the Zapatista revolution which many commentators point to as the turning point in the organization of the global resistance to neo liberalism.
There is a lot more significance in the actions of the APPO and the events of this Wednesday than just another assassenated body. |
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thwap Fulltime enMasse Member

Joined: 12 Apr 2006 Posts: 4564 Location: Hamilton
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Posted: Sat Oct 21, 2006 3:48 am Post subject: |
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My point was exactly what you said:
This is an issue of major historic importance.
I wasn't belittling that death you described in your story.
I was just asking how far Canada might be from a a government formed out of a decayed democracy that employs naked violence to perpetuate its rule.
Mexico is once again testing out theories of governance. I believe they are nearing a revolutionary point here. _________________ Man! I hate them fancy-lads! |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Sat Oct 28, 2006 3:36 pm Post subject: |
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A journalist and 2 others have been killed as violence from armed vigilanties has increased, attacking the baracades in Oaxaca. BBC is reporting that Fox is goign to send in the military/heavily armed police. People in the streets say he already has- just not in uniform.
| Quote: | OAXACA CITY: In the face of a renewed civil strike established in this capital city yesterday by the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO), groups of gunmen linked to three municipal mayors from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) launched a “cleansing” of the barricades and building occupations that opponents of PRI Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz have been maintaining for months.
The result: three people killed, eleven wounded, two disappeared, one detained by the Ministerial Police and hundreds of shell casings left scattered along the streets as a testimony to the 21 shootouts that occurred yesterday in the city.
This capital city has already been under a sort of siege for 154 days, but since 6:00 yesterday morning the city was now truly besieged, just as the APPO leadership collective had warned would happen as part of their attempts to win the ouster of the PRI governor.
And so around 1,000 barricades were installed in broad daylight throughout the city, as part of the dissident strategy seeking to demonstrate that “ungovernability” is a fact in the southern state.
Just before 10 a.m., the first of the twenty-one armed attacks on the rebels’ self-defense fortifications (and more were coming out as this article went to press) was reported. |
http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2230.html |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2006 12:20 am Post subject: |
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It is expected that the National Police will attack the barracades tonight or tomorrow. 2 Planes carrying 500 police have arrived at the Oaxaca airport. http://mexico.indymedia.org/oaxaca
If they attack during the night, there likely will be significantly more death than the 4 that happend yesterday.
I am sick of the CBC and their absolute trash reporting (I know its an AP article but that its trash):
| Quote: |
Federal police ordered to Mexico resort after riots, deaths
Last Updated: Saturday, October 28, 2006 | 5:11 PM ET
The Associated Press
Shop owners in the Mexican resort city of Oaxaca shuttered their businesses and demonstrators built up street barricades Saturday after President Vicente Fox ordered federal police to intervene in a tense stand-off between striking teachers and their supporters, and the state authorities.
Fox, who leaves office Dec. 1, had refused repeated requests to use force in Oaxaca even as the southern city slid into chaos. But gun battles Friday that killed a U.S. journalist and at least two Mexicans apparently exhausted his patience |
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2006/10/28/mexico-violence.html
Last nights attacks was not what has caused Fox to increase the violence in the city by bringing in the police. people in Oaxaca indicate that the people who attacked the barracades killing 4 last night are connected to the PRI, and may have been plain clothed officers from the state police.
Nor is the most pressing concern of the violence whether the shop keepers should keep open or not. 4 people were just killed, including a journalist, who gives a fuck about the shop keepers windows.
But you can tell the idiot who put that story together doesn't know Oaxaca, because Oaxaca is most certainly not a "resort city". |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Sun Oct 29, 2006 6:04 pm Post subject: |
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| Here is the last footage made by Brad Will as he was shot and killed in Oaxaca on Friday, Warning while not as visually graphic it is extremely violent: http://salonchingon.com/movies/brad.mov . |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2006 2:52 am Post subject: |
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Reports are coming in that the federal police started their attack this afternoon and have entered the zocalo. There is a question of whether more people have been killed and I am sure the situation right now is extremely chaotic.
http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2006/10/29/162836/67 |
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Vice Member
Joined: 26 Sep 2006 Posts: 70 Location: Toronto
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Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2006 7:28 am Post subject: |
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Is any organizing going on in toronto for solidarity?
Anyway I really hope the mexican populace destroys the state. That would really help at this moment. |
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bshmr Fulltime enMasse Member
Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Posts: 4004 Location: Central USA, Earth
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Wed Nov 01, 2006 3:26 am Post subject: |
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This whole thing has hit me harder than a lot of things that happen in the world - despite not the same catastrophic piles of bodies we have seen else where in the world - it really has been the oppression of people who are struggling to bring real 'democracy' and it feels like it is almost in their grasp, but if it slips through their fingers once again...
Here is something from Narco News, on the assassination of the US reported Brad Will:
| Quote: | In the barricades in front of the monument to Juarez heading away from Oaxaca City towards Mexico City, the people gathered there held a moment of silence in honor of Brad. One woman made an important remark. She said that he went everywhere the APPO went. He was at their side because he wanted to tell the truth about what was going on. He was in the street with the common people of Oaxaca who were fighting for justice. And when he was shot it was the APPO who was by his side and tried to help him. And when he died he died in the arms of the APPO. She remarked about how he gave his life at the service of the Oaxacan people and the Oaxacan people respect his presence. The fact that someone from the United States would come to a place like Oaxaca and fight along side the Oaxacan people is testament, according to her, that people can be good despite differences in nationality, color or economic status.
According to what has been said and written about him, Brad has always worked to develop and spread the idea of independent media. With his death, the people of Oaxaca have been exposed to his ideas and thus the ideas of a free and independent media. The amount of people who are now conscious of the efforts of the independent media in divulging the truth in contrast to the lies and misinformation of mass media is incredible. |
http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2258.html |
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thwap Fulltime enMasse Member

