Chile Strives for Economic Justice

EL BOSQUE, Chile - Chilean protests have been going on since 2019 and have headed on into 2020. Protesters in the streets chant, "Chile is waking up," but Chile's centrist right government has made some concessions. They now say that they want to raise the minimum wage from $396 to $460, presented by President Sebastian Pinera. However, the secretary-general and leaders of Chile's Senate and House wanted to persuade him to throw out that bill and focus instead on the government's total structural reform. It is hard to foresee precisely which direction the country will progress forward with so many different viewpoints. With December 8, 2019's non-binding consultation showing that 92.4% voters want a new constitution and 73.1% want an all-citizen convention, voters are making voices heard loudly and adamantly. Violence between police and protesters has led to 11 deaths and thousands thrown in jail

These clashes have been the government having to declare a "State of Emergency" as businesses are looted, and buses are burned. It would seem the people are staging their own unique drama as the world watches. With the country calling for curfew in major cities such as Santiago, the government is having to act strictly with shows of military force. The last time such force was used was at the Pinochet rule's close in the 1990s. The recent novel Coronavirus issue may be causing more issues in Chile. The people of Chilies are on edge over the food shortages that came about during lock down due to the Coronavirus. It seems that the government used water cannon and tear gas to quell a protest in a poverty-stricken area, El Bosque, Chile. 

The government is not getting in line with the overall message of equal treatment for all Chileans regardless of economic status. Though the government said in a statement that they distributed over 2,000 aid packages, still the entire needs of the country and El Bosque could not be met. The mayor of the district in El Bosque, Sadi Melo, declared the situation "very complex" due to the clearly seen "hunger and lack of work." What other tolls has Coronavirus taken? Since being ordered to stay at home, it looks like some are going hungry. President Pinera said that aid would go mainly to "the most vulnerable families." Following that comment Felipe Guevera, the governor of the metropolitan area, tweeted in Spanish about the ongoing crisis: "I understand the deep anguish of millions of Chileans, thousands are starving." While making these comments, Guevera subsequently dismissed the disputed comments he had made about the protests in a televised broadcast. The civil unrest witnessed in Chile can be seen in various Latin American countries, such as Colombia, where people have begun draping red cloths out-of-doors to signal hunger. 

The protests in Chile have been happening since the government announced it would raise metro fares in 2019. Let us hope the government can come to terms with the people's wants and needs before unforgivable violence occurs again. While the protests first started due to the raised metro fares, there were other issues at stakes, such as the high costs of health care, unequal handling of Chile's peoples, and unsatisfactory financing of education

There was trouble brewing in Chiles' waters for a while before Santiago's metro fares resulted in protests. Besides calling necessary attention to Chiles' problems, another good thing that has come out of the protests is incredible street art. Graphic artist Oscar Nunez, who has played a lead role in protests since they began, goes by the name Mr. Owl. Mr. Owl's art moves violence aside and allows for a peaceful conversation to occur between onlookers. Says Nunez, "I started using the imagery of a military police officer in a peaceful yoga pose. It is ironic and fresh, but my favorite part is that other graffiti artists have put their own touches to that image," he says. It seems many long-awaited and much-needed changes and beauty will come out of the pain of Chile and their sometimes peaceful, sometimes violent clashes. Hopefully, the future holds the changes they the people wish to see.

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Africa's Post-Colonial Addiction to Power and Corruption

AFRICA - The exchange of power among most African states is stained with blood. Once a leader comes into power, it becomes difficult to let go of the seat. Political leadership is attached to the amassing of wealth through every means possible. The vice has seen leaders cling on to power longer than the constitutionally defined limits. The result of this is the bloodshed that follows each election period. Three African heads of states have been in power for over three decades. They seek to rule by all means alienating their countries from the world. For decades, these countries have suffered from corruption, killings, the rigging of the election, and unlawful constitutional amendments. Political opponents and other critics are intimidated, jailed, and killed.

Ugandan Anti-Corruption Sign, Photo by Future Atlas

President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda

Yoweri Museveni of Uganda has led the country since 1986. The Aljazeera refers to him as "the five-time elected dictator." The Ugandan president faces silent accusations of robbing the citizens of the freedom of speech and the adverse infliction of human rights through extrajudicial killings. The president has also appointed his wife to a cabinet seat, and his son is his special advisor. The age limit for presidential leadership in Uganda is 75 years, and some sources speculate that he will try to alter the constitution to allow him a 6th term. If this doesn't work out, he will have his son run for the presidency after he retires.

President Paul Biya of Cameroon

Cameroonian President Paul Biya has led the country since 1982. His leadership saw the change of presidential term limits in 2008 to create a leeway for him to run for another term during the 2011 elections. The constitutional amendments saw more than 40 people lose their lives in anti-protests. The 87-year-old president is suffering from poor health, which has affected the execution of his duties. He hardly makes public appearances and can go for months (longest term- two years) without holding a cabinet meeting with his critics, terming him the "absentee president." Only death can rob him of the throne. In Cameroon, Elections are overseen by a body appointed by the head of state. The country still faces problems of unemployment, with a quarter of the population under 25years. Terrorism and internal conflicts are also a significant challenge, with 160,000 people fleeing to neighboring Nigeria. There is an evident conflict between French and English speakers in the country. English speakers threaten to detach from the state, which seems to overlook their rights. President Biya remains unmoved by the pressure from locals and the international community as he still aspires to run for the 7th term.

Teodoro Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea

President Teodoro Obiang has sat as the president of Equatorial Guinea since 1979, making him the longest-serving president in the world. He attained power after overthrowing his uncle Francisco Macias Nguema from office in a military coup. The ex-soldier had his uncle executed by a firing squad for abuse of office. President Teodoro appointed his son and likely successor as his Vice president. He is, among others, accused of robbing their states of wealth to acquire luxurious homes and properties in France in a scandal dubbed the "ill-gotten gains." The United States has been fighting with the president's son over illegally acquired property worth $71million. The property is said to have been born of stolen from the oil-rich state. Though the country's constitution allows for multiple parties, it remains virtually a single party. Mr. Obiangs political party, "Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea," is the state's dominant party. Opposition stands no chance during elections, and looking into the future, with his son in line, the dynasty of Nguema's is likely to rule the country for decades.

