The riots at Gare du Nord station, 27 March 2007: 'The
atmostphere was strangely festive.' Photograph: Francois Guillot/AFP/Getty
Images
Gilles Kepel: 'Many French political commentators are blind.
They do not understand that what happens here is because of our relationship
with the Arab world, and our history there.' Photograph: Thomas Coex/AFP
The French Intifada: how the Arab banlieues are
fighting the French state
The secular republican world
of France, the Muslim world of North Africa: how the bitter history of France's
relationship with its ex-colonies is played out in the French capital is the
subject of a fascinating new book, extracted below
Andrew Hussey
The Observer, Sunday 23 February 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/feb/23/french-intifada-arab-banlieues-fighting-french-state-extract
In the late afternoon of 27 March 2007, I was travelling on
the Paris metro, heading home after a day's work in the east end of the city. I
got off at the Gare du Nord to change trains. In a trance – lost in the music
on my headphones – I automatically made for the shopping mall which connects
the upper and lower levels of the station. This was where I would normally buy
a newspaper and a coffee and then catch a train south to my flat.
But this was no ordinary evening. As I walked up the exit
stairs I could smell smoke and hear shouting. The corridors were a tighter
squeeze than usual and everyone a little more nervous and bad-tempered than the
average rush-hour crowd. As I got nearer the main piazza of the mall, smoke
stung my eyes and nostrils, and the shouting grew louder. I could see armed
police and dogs. Still, there didn't seem to be too much to worry about. My
only real fear was how to get through the tide of commuters, which by now had
come to a dead halt, and on to my train home.
I pushed my way through the crowd, burst into the empty
piazza, and found myself in dead space, caught in a stand-off between two
battle lines – on one side police in blue-black riot gear, drumming batons on
their clear, hard shields, and on the other a rough assembly of kids and young
adults, mainly black or Arab, boys and girls, dressed in hip-hop fashion,
singing, laughing, and throwing stuff. You could tell from their accents and
manners that these were not Parisians; they were kids from the banlieues – the
poor suburbs to the north of Paris, connected to the city by the trains running
into the Gare du Nord. One African-looking kid was swinging an iron bar and
shouting. The bar crashed into a photo booth and a drinks machine. A few yards
further on, a fire had been started in a ticket office.
The atmosphere was strangely festive. Behind the reinforced
steel and glass of the Eurostar terminal, new arrivals from London were ushered
into Paris by soldiers with machine guns – the glittering capital of Europe now
apparently a war zone. They looked on the scene with horror. But it was
exhilarating to watch kids hopping over metro barriers, smoking weed and
shouting, walking wherever they wanted, disobeying every single one of the
tight rules that normally control access to the station. It was also
frightening, because these kids could now hurt you whenever they wanted. They
had abolished all the rules, including the rule of law.
Over the next few days, I read the press. Most reporters and
eyewitnesses agreed on the chronology. At half past four in the afternoon, a
young Congolese man, already known to the police, had been arrested while
trying to dodge the ticket barrier. The arrest was heavy-handed and as the cops
started hammering the guy, passers-by waded in to support the underdog. Guns
were pulled out, batons drawn, and soon enough a riot was in full swing.
But how did this happen? What made the Gare du Nord such a
powder keg that the arrest of a ticket dodger could, within minutes, make it
the most ungovernable part of French territory? This is where the
interpretation of events became confused. In the pages of Le Parisien, the
chronicle of daily life in the city, the events were described as "une
émeute populaire" (a popular riot). The tone was one of mild approval. Le
Parisien is not particularly left-wing, but it is always on the side of the
"people" – that most cherished of Parisian myths. This language placed
the events at the Gare du Nord in a long tradition of popular uprisings in the
city – from the days of La Fronde through to the French Revolution and the
Commune, these have been a defining feature of Parisian history. Several other
newspapers, including the right-wing Le Figaro, reported the same facts with a
shiver of horror, adding that the crowds had been chanting "A bas l'état,
les flics et les patrons" ("Down with the state, the coppers and the
bosses"), thereby domesticating the riot as part of the Parisian folklore
of rebellion.
But the problem was that none of these accounts was true.
The kids I saw didn't give a fuck about the state or the "bosses".