Joined: 12 Apr 2006 Posts: 4564 Location: Hamilton
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Fri Nov 03, 2006 3:53 am Post subject: |
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The Federal Police attacked the Autonomous University of Oaxaca - Benito Juarez today. They were threatening an attempt to enter the university, which following the massacre in '68 is illegal for police to enter autonomous univerisities unless requested by the rector (who is telling the police to get the hell out). They have since retreated and APPO is declaring a victory against the police, though dozens have been injured today, and more have been arrested/disappeared by the police forces in Oaxaca.
http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2289.html |
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elmateo sleepy.
Joined: 19 Apr 2006 Posts: 4978 Location: socialist corner, ottawa
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Posted: Mon Nov 06, 2006 5:18 am Post subject: |
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Here are some photos from today's "megamarch" in which tens of thousands (some say hundreds of thousands, though that seems a little bit large for the size of the city itself):
http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/11/78870.html
A description of the days events:
http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/11/78891.html
At the bottom the story notes:
| Quote: | ATTACK AGAINST RADIO
For the second day in a row, shortly before 7 AM, armed gunmen again opened fire on the university radio station, this time wounding one student, 22 year-old Marcos Sanchez Martinez. He was in critical condition at a local public hospital this morning. |
There was the attack against the university last week, as a student that really hits home. To have police and gunmen shoot at me... I no ability to comprehend this environment, but it certainly tells me that their independent voice is extremely important to these people. |
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thwap Fulltime enMasse Member

Joined: 12 Apr 2006 Posts: 4564 Location: Hamilton
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Posted: Mon Nov 06, 2006 7:28 pm Post subject: |
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The Toronto Star actually had decent reporting.
A quick survey of mainstream sources also showed this march had a good effect.
Whether they're buried in the back pages or even mentioned on the television news is another matter. _________________ Man! I hate them fancy-lads! |
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Vice Member
Joined: 26 Sep 2006 Posts: 70 Location: Toronto
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thwap Fulltime enMasse Member

Joined: 12 Apr 2006 Posts: 4564 Location: Hamilton
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Posted: Mon Dec 04, 2006 2:27 pm Post subject: |
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http://counterpunch.com/peller12022006.html
| Quote: | In this past week, the government of Mexico has adopted a ¨gloves off ¨ policy and has clearly stated in the press its plans to do away with the popular movement in Oaxaca before Friday, the 1st of December, when PAN party Felipe Calderon was to take presidential office despite protests by millions of voters around the country amidst the fraudulent summer elections that stole the vote from PRD (Democratic Revolution Party) candidate Lopez Obrador.
Thousands of Preventive Federal Police, PFP, forces who entered the city of Oaxaca on the 28th of October, prompted by the death of Indymedia journalist Brad Will, are now in control of the local, state, and investigative police branches, and have expanded their operations to outside of the capital, Oaxaca City. A special operations department of the PFP joined the existing force there, and armed patrols circle the city. |
| Quote: | | Activists in Mexico have had the task of assessing the situation in Oaxaca in comparison to the rest of the country, and there remain many questions of how different movements can relate to that of the APPO in terms of coordination and solidarity. While those suffering repression in Oaxaca remain isolated by the mainstream Mexican media, who have hardly reported on deaths, disappearances and torture, there is also a danger coming from some of those on "the left" in Mexico who isolate the Oaxacan movement as a protest against the governor Ulises, and not a broader struggle against neoliberalism and capitalist exploitation whose context is surely national. Despite this, at the moment there are still organizations and collectives around the country who are strategizing their modes of solidarity for Oaxaca, particularly concentrating on the grave human rights situation for those incarcerated and those remaining inside the city. |
_________________ Man! I hate them fancy-lads! |
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Hephaestion Deeply Shallow

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Posts: 24243 Location: Where the Wild Things Are...
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Posted: Tue Dec 05, 2006 1:49 am Post subject: |
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Oaxacans venture out as violence eases, but many say conflict far from over
| Quote: | The southern Mexican city of Oaxaca is visibly returning to normal after six months of protests and clashes that killed at least nine people. Yet even as teachers whose strike began the unrest return to classrooms and clashes between police and leftist protesters have died down, many residents say the conflict is far from resolved.
Leaders of the Oaxaca People's Assembly, or APPO, the group heading the protests, have vowed to keep pressing for Gov. Ulises Ruiz's resignation and are calling for a "mega-march" Saturday.
And some residents warn that simmering discontent about poverty, injustice and oppression again could erupt into violence at any time.
"We're still in a state of siege, just look around," said Ramon Ruiz, a 72-year-old retiree sitting on a bench in the central plaza surrounded by police officers. "The governor needs to leave but they also need to arrest the APPO leaders. Otherwise, this will continue."
[...]
APPO spokesman Florentino Lopez said one of the movement's most visible leaders, Flavio Sosa, is in Mexico City to negotiate a peaceful solution with Interior Secretary Francisco Ramirez Acuna, who took office Friday along with President Felipe Calderon.
City workers have begun painting over graffiti slamming Ruiz, who is accused of rigging the 2004 election and using thugs to attack dissidents.
Hundreds of federal officers remain in the Zocalo, but only a few agents now guard roadblocks that were manned in days past by rows of police in riot gear. |
_________________ "The dignity of an animal is measured by his capacity to revolt in the face of oppression." -- Mikhail Bakunin |
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