Democracy is still novel in most African states. The civil society and regional blocks have been at the forefront in the fight for human rights and democracy. The trends are changing in some countries where long-serving leaders are accepting defeat and stepping down. Jose Eduardo dos Santos, the former head of Angola's state, stepped down in 2017 following defeat after 38 years in office. A military coup also overthrew Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe in 2017 after 37years of the presidency. Poor leadership, majorly resulting from lack of democracy, has been the major contributor to poverty among African states.

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At the Nexus of Water Wars is the Axis of Greed

UNITED STATES – According to a 2019 report by UNICEF and the World Health Organization, some 2.2 billion people around the world do not have access to potable water. Worse, 4.2 billion people do not have carefully managed sanitation services, and 3 billion lack basic hand washing facilities.  However, poverty alone does not explain the disproportionate access of the world’s poor to clean water.  Water is a plentiful natural resource available from lakes, rivers, and streams. However, in most countries, water management policies and systems are in place that favor national elites while leaving low-income communities without the infrastructure to keep even nearby water sources safe from contamination by human or industrial waste.

Hot Raw Sewage, Bangkok, Photo by Trey Radcliff

The evidence suggests that these problems are growing worse, thanks, in part, to lending policies pushed by international agencies like the World Bank and Inter American Development Bank. These entities allow private companies to turn a nation’s water supplies into a commodity bought and sold on the open market at prices only the rich can afford.  However, these policies have also faced popular protest that has forced national governments pursuing neo-liberal policies on water to stand up to foreign agencies or risk being ousted from below.

Bolivia offers a critical case study of today’s increasingly bitter “water wars.”   In 2000, and again in 2005,  foreign companies like the giant Bechtel Corporation were given control over water rights, which led to an average 35% price increase to consumers for access to clean water.  In some areas, the price for water doubled, making it utterly unaffordable for low-income families.  Families were even charged for water taken from wells dug on their property, and in some cases, licenses were required for individuals to collect rainwater from their roofs.

Supporters of privatization and commercialization argued that these policies would allow for investments in improved water management systems, eventually benefiting the nation’s poor.  But fierce protests from popular organizations forced the national government to declare martial law, and finally, Bechtel withdrew from the country.  A similar process unfolded in neighboring Peru, which embraced neo-liberal policies in the early 1990s allowing for extensive corporate involvement in water management.  While privatization was halted in 2006, the Peruvian government has created new public water agencies that continue to favor large corporate growers, threatening to overshadow efforts by local communities to ensure equitable access for small farmers and low-income consumers.

The issue of water is a complex one.  Over consumption of water in local communities is a real problem requiring expanded education efforts to limit excess waste.  At the same time, improved village-level development and distribution of water suppliers can founder without large scale administrative and financial support. For example, in Bolivia, villagers formed a collective that required members to dig wells on behalf of the community as a whole.  Clean water was distributed to all residents 17 hours a day, and each household only had to pay $3 per month.  But without outside financing, the community was unable to build a water treatment system or to expand production to meet escalating demand from neighboring areas.  Despite this successful experiment, the water supply was expected to dry up in the space of a decade.

The fact is, government-supported municipal water agencies may not be up to the task of distributing clean water more equitably.  For example,  after the Bolivian government ousted Bechtel, the government municipal water service, SMAPA, proved unable to deliver on its promises.   The election of Evo Morales in 2005 led to the creation of a new Ministry of Water and a constitutional provision declaring water a human right that included an explicit ban on private appropriation.  However, the distribution of water to Bolivia poorest southern districts continues to lag far behind the rest of the country.

Venezuela may be one of the few countries that have managed to overhaul water management to meet the U.N. Millennium Development goals for water and sanitation.  In this case, the government’s State Institute for Water Resources promoted the creation of “community water councils” across vast swaths of the countryside. It provided not only government financing and technical support but also grassroots education in water conservation, two of the elements typically missing in any public water management plan.  While some observers are skeptical of the government’s numbers, Venezuela claims that 93% of its population currently has access to clean water supply and sanitation at prices they can afford.

It’s worth noting that increased corporate control over water is not just a “Third World” problem.  An analysis conducted by the Guardian newspaper found that the combined price of water and sewage had increased by an average of 80% between 2010 and 2018 in 12 U.S. cities. More than 40% of residents in some of those cities live in neighborhoods where the price of water is so high that many they are often in arrears and face service disconnection.  One U.S. city, Austin, Texas, reported a 154% increase in the cost of water and sewage over this same period.  In New Orleans, Santa Fe, and Cleveland, about three-quarters of low-income families live in neighborhoods where average water and sewage bills are unaffordable.

“More people are in trouble, and the poorest of the poor are in big trouble,”  said Roger Colton, a leading utility analyst. He was commissioned by the Guardian to study water poverty.

Just as in much of Latin America, a lack of federal support to public water utilities, which provide service to 87% of all U.S. residents, is crippling the ability of local communities to gain equitable water access.  In recent years, maintenance, environmental and health threats, climate shocks and rising expenditures have skyrocketed, the Guardian notes. Meanwhile, U.S. corporate interests seeking control over water in Latin America are pursuing the same control agenda at home.  Privatizing public utilities, ostensibly to allow for an overhaul of the aging water management infrastructure and an expansion of water access, is a commonly-proposed solution. However, most cities, despite being strapped for funds, aren’t biting, knowing full well that strictly market-based solutions could produce far worse outcomes.

As an alternative, some cities like Philadelphia are allowing their residents to pay what they can for water, similar to their solution for rising energy costs, reasoning that the public health benefits will far outweigh the costs.   It is still only a stopgap, however.   The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that at least $35 billion will be needed every year for 20 years for American cities to comply with federal safety regulations for water, sewage, and stormwater. 