Most of them didn't have jobs anyway. And although they did hate the police,
they would never have used an old-fashioned slang word like flics, which
belongs to the Parisian equivalent of the Krays' generation. For the rioters,
the police were either keufs or schmitts. The chanting I heard was mostly in
French: "Nik les schmitts" ("Fuck the cops"), and sometimes
in English: "Fuck the police!" But there was another slogan, chanted
in colloquial Arabic, which seemed to hit hardest of all: "Na'al abouk la
France!" ("Fuck France!"). This slogan – it is in fact more of a
curse – has nothing to do with any French tradition of revolt.
These days France is home to the largest Muslim population
in Europe. That includes more than 5 million people from North Africa, the
Middle East and the so-called "Black Atlantic", the long slice of
West Africa which stretches from Mali to Senegal. A short walk around the
Barbès district in northern Paris, where almost all of these nationalities are
represented in the same tiny, overcrowded space, provides both a vivid snapshot
of the diversity of this population and a neat lesson in French colonial
history
The Gare du Nord, at the heart of this district, is frontier
territory. It is the dividing line between the wretched conditions of the
banlieues, the suburbs outside the city, and the relative affluence of central
Paris. It is where young banlieusards come to hang out, meet the opposite sex,
shop, smoke, show-off and flirt – all the stuff that young people like to do.
Paris is both near and distant; it is a few short steps away, but in terms of
jobs, housing, making a life, for these young people it is as inaccessible and
far away as America. So they cherish this small part of the city that belongs
to them.
This is why the Gare du Nord is a flashpoint. The area is
generally tense but stable: everyone in the right place, from the police to the
dealers. But when the police come in hard, it can feel like another display of
colonial power. So the battle cry of "Na'al abouk la France!" is also
a cry of hurt and rage. It expresses ancestral emotions of loss, shame and
terror. This is what makes it such a powerful curse.
The rioters at the Gare du Nord or in the banlieues also
often describe themselves as soldiers in a "long war' against France and
Europe. The so-called "French intifada", the guerrilla war with
police at the edges and in the heart of French cities, is only the latest and
most dramatic form of engagement with the enemy.
In November 2005, 18 months before the riot in the Gare du
Nord, the tensions in the banlieues had already spilled over into violence and,
for one spectacular moment, threatened to bring down the French government. The
catalyst was a series of confrontations between immigrant youth and the police
in the Parisian banlieue of Clichy-sous-Bois. As the fighting between police
and the banlieusards intensified, riots broke out in major cities across
France. This was when the term "French intifada" was first widely
used by the media and by the rioters themselves.
The violence began on 27 October 2005, when two young men
were electrocuted while trying to escape police by fleeing through an
electricity substation. This incident was followed by almost a week of rioting
every night, during which thousands of cars were burned. Then it began to
spread to other French towns and cities. President Jacques Chirac declared a
state of emergency, effective from midnight on 8 November. This gave the
government and police special powers of arrest, the power to order a curfew and
conduct house-to-house searches. But this only seemed to intensify the
situation. On 11 November there was a blackout in part of Amiens when a power
station was attacked – to the alarm of the police, this was to become a common
and effective tactic. Churches were also firebombed.
The riots finally subsided after two weeks. But this was no
easy victory for the police – quite the opposite in fact. The violence was
partly fuelled by aggressive police tactics and by the belligerence of Nicolas
Sarkozy, then Minister of the Interior, who declared "zero tolerance"
and said that he would clean the streets of racaille (scum). Such inflammatory
words only served to increase anger in the banlieues – it was clearly the
language of war. By the end of November, with the French government in
disarray, the riots across France had demonstrated that the youth of the
banlieues could take on the authorities whenever they wanted to, and win. Since
then the troubles in the banlieues have been sporadic but have never gone away.
The events of 2005 inevitably provoked an almost ceaseless
flow of articles, books and debates in France. For all the noisy rhetoric,
however, there were several important points of consensus on the right and the
left. First of all it was generally agreed that the severity of the crisis had
been exaggerated by the English-speaking media, who knew little of France and
used the news of the French riots as a distraction from their own problems with
immigration and immigrants in their own countries. This is, of course, the
traditional role of the perfidious Anglo-American world in the French
imagination.