Where will cities get the money?  In theory, from a massive bipartisan federal spending program for infrastructure development.  Democrats and Republicans say they are committed to working on a bill, but legislative gridlock, complicated by the bitter divisions surrounding the 2020 election, has stalled all progress thus far.  Meanwhile, millions of low-income residents continue to buy bottled water, which they can’t afford to wash their hands while depositing their feces and urine in plastic bags in local dumpsters because the water in their toilets still isn’t running.  It is a solution to which millions of poor residents in slums from Sao Paolo to La Paz can already relate.

Gaining access to clean water is one of the significant challenges facing the world’s poor.  For decades poorly governed water management systems overseen by corrupt and inefficient national governments have favored economic elites while disproportionately leaving low-income sectors exposed to diseases due to contamination by industrial waste.  An added problem is that multinationals, corporations, and international agencies like the World Bank favor water privatization schemes, which boost profits for foreign investors. The net result is a local population held hostage to a system that has commoditized water, the one thing without which human beings can live.

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Rwanda's Most Wanted Man Arrested in Paris and Extradited

RWANDA - Felicien Kabuga, 84, is a Rwandan businessman, who made the bulk of his fortune in the 1970s in the tea trade. He is also the founder and primary funder of Radio Télévision Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM) and stands accused of using twenty different aliases to evade capture. After evading apprehension for 28-years, he was finally arrested by French police on 16 May 2020, in a suburb of Paris.

Ntarama Genocide Memorial, Ntarama, Rwanda, Photo by Bradford Duplisea

Kabuga was the richest man in Rwanda before the 1994 genocide when the Hutus slaughtered approximately 800,000 Tutsis between July and April of that year. RTLM was a leading news outlet for Rwanda, but a significant propaganda arm for the Hutu militia, Interahamwe. Daily programming included anti-Tutsi content, songs, and speeches, including the broadcast of the names of people who were killed earlier in the day.

Indicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) in 1997, Kabuga evaded capture by frequently moving between several East African countries, including Kenya, where it is believed that the government harbored him as a fugitive for many years. During this time, he continued to do business in the country, held a Kenyan passport, and investigators charge that Kenyan government officials actively aided and abetted the fugitive. Kenya has repeatedly denied these allegations.

Efforts to locate Kabuga and bring him to justice were abandoned when the Tribunal closed in 2015. However, Serge Brammertz, a United Nations’ war crimes prosecutor, leading the division responsible for adjudicating outstanding war crimes from Uganda, ordered the search restarted last year after learning that Kabuga may be hiding in Europe. Authorities located Kabuga in his French apartment based on information obtained by surveilling his children.

The diplomatic relationship between France and Rwanda – a former French colony, has been extremely complicated since the days of the genocide. Rwandans accuse the French of complicity in the genocide since the French government was an ally of Hutu leader, Juvenal Habyarimana, (whose death was the final catalyst for the genocide), before the massacres.

Rwanda charges that the French initially supplied arms to militias, and UN peacekeepers from France often helped known killers escape capture and prosecution. Twenty-six years after the genocide, archived records about Rwanda and the genocide are still classified in France, despite numerous calls for the documents to be made public. Rwandans also accuse the French of harboring génocidaires, including Kabuga, since 1994. Six charged génocidaires by the Tribunal remain fugitives who are possibly being harbored by France.

Kabuga has denied alleged involvement in the genocide during a bail hearing in a French court at the end of May. On 3 June 2020, a French court ruled that he be extradited to Tanzania, the home of the UN Tribunal. His lawyers argue that Kabuga will not receive a fair trial at the Tribunal, especially one held in East Africa. Rwandans prefer that he be tried in his home country for war crimes, but there is no extradition treaty between Rwanda and France at this time. Kabuga’s legal team will appeal the decision to France’s highest court, which they hope will be successful due to their assertion that his ailing health makes him unable to travel.

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COVID-19 Inequities, is Universal Basic Income the Answer?

UNITED STATES - As the pandemic continues globally, parts of the U.S. are re-opening despite the real risks of surging infections and deaths due to COVID-19. While the one-time stimulus check of the CARES Act kept landlords and bill collectors temporarily at bay, it has been widely considered as “not enough,” with recent polling indicating that 82% of Americans would prefer the stimulus checks to be re-occurring monthly.

Time Money Puppet, Photo by Thomas Skirde

This recent shift in opinion shows that Americans are beginning to show a clear preference for a Universal Basic Income (UBI) solution. UBI is a guaranteed income provided by a government entity on a reoccurring basis that is additional to the current entitlement programs such as social security, disability, and welfare benefits.

There are clear trends that show why this shift in opinion on UBI is shifting. While facilities, workplaces, and government services previously closed or partially shut down due to social distancing requirements begin to reopen slowly, but this will not alleviate the pain felt by the most economically vulnerable. Increased under-employment and unemployment continues despite the end of lockdown. Those fortunate to still be in the labor force are not making enough money to repay loans from predatory lenders or credit card companies to survive.

The number of people negatively affected by the COVID-19 pandemic suffering from food and housing insecurity is drawing increased comparisons to the Great Depression, demonstrating that more progress needs to be made to avoid further adverse economic consequences. Furthermore, an estimated 27 million people lost their health insurance as of May 2, 2020. In all of this bad news, there is evidence of an "inevitable" second wave of infections and further lockdowns in the upcoming fall and winter seasons.

Social distancing requirements over an extended period, as well as the unanticipated financial repercussions of the pandemic itself, might also make a policy like UBI more attractive to the public. The promised money granted to citizens through UBI programs could act as an additional incentive for people to wear masks and social distance to prevent the resurgence of infections and deaths. At the moment in states like Mississippi, California, and Texas have witnessed rates of disease and hospitalizations continue to rise.

Even states considered to have handled the pandemic "successfully" are proceeding forward with caution in the hope that a vaccine may be developed before the fall when flu season begins. In the meantime, multiple states are adopting requirements to guide phased reopening of non-essential business sectors.

Universal Basic Income could also help workers with expenses during the transition back into the workforce, particularly in the capacity of remote work or even becoming entrepreneurs. Investment remains a prohibitive hurdle for startups, and the UBI may mitigate this barrier. Entrepreneurs and small business owners are the engines of the American economy, by enabling people to afford the costs for technology, broadband access, office equipment, and resources and other upfront costs, while guaranteeing dependable income.

This surety of regular, guaranteed income can lead to increased credit scores that will enable people to access to loans and other financial instruments. This will help more people realize the American dream, not through a handout, but as a stepping stone to upward mobility. But, most importantly, in this era of disease and pandemic, as the Trump administration continues the dismantling of the Affordable Care Act and contraction of Medicaid, UBI could become the difference between life and death, between going hungry or buying food, between purchasing medicine or going without taking it.

In any case, the COVID-19 pandemic is proving to be a transformative event in the global economy, one that is causing a definite shift in public awareness and preferences. The acceptance of Universal Basic Income in the form of monthly payments without any preconditions is not that different from the initial CARES Act, which, if extended, would serve as a precursor model. Both would have the potential to jumpstart the economy while undergirding the most vulnerable populations until a vaccine for COVID-19 is successfully developed and deployed on a national scale. Until then, as the U.S. economy recovers, the government must focus on a long-term economic strategy that will address the unique demands of the ongoing pandemic and its effects on private budgetary security.

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Extrajudicial Killings and Racism, a Global Pandemic

ISRAEL - Currently, the streets of many American cities are filled with crowds of people armed with signs, protesting the violent death of George Floyd, a black man, who was killed by white, former police officer Derek Chauvin. But the increased public speculation on systemic racism and discrimination is not unique to America; instead, the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement is present in nations worldwide, including Israel—the “Holy Land,” known for its claimed acceptance of all people regardless of race or faith.

Ethiopian Protesters Confront Israeli Police Over Death of Unarmed Teenager, Photo Flickr

On June 30, 2019, in the Israeli town of Haifa, 18-year-old Solomon Teka decided to spend some time at a neighborhood park. While there, he got into a small fight with a few other teenagers. A nearby off-duty police officer attempted to break up the fight after identifying himself. According to the officer, this caused the men to turn violent against him, and fearing for his life, and he aimed a warning shot. The bullet hit Solomon Teka, who later died in medical care. 

Teka was an Ethiopian Jew, a dark-skinned ethnic minority in a majority white country. The Ethiopian Jews have long endured systemic racism in Israel. Many of them are either migrants or descendants of refugees from the nearby countries of Ethiopia and Sudan, flocking to the Holy Land in search of religious freedom. However, their dreams are soon shattered as they continue to suffer from ingrained racism. Ethiopian Jews have the highest poverty rate in Israel and continue to be searched, tried, and arrested at a much higher frequency than any other community. They are often treated as second class citizens. Solomon Teka’s death was the last straw—thousands of protesters took to the streets, calling for a stop to the excessive use of police force against Ethiopian Jews. 

The protests blocked many major Israeli roads, halting commuting traffic from nearby cities. In Tel Aviv, protesters shut down the Ayalon Highway. While the Tel Aviv protests continued to be mostly peaceful, other cities were plagued with violence, as people burned tires, vandalized buildings, and fought with the police. 

Both sides of the violent riots suffered greatly—over a hundred protesters were arrested, and a similar number of police officers were injured. The police turned to tear gas and increased force in retaliation to rioters who threw stones and gas bombs at them. Through all of this, the Ethiopian Jews’ message remained clear: they were tired of the institutionalized racism that was ingrained in both the country of Israel and its police forces. These past protests and those of today’s Black Lives Matter demonstrations are eerily similar—presenting the possibility that action against racism has been futile so far. 

At one point in the protests, things seemed to take a turn for the better. In an attempt to answer the Ethiopian Jews’ pleas, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu initiated a ministerial committee on the integration of Israeli citizens of Ethiopian origin. However, this action was increasingly hard to implement, as the majority of the targeted citizens were low-income citizens and did not have access to the Prime Minister’s committee. 

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin and Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan agreed that action against the country’s deep-rooted racism was necessary. Rivlin issued the following statement:

“This is not a civil war. It is a shared struggle of brothers and sisters for their shared home and their shared future. I ask all of us to act responsibly and with moderation. My home is your home. Let us continue to stand together like a wall against violence, any form of violence, and to fight together for our shared home.”

However, both figures shared the sentiment that violent protests would be met with the requisite police force and whatever means necessary to quell the riots. 

Authorities initially arrested the suspected police officer on charges of possible manslaughter. But they soon released him into house arrest, causing protests to rise once more. Charges against him were reduced to involuntary manslaughter, which is used in the case that the accused acts dangerously with clear violent intent, although not with the purpose of killing. The maximum sentence for involuntary manslaughter is 12 years, but Israeli courts usually only issue one or two years.

A few days after the charge, legal counsel began entertaining the idea of reducing it to negligent homicide, which has even fewer consequences. The officer was not also fired from the force, despite the call to do so by Tebeka, an organization that defends the rights of Ethiopian Jews in Israel. 

In a statement taken by the L.A. Times, Teka’s family lawyer asked for “the truth to be uncovered, and justice served.” He also mentioned that the “police and the State Prosecutor’s Office, in their public statements, show a tendency to attribute reduced responsibility to a police officer who killed our beloved in his prime,” alluding to the racism permeating Israel’s legal forces. 

While the Teka family continues to fight for an appeal following the officer’s reduced charges, the Black Lives Matter movement in Israel has flared up once again due to the death of George Floyd in America. Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the U.S. diplomatic mission in Tel Aviv, holding signs emblazoned with the words “Black Lives Matter,” “George Floyd,” and “Solomon Teka.” Because every name that is added to the list of racism-related deaths is a reminder that we, as a global community, are still far from equality for all.

*A Note of Importance: As a South Asian-American, I acknowledge that I can never truly understand the day-to-day struggles that people of African descent endure. However, as a human being, I fully support and stand by the BLM Movement; furthermore, as a writer, it is my responsibility to use the given platform to objectively detail the following situation as I see fit, allowing readers to interpret my work as they wish. ~ Sayuni Dharmasena

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Myth of Reparations | 40 Acres Minus Mule

UNITED STATES, Washington, DC - As the grand-daughter of an early civil rights activist, Attorney Julius Winfield Robertson, who was a dedicated advocate for human rights, and worked closely with U.S. Congressman Senator Estes Kefauver and Attorney James Nabritt, Jr. on historical civil rights cases, it saddens me to witness the protests of the killing of George Floyd reigniting the discussions about the issue of reparation.