Second, there was broad agreement that the riots had little
or nothing to do with Islam or the historical French presence in parts of the
Islamic world. Leftist intellectuals, in the pages of Le Monde or Libération,
fell over themselves to distance the riots from any connection with the same
anger that radicalised Islamists. According to these journalists, the riots
were caused by a "fracture sociale" and lack of "justice
sociale". Even the French intelligence services, the Renseignements
Généraux, joined in, producing their own report, which described the riots as a
"popular insurrection" and downplayed the role of Islamist groups and
the immigrant origins of the rioters. In this way the riots of 2005 were
domesticated and made part of a traditionally French form of protest. There was
an almost complete denial that what was happening might be a new form of
politics that was a direct challenge to the French state
There is, however, a very real conflict in contemporary
France between the opposing principles of laïcité and communautarisme, which is
being played out in the riots. The term laïcité is difficult to translate; put
simply, it means that under French law it is illegal to distinguish individuals
on the grounds of their religion. Unlike the Anglo-American model of the secular
state, which seeks to hinder state interference in religious affairs, the
French notion of laïcité actively blocks religious interference in affairs of
state. This dates back to the revolution of 1789 and is traditionally
understood to be a way of controlling and disciplining the Catholic Church. As
a specifically anti-religious concept, laïcité, it is argued, guarantees the
moral unity of the French nation – the République indivisible.
In recent years this core value of the French republic has
been opposed by communautarisme, which sets the needs of the
"community" against the needs of "society". Again, the
loose Anglo-American model, where "difference" – whether of
sexuality, religion or disability – is tolerated or even prized, does not apply
in France, where "difference" is seen as a form of sectarianism and a
threat to the republic. The most acute problem for the recent generations of
Muslim immigrants to France is that the proclaimed universalism of republican
values, and in particular laïcité, can very quickly resemble the
"civilising mission" of colonialism. In other words, if Muslims want
to be "French", they must learn to be citizens of the republic first
and Muslims second; for many this is an impossible task, hence the anxieties
over whether Muslims in France are musulmans de France or musulmans en France.
But this conflict is not just about politics or religion. It
is also about extreme emotions. More than death, most human beings fear
annihilation.This is a process familiar to psychiatrists who treat patients for
disorders such as schizophrenia and depression. Part of the process of mental
disintegration that characterises those illnesses is the experience of partial
or total alienation. When a person loses all sense of authentic identity, all sense
of self, to the extent that they don't feel that they properly exist, they then
become literally strangers to themselves.
Historically this is what happened in France's territories
during the colonial era and what is happening now in the banlieues. This is why
it is almost impossible for immigrants to France from its former colonies to
feel authentically "at home" there. For all their modernity, these
urban spaces are designed almost like vast prison camps.The banlieue is the
most literal representation of "otherness" – the otherness of
exclusion, of the repressed, of the fearful and despised – all kept physically
and culturally away from the mainstream of French "civilisation".
This is an argument made by the political scientist Gilles
Kepel in his 2012 book Quatre-vingt-treize, a title that alludes to Victor
Hugo's great novel of the Terror of 1793, and to the notorious Seine
Saint-Denis district of Paris, which is known as "93" after its
postcode. In his book Kepel conducts a forensic examination of the recent
history of this district, concluding that although several varieties of Islam
are at war with one another, they are all united in their hostility towards the
secular French state.
Kepel is also convinced that one of the crucial conflicts in
the banlieues is the challenge to the French republic from the
"outside", by which he means both the banlieues and France's former
territories in the Muslim world. Most importantly, unlike many of his peers, he
sees the recent changes in French society as intimately connected to events in
the Arab world which are little understood in the west. "Many French
political commentators are blind," he told me in his cramped office just
off the boulevard Saint-Germain. "They do not want to see the world beyond
France. And so they do not understand that what happens here is because of our
relationship with the Arab world, and our history there."
Kepel insists that the present tensions in France cannot be
separated from the so-called "Arab spring" – the wave of rebellions
that spread across the Muslim world in 2011. More specifically, the Arab spring
has led to a severe shake-up of all accepted truths about North Africa, which
until now has normally been known to the world through French eyes.
On 14 January 2011 President Zine Ben Ali finally fled his
palaces in Tunis, heading for exile in Saudi Arabia. On the streets of Paris
the mood that day was as festive as it was in cities across Tunisia. This was
because the unthinkable had happened: Ben Ali had been in power since 1987 and
seemed poised to stay in command for as long he liked – which, given his good
health and vanity, could have been for a very long time – but, within a few
short weeks, he was gone.