Justice Americas Broken Promise, George Floyd Murder Protester, May 2020

The civil rights movement was governed by action versus committee. Activists were veritable “Davids vs. Goliaths” bravely challenging the legislative system which codified racism.  When Robertson’s firm, along with a junior partner, Dovey Johnson Roundtree, filed a segregation complaint in 1953 on behalf of a Women's Army Corps (WAC) private named Sarah Louise Keys, it would portend the Montgomery Alabama Bus Boycotts.

Most descendants of slaves, at least those with voices in the public square, are vociferously demanding that the issue of reparations become a cornerstone of the Democrat’s electoral platform. However, as a person of color who does not agree with the premise, I understand that my position is in the minority. To be clear, I do not disagree with the fact that structural changes need to be implemented to increase parity in the economic fortunes of those whose ancestors were enslaved and those whose ancestors owned them.

However, doling out what amounts to a one-time cash settlement is short-sighted and will not address past issues of institutionalized inequality. Thus, a Commission to study what any African-American in this country can attest to, unfair and unjustified mistreatment, results in little more than a menagerie of wish lists, often to meet immediate needs. A cash settlement will never eradicate increased incidents of extra-judicial killings, that latest of which is the murder of George Floyd who was murdered by former Officer Derek Chauvin who knelt on Floyd’s neck for 8 mins 46 seconds even after he became unresponsive presumed dead.

It will not assuage the pain felt by the family and community of Breonna Taylor an essential healthcare worker who was caring for COVID-19 patients at a local hospital, and who was murdered by police who stormed her home and shot her 8 times without cause. Then, there is Ahmaud Arbery who was hunted down by 3 men who decided that he should not be jogging in their neighborhood and therefore deserved to be shot and killed.

Six years after the 2014 article titled “Unarmed People of Color Killed by Police, 1999-2014,” which was written “after the announcement that NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo would not be indicted for killing Eric Garner, the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund Twitter posted a series of tweets naming 76 men and women who were killed in police custody since the 1999 death of Amadou Diallo in New York,” have yet to progress. As heinous is the string of extrajudicial killings are, they are not new, they are just being caught on camera. And as much as our heart aches from these murders, the system is inherently racist and it is the little things, the death by a thousand cuts that debilitates brown and black people in America.

Until systemic racism is eradicated and until people accept their culpability in maintaining this status quo, we will never begin the process of dismantling an inherently biased governance. Without this change, it will never stop a sales clerk from following blacks around the store who are legitimately shopping. It will never prevent a group of police from terrorizing a family, brutalizing their father. Then, threatening to kill their pregnant mom trying to protect her children, one of whom purportedly took a .99 cent doll from the Dollar Store. What started as a meme is truly the norm because we can never “breathe while black,” “jog while black,” “bird watch while black,” “drive while black,” think of any pedestrian activity and add “while black,” and that is the reality of most brown and black America.

It was a nice gesture that on Juneteenth, which commemorates the June 19th date of the end of slavery in the United States, that H.R. 40 a bill sponsored by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas), was televised in well-attended and animated House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties’ hearings. But this bill is not an opening salvo for change; it is just another futile exercise in pushing a Sisyphean boulder up the proverbial hill. The bill’s title spells out its intent, which is not one of action, but bureaucracy since H.R.40 has been advanced to create a “Commission to Study and Develop Reparations Proposals for African-Americans.”

Anyone who has spent significant time in the workforce, private or public, understands the efficacy of commissions and panels, and most if honest would say they are “a waste of time,” and resources. In this respect, it is another bite at the apple of assuaging “white guilt,” through some means of pay-off. It is the latest version of 40-Acres and a Mule. That the politicians jumped on this bandwagon smacks of pandering. It is as if they believe at best that “Reparations” is the magic catchphrase that will guarantee to deliver black votes to them in 2020.

Alternatively, and more cynically, they are selling reparations as a panacea to the reemergence of Jim Crow-era tactics that currently beset the nation, particularly in the South. From a legislative perspective, reparations do not address the urgent actions being implemented around the country to dismantle the protections from disenfranchisement, such as gerrymandering, efforts to overturn the Voting Rights Act, law enforcement killings of black men, women, and children, as well as mass incarceration.

It indeed is as they say in the South, it is “broke and needs fixin’;” but equally true is the sentiment openly expressed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), and privately felt by many others:

I don’t think reparations for something that happened 150 years ago for whom none of us currently living are responsible is a good idea,” McConnell said. “We’ve tried to deal with our original sin of slavery by fighting a civil war, bypassing landmark civil rights legislation. We elected an African American president. (Source: MSN.com)

Thus, 150 years later it seems as if those who were against giving slaves 40 acres on which to rebuild their lives, are of the same ilk as those who felt that providing slaves their “freedom’ was payment enough.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr. explained how "Union General William T. Sherman’s Special Field Order No. 15, issued on Jan. 16, 1865, prescribed the 40 acres policy, but not the mule. That “would come later. But what many accounts leave out is that this idea for massive land redistribution was the result of a discussion that Sherman and Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton held four days before Sherman issued the Order, with 20 leaders of the black community in Savannah, Ga., Where Sherman was headquartered following his famous March to the Sea. The meeting was unprecedented in American history.

This policy was actionable and substantial and would have radically changed the nature of this country. IT WOULD have been an actual reparation for the country’s “original sin,” because of the power inherent in the permanence of land, and self-governance.

Gates continues to explain that “Section two of the order specifies that these new communities, moreover, would be governed entirely by black people themselves … on the islands, and in the settlements hereafter to be established, no white person whatever, unless military officers and soldiers detailed for duty, will be permitted to reside; and the sole and exclusive management of affairs will be left to the freed people themselves … By the laws of war, and orders of the President of the United States, the negro [sic] is free and must be dealt with as such. With this Order, 400,000 acres of land — a strip of coastline stretching from Charleston, South Carolina, to the St. John’s River in Florida, including Georgia’s Sea Islands and the mainland thirty miles in from the coast,” as Barton Myers reports — would be redistributed to the newly freed slaves. The extent of this Order and its larger implications are mind-boggling, actually.” (Source: PBS)

The crux of the matter and any discussions about reparations that do not institutionally compensate the descendants of slaves is a moot point. And even, then, it cannot and will not fix the view by some that people of color in this country are inferior and undeserving of equal treatment under the law de facto or de jure, especially in employment and equitable pay, which is the real currency of freedom in today’s world. It also will never prevent the institutional inequities which exist, not just for African-Americans, but all people who were not blessed by the lottery of birth to be born into extreme wealth.

In this era of globalism, when foreign investors hold nearly “30 million acres of U.S. farmland, and the remainder held by corporations and farmers, the possibility of achieving this ‘commensurate’ reparation equal to the pain, suffering, torture, and horrors of 400-years of slavery, as initially ordered, will never be delivered. In lieu of this, we cannot let this election slogan become the ultimate manifestation of our desires for justice and equity. It is not up to others to make right what is wrong in our society, and with our lives. It is up to us to push, to demand, to protest, and to legislate, otherwise “Black Lives [will not] Matter,” nor will the lives of all the great Civil Rights martyrs from emancipation until today.

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Gender Based Violence, a Covid Lockdown Nightmare

The COVID-19 pandemic has radically changed the world in so many ways. While the world learns to adapt to a new normal, it is still ignoring one crucial group, and this passivity has led to what some are calling, “a shadow pandemic.” While globally, other types of crimes decreased during the Coronavirus lockdowns, there has been, unfortunately, a commensurate increase in domestic violence cases.

Source: Pixabay

Source: Pixabay

During this era of quarantine, women and children have been most at risk of death because of an inability to escape or reach out for help. Anecdotally, there have been reports of abusers threatening to lock victims out of their homes with the claim that they will be exposed to and contract the deadly Coronavirus that causes COVID-19. Fear and intimidation are the hallmarks of abusers, who ‘weaponize’ lies and manipulation to keep their victims quiet.

Statistical figures on the number of domestic abuse cases that occur annually are difficult to compile because the victims are often ashamed to report it. Abusers depend upon their victims’ feelings of complicity and responsibility for their abuse. All of which contribute to the difficulty in gather data about the number of domestic violence cases pre-coronavirus lockdown. According to the National Domestic Violence Hotline, here in the United States, the organization reported receiving an average of 1,800 to 2,000 contacts a day from March through April of 2020.

According to UN Women, “It is estimated that 35 percent of women worldwide have experienced either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or sexual violence by a non-partner (not including sexual harassment) at some point in their lives. However, some national studies show that up to 70 percent of women have experienced physical and/or sexual violence from an intimate partner in their lifetime. Evidence shows that women who have experienced physical or sexual intimate partner violence report higher rates of depression, having an abortion, and acquiring HIV, compared to women who have not.”

Gender-based violence (GBV) is a global epidemic. Female genital mutilation (FMG), child marriages, and rape fall under its rubric. There has been an observable correlation between pandemic health emergencies and increased gender-based violence. In a July 2015 Oxfam International report on the impact of Ebola, “22.9 percent of respondents reported that cases of GBV were still happening even during the Ebola crisis. Respondents in urban areas were more likely (32 percent) to acknowledge the existence of GBV than those in rural areas (24 percent). Different forms of GBV took place, including domestic violence, sexual abuse, rape, etc. …The assessment found that 52.6 percent of respondents recognized that women and girls had been bearing a greater burden in the household since the Ebola outbreak began.”

These conditions that exacerbated domestic abuse and GBV seemed confined to Africa are now being seen in the United States and Europe since the spread of coronavirus. A variety of factors contribute to the increase in violence: primarily victims confinement in government-mandated isolation with their abusers, additional household stress, and those who were ready to reach out for help can no longer do so safely. The National Domestic Violence website has a pop-up warning for individuals seeking help “Safety Alert: Computer use can be monitored and is impossible to completely clear.” This effort is a means to encourage continued engagement but provides them with protection from controlling, tech-savvy abusers.

Women and girls have also borne the caretaking duties during this pandemic, and in countries with more deeply rooted patriarchal societies, access to help is impossible. These women lack access to phones and computers, and often the family and community tightly control their movements.  In this new world where governments are making decisions about what elements of society are essential and nonessential, many services like shelters, reproductive health clinics, and counseling are relegated to the latter. Throughout the Continent, law enforcement resources are enforcing strict city and country lockdowns. Like their U.S. and European counterparts, they are less concerned with responding to domestic violence calls unless there is evidence of clear and present danger and a probable life or death situation.

During this global pandemic, victims of GBV need our help, and it is incumbent upon society to be more vigilant and diligent in supporting them during these challenging times. We must no longer turn a blind eye or expect other people or organizations to help. As citizens, it is our responsibility and social contract to support women who may be experiencing domestic and gender-based violence without judgment.

Find discrete ways to check on friends and family who you suspect might be in trouble. If necessary, help them with cover stories and code words so that they can become survivors instead of victims. If feasible, please donate to women’s shelters because they are best equipped to help women and children safely escape dangerous situations. In these times of economic hardship, these organizations are in dire need of private and public support. Every dollar counts, and if you are in a position to help please do so.  

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Africans in China and Covid-19

CHINA - Africans are not strangers to discrimination, scarred by the long history of the slave trade, colonial rule, and now technological dominance, the peoples of the Continent have yet to realize independence fully. The stigma of racism remains a pressing reality for many Africans in the United States, Europe, and, most recently, China. Many Western countries have a bias about Africans. They are often regarded as uncivilized, ignorant, and unhygienic, particularly those seeking asylum as refugees. These stereotypes are dangerous, but also belie the truth that many Africans are successful business people and entrepreneurs. In 2018, six of the world’s fastest-growing nations were in Africa.