The catalyst for the angry demonstrations that led to his
departure was the self-immolation of a 26-year-old street vendor called
Mohammed Bouazizi in the obscure Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid. At 8am on 17
December 2010 "Besboos", as he was known locally, set up his cart of
fruit as usual in the centre of town. At around 10am he began to be harassed by
police officers who claimed that he did not have a permit and had no right to
be there. The reality was that Mohammed had simply not paid enough bribes and kickbacks
to the local police, even though he had already put himself $200 in debt by
borrowing money to pay off officials. But Mohammed was in a defiant mood that
day and stood his ground when a middle-aged female officer insulted him, cursed
his dead father, and tried to seize his cart. When the officer grabbed his
weighing scales, his most expensive piece of equipment, without which he could
not conduct any business, the young man broke down. Angry beyond belief, unable
to control his weeping, he ran to the local governor's office to complain at
this vicious injustice. The governor refused point blank to see him. In a
torment of frustration, Mohammed stood outside the governor's and threw a can
of petrol over himself. To the horror of the small crowd that was gathering
around him, he then set the petrol alight. His body was ablaze as he staggered
in circles in mute agony. This was at 11.30am, just an hour or so after the
original row over his cart.
Mohammed died a few days later in hospital. His suicide has
now gone down as the spark that lit the flame of the Tunisian revolution. As he
lay dying, the ordinary people of Sidi Bouzid rose up against the petty
bureaucrats who had held them in check until then. When the insurrection gained
momentum, the military stopped trying to control the events and hundreds of
thousands of Tunisians glimpsed that this was their first chance to oppose the
authorities. Riots spread across the country and within a breathless few weeks,
in the face of the hatred of his people, President Ben Ali was gone.
It was the fairytale nature of the revolution that was
celebrated on the streets of Paris on the day of Ben Ali's departure. France
has a Tunisian population of more than 700,000 people, mostly concentrated in
the Parisian region. Everywhere you went in Paris during the revolt in Tunisia,
portable televisions blared at top volume in shops, takeaways and cafes,
broadcasting a polyglot, polyphonic babble from Al Jazeera, Al Arabiya and the
French-speaking channels from the Maghreb. Everybody was excited and wanted to
talk, especially the Tunisians themselves.
What was most stunning about these events – at least for
those who did not know Tunisia – was that they had been set in motion in a
country the west saw as a moderate, stable and apparently inconspicuous player
in the politics of the region. Until this happened, the entire outside world
thought of Tunisia as a downmarket tourist destination, with a servile attitude
towards the west. All Tunisians knew that this view of their country was at
best no more than wishful thinking and at worst a deliberate lie.
The bullying experienced by Bouazizi was the kind of thing
that happened in Tunisia every day. It was directly connected to the people in
power, who not only permitted but actively encouraged this low-level
intimidation. When Bouazizi set himself on fire, his action spoke directly to a
nation ready to stake all for freedom. The president's flight into exile was
justice long overdue. "When Ben Ali left it was a beautiful moment,"
I was told by a young woman who had been out on the streets to protest against
him in Tunis. "I did not know such happiness was possible."
In contrast to the jubilation of the Tunisian population in
Paris that day, the mood of official France was sombre. The fall of Ben Ali was
not at all what the French government wanted to happen. From the moment that he
came into power in 1987, successive French governments had supported his
regime, spurred on by his invoking Algeria and the threat of Islamist terrorism
as a possibility in Tunisia. The French had taken Ben Ali at his word and
turned a blind eye to all manner of abuses in the name of preserving
"stability" in Tunisia. They had also believed his hold on the
country was unassailable.
"We were taken by surprise," said Henri Guaino,
special adviser to Nicolas Sarkozy with a particular brief for Mediterranean
affairs. "Nobody saw what was happening. It all happened very fast, a
chain of events that degenerated very quickly."
He also admitted, "I had not been vigilant enough about
the development of the regime and Tunisian public opinion." That was
putting it very mildly. Since the late 1980s, successive French governments had
become mired in compromising and contradictory relationships with Tunisia.
French diplomats had reported on the brutal nature of Ben Ali's regime as far
back as 1990, but the authorities in Paris had looked the other way.
Most disgracefully, on 11 January 2011, Michèle
Alliot-Marie, the French minister of state for justice, defence and home
affairs, stood before the National Assembly in Paris and declared that the
revolt in Tunisia was "a complex situation" and that it was not for
the French government to "give any lessons to the regime". It was
hard to imagine a more arrogant and self-serving statement, as the people of
Tunisia were fighting for their freedom. But there was worse to come:
Alliot-Marie went on to offer the French military's "world-renowned
savoir-faire" to Ben Ali's regime, and to deliver this savoir-faire to
Tunis. The response, across all parties, was open-mouthed incredulity. Was the
French minister really suggesting that French soldiers or police would fire on
crowds in Tunis?