Ever since the first cases of the  COVID-19 virus were reported to World Health Organization (WHO) in December 2019, Wuhan, the capital city of the Hubei province located in the central region of China, has become synonymous with the plague which purportedly originated in its “wet markets.” During the first few months of 2020, as worldwide infections and deaths increased, massive efforts to stop the spread of the novel Coronavirus resulted in aggressive quarantines.

These measures have brought most countries to the brink of economic collapse and triggered a desire to scapegoat. The lockdown is detrimental to global trade and development. Adding racial discrimination, violence, and detention will only make matters worse. During the best of times, racism is a scourge deeply rooted and often denied. But, when societies face undue stress, underlying currents of xenophobia can manifest. The latest target of this blame game is the People’s Republic of China.

Unfortunately, in response to this, it appears that some have tried to shift blame to an immigrant community. It has been reported that in Guangzhou, the fifth largest city in China, some of the people have sought to blame Africans for the current outbreak.

Nicknamed ‘Little Africa,’ the prosperous southern city of Guangzhou, is home to Asia’s largest African migrant population, who come to China chasing business opportunities, reputable universities, and low living costs. Although there are no precise figures, more than 15,000 Africans, mainly from Egypt, Mali, the DRC, and Nigeria, are estimated to live in the bustling city, which forms part of the Pearl Delta Region – the largest urban area in the world in terms of size and population. More than half a million travel here each year to buy every imaginable ‘Made in China’ product, from air conditioners to fake Nike sneakers, and send them back to Africa. (Source: New Internationalist)

China has long been perceived as a homogeneous nation, but until recently, it was a relatively hidden fact that there are African citizens and permanent residents. Currently, China produces one-third of global manufacturing. Through a sheer economic will, low overhead, China’s model of state capitalism has positioned it as a formidable trading partner. It has become the primary source for both developed and emerging economies nations from which to purchase low-cost goods and technology solutions. The existing supply chain disruption has revealed the level to which China has become an indispensable player in facilitating the delivery of goods and services worldwide.

African countries have increasingly become dependent on China for investments in infrastructure, consumer goods, and even clothing. Hence, the migration of Africans to China is expected. The majority are there on business, and while some travel there on student visas courtesy of Chinese government scholarships. One can hope that with these economic relationships, Africans would be welcomed in China; unfortunately, that is not the case. Following the outbreaks, there have been reports and videos showing the maltreatment of foreigners, especially black people, in China.

The Chinese authorities have even started seizing travel documents like passports and other forms of the federal ID. Chinese landlords have evicted legal residents leaving them homeless. Some restaurants have posters saying, “Africans are not welcomed.” In a video shared on Instagram, two Black men perceived to be Africans are seen being beaten.  In an interview, a Ugandan student described her treatment and the situation in general as “inhumane.”

Though myths of Africans being immune to the virus have persisted, even though it has been proven that COVID-19 afflicts people irrespective of race, religion, or status. The Chinese believe they were able to defeat the first wave of the COVID-19 outbreak. With the reemergence of the virus and the likelihood of a second wave of the pandemic, some people have begun to falsely assert that foreigners, mostly Africans, are the source.

One might wonder: what the leaders of African Governments have done in response to the maltreatment of their citizens? In April, a group of African Ambassadors gathered to draft a statement requesting the cessation of the embarrassment and forceful quarantining of their citizens. To many, this seems at best, an inept and empty request that lacks enforceability due to their economic obligations. Countries like Angola, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, and Ghana are in serious debt to China

Though these leaders may not be in the position to do more than ask abeyance, inherent in their requests is the fact that xenophobia is unacceptable. Also, the acknowledgment that if we are to survive and possibly defeat Covid-19, we must do so as a collective. In the words of Tedros Adhanom, the WHO Chief, “we should not politicize the virus” instead of working together to defeat it as it.

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AcroYoga - A Language of Perfect Union

The mission and focus of this website informs the presentation and dialogue about stories on gender relations with a particular emphasis on women’s’ rights. Consequently, we report on stories from around the world in which women are not allowed to realize their full potential either through force or circumstance. But, not every man is bad, nor every woman abused. In fact, the state of mankind is not as dire as it seems despite all our bad behavior, and millions of men and women across the globe experience healthy and loving relationships.

AcroYoga with Hagar Tsabar and Elad Sadeh Choreography and Production by Hagar Tsabar

Balance in reporting is as important as it is in life, and the video above featuring a husband and wife practicing AcroYoga or partner yoga is a beautiful illustration of the best in us as humans. Though this is demonstrated through yoga, one need not be a practitioner to achieve the highest ideals of harmony and peace between all people as there are many paths to this destination.

For some people, the path toward peace and enlightenment is achieved through religious observance and a belief in a higher power. For others it is meditation or actively living consciously by being aware of our impact on the world and other people so that we don’t accumulate negative Karma.

For others, it is a combination of all of the above and yoga. I fall into this category as I regularly practice yoga. In Western societies, most practitioners use yoga as a form of health and fitness similar to pilates which is an exercise created by Joseph Pilates to strengthen and stretch the body to achieve a strong core.

However "the traditional purpose of Yoga, has always been to bring about a profound transformation in the person through the transcendence of the ego," (Feuerstein, Georg. The Deeper Dimension of Yoga: Theory and Practice. Boston: Shambhala, 2003)

According to the Levy, “Yoga in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism means "spiritual discipline”…..It is an activity that has been practiced for thousands of years, and it is something that has evolved and changed overtime…..the exact history and origins of yoga is uncertain; however……the earliest signs of yoga appear in ancient Shamanism. Evidence of yoga postures were found on artifacts that date back to 3000 B.C.

Evidence of Yoga is found in the oldest-existing text, Rig-Veda. Rig-Veda is a composition of hymns. Topics of the Rig-Veda include prayer, divine harmony, and greater being. Yoga originally focused on applying and understanding the world. Its focus later changed to the self. Self-enlightenment became the ultimate goal.”

Though many may take umbrage, at the end of the day “When all's said and done, all roads lead to the same end. So it's not so much which road you take, as how you take it.” ~ Charles de Lint

Editor-in-Chief: @ayannanahmias
LinkedIn: Ayanna Nahmias

A Motivational Tool for Personal Growth

A Motivational Tool for Personal Growth

In a time of pandemic when death is ever present, it is a good idea for us to remember that life is neither as bad as we think, and can be so much better than we have hoped. If we have not lost any loved ones to Covid-19 we can count ourselves among the blessed. But, we must also be grateful for the choice to determine how best we cope in these days and times, how we would like to design our lives post quarantine to enjoy every minute, every breath, and every relationship.

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If Wishes Were Horses and Envy Complete

If Wishes Were Horses and Envy Complete

Satisfaction lies not in wishes, but in the journey toward accomplishment. There was once a stone cutter who was dissatisfied with himself and with his position in life. One day he passed a wealthy merchant's house. Through the open gateway, he saw many fine possessions and important visitors. "How powerful that merchant must be!" thought the stone cutter. He became very envious and wished that he could be like the merchant.

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Greed is the Hardest Task Master

Greed is the Hardest Task Master

In an era of the pandemic, we are seeing that there are people demonstrating great acts of kindness and sacrifice, sometimes to the point of death. But, sadly, we have also so a level of greed and selfishness not witnessed in many of our lifetimes. The callousness of nursing homes being absolved of responsibility for the lack of caring for its residents, the trillions of dollars intended for the people being stolen by those without financial need, etc. This story reminds us that avarice is not just a condition, it is a virus.

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Twenty Commandments for Ethical Living

Twenty Commandments for Ethical Living

Every society and religious traditions have central tenets that are meant to help human being govern their behavior in relationship to each other. Sometimes, we must take a moment to recite all of the ways that exist for us to honor ourselves, nature, the planet, and each other. These twenty commandments for living are a great starting point.

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The Answer is Behind Every Door

The Answer is Behind Every Door

A story about how when we help others we can often get out of our pain. It doesn’t mean that grief does not happen, nor that the sorrow of loss will ever become absent, but it does enable us to get up and keep moving forward. One such story is of a woman became so involved in helping others cope with their sorrows that she eventually let go of her own.

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A Question of Seeing God

A Question of Seeing God

God is a deeply personal pursuit made more complicated by man’s desire to define the undefinable. In humanity’s quest to capture the divine in a box, we lose sight of the simplicity. Spirituality is not the exclusive provenance of any one religion, and God is beholden to none. But, we can and do learn so much from the innocent questing of new humans who are unafraid in their innocence to ask the hard questions. Can anybody every really see God?

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America's Dark Days of Intolerance and the Lessons of Religious Judgment

I was shocked, confused, bewildered as I entered Heaven’s door,
Not by the beauty of it all, nor the lights or its decor.

But it was the folks in Heaven who made me sputter and gasp–
The thieves, the liars, the sinners, the alcoholics and the trash.

There stood the kid from seventh grade who swiped my lunch money twice.
Next to him was my old neighbor who never said anything nice.

Herb, who I always thought was rotting away in hell,
Was sitting pretty on cloud nine, looking incredibly well.

I nudged Jesus, ‘What’s the deal? I would love to hear your take.
How’d all these sinners get up here? God must’ve made a mistake.

‘And why’s everyone so quiet, so somber – give me a clue.’
‘Child,’ He said, ‘they’re all in shock. They never thought they’d be seeing you!’

This story was told by Joel Osteen though the source is unknown.

Editor-in-Chief: @ayannanahmias
LinkedIn: Ayanna Nahmias

Welfare, a State of Connectedness

Welfare, a State of Connectedness

So it is with our lives. Those who choose to live in peace must help their neighbors to live in peace. Those who choose to live well must help others to live well, for the value of a life is measured by the lives it touches. And those who choose to be happy must help others to find happiness, for the welfare of each, is bound up with the welfare of all.

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Ethiopian Airlines Leading in Women's Empowerment

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - Ethiopian Airlines is one of the premier international carriers operating throughout Africa and major hubs globally. Whenever we travel to Africa for the Zimbabwe Farm Project, we fly Ethiopian Airlines. Long known as one of the safest airlines on the Continent, the recent tragedy was an aberration. A defining ethos of the airline among other things, is its commitment to women’s empowerment, as evidenced by the fact that 35% of the company's 16,000-strong workforce is female.

Amsale Gualu is Ethiopian Airlines' First Female Captain

Amsale Gualu is Ethiopian Airlines' First Female Captain

The airline’s hiring practices speak to its vanguard status as a proponent of gender equality in Africa. In an era when women’s rights are under assault globally, it is crucial to recognize an organization where highly trained professionals responsible for the lives of so many happen to be female.

The practice of hiring and promoting women to greater levels of responsibility is no accident. Ethiopian Airlines implemented initiatives designed to provide women in the workforce with opportunities normally reserved for men. It is a strategy which has been deliberative, and as Chief Executive Officer Tewolde GabreMariam “explained that initiative celebrates women on a continent where ’gender inequality still persists.’

The all-female-crew on 8 March 2019 flew from Addis Ababa to Stockholm-Oslo using female ground crews, flight dispatchers, load controllers, ramp operators, on-board logistics staff, safety and security personnel, catering service, as well as air-traffic controllers.

Ethiopian Airlines joins other carriers which have honored International Women’s Day by organizing all-female-flights such as Air India and British Airways. On 8 March 2018, British Airways London Heathrow to Glasgow flight was facilitated by over 60 women as featured in this U.K produced video.

Disclosure: I have not been paid to write this article, nor do I have any financial stake in the company, and the opinions expressed are based upon personal experience.

Editor-in-Chief: @ayannanahmias
LinkedIn: Ayanna Nahmias

Colin Kaepernick and Nike's #JustDoIt Headed to the Emmys

Colin Kaepernick and Nike's #JustDoIt Headed to the Emmys

To realize greatness in one’s chosen field, it takes dedication, unwavering tenacity, and commitment to the dream of a future much different from the “now” in which we inhabit. All significant accomplishments started with what people often labeled as “crazy,” thus it is fitting that the Nike commercial narrated by Kaepernick and titled "Dream Crazy,” has been nominated for a 2019 Emmy for Outstanding Commercial.

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