Sarkozy immediately distanced himself publicly from her –
his adviser reported that Alliot-Marie had been giving her "own personal
analysis of the situation". The left was slower to react, partly because
many on the Left, including the mayor of Paris, had their own issues with
Tunisia. In the regions and in the banlieues of France, however, the speech
provoked anger. In Algeria the daily newspaper, Liberté, made the point that,
in her arrogance, Michèle Alliot-Marie "has apparently no fear of
awakening the memories of peoples who have already known historically the military
savoir-faire of France". Tunisian bloggers – blogging was now the main
form of communication in the country – were furious and sarcastic. "Merci
La France!" was the response from a campaign on Facebook.
The controversy deepened even further over the next few days
when it emerged that Alliot-Marie, who had close and friendly links with Ben
Ali himself, had spent the Christmas of 2010 in a luxury resort in Tabarka, and had
travelled there in a private jet belonging to an intimate friend of Ben Ali,
who also happened to be a criminal. She had also recently bought an apartment
in the holiday complex of Gammarth, just outside Tunis. Meanwhile Tunisia went
up in flames.
Few Tunisians were surprised at this French duplicity. In
the past few years they had seen Ben Ali and his family and friends become
extremely rich by plundering the nation. Tunisia was not a wealthy Arab country
– for one thing, it has no oil money. But this did not prevent Ben Ali and his
associates looting the country's resources and spending the money in France.
When I arrived in Tunis in the autumn of 2012, I was
practically the only westerner landing that afternoon. I could see straight
away that everything had changed since my last visit in 2011. I had been a
fairly frequent visitor to Tunis from 2005 onwards, but had not been back since
the revolution. Now it was the same city but a very different place.
On the short drive into town from the airport, the suburbs
looked dirtier and more broken than they had before. The most obvious change to
the cityscape was the absence of the huge portraits of Ben Ali, which, until
the revolution, had lined every main road in and around the city. As we headed
into the city centre, there was graffiti everywhere, often in several
languages, not just Arabic; the graffiti in English, French and Spanish called
for more revolution, declaring war on the west and all those who hated Islam.
A few days earlier the US Embassy in Tunis had been attacked
and the American School had been burned down by a Salafist mob, apparently
demonstrating against the provocative anti-Muslim film The Innocence of
Muslims. Only days before this, the American ambassador to Libya had been
murdered by a jihadist militia. In Tunisia, the Americans had pulled out all
their staff and citizens to let the Tunisians know that they were not to be
messed with. The atmosphere was made even more brittle by the publication in
France of images of the prophet in the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. As a
consequence, the substantial French population of Tunisia had been frightened
off the streets by death threats from the Salafists and stayed at home.
On my previous visits to Tunis, I had always thought that it
was an easy place to work; it was safe and well organised. But despite its
beauty and apparent order, there was always a secret and sinister side to
Tunisian life. You were not exposed to the kind of violence and extremism that
had so marked life in Algeria, nor was it as wretchedly poor as Morocco.
Instead, Tunisia reminded me of my time in Romania in the early 1990s, where,
even after the fall of Ceausescu, ordinary people were afraid to say what they
really thought. Romanians described this as "auto-censure" –
self-censorship – and said that it was far more effective than the Securitate,
the secret police. Nearly everybody I met in Tunisia before the revolution had
adopted these habits of mind. It was a place where you could not really connect
with anyone. The secret police were ever-present, listening and watching. But
they were not really needed in a country where no one dared to criticise the
government anyway.
When the journalist Christopher Hitchens came here in 2007
to write a piece for Vanity Fair, he wrote that his friend Edward Said had
described Tunisia to him as the "gentlest country in Africa". He was
not disappointed by the stylishness of the Avenue Habib Bourguiba, the main
artery in Tunis, the olive groves and the sheer gorgeousness of the island of
Djerba (where 19 tourists were killed in an al-Qaida attack in 2002).
Hitchens found Tunisia to be a "mild" place and,
although he expressed disquiet at the 20 years that Ben Ali had been in power,
the ubiquity of his image and the general reluctance of people to discuss
politics, he was comforted by the availability of contraception, young people
holding hands, and other clearly visible signs of "western values"
and indifference to the puritan values of Islamism. Hitchens was obviously
writing in good faith and reporting what he saw. This is what everyone saw when
they first came to Tunisia. Below the surface there was, however, a bitter
version of Tunisian reality at work within the nation's psyche.
As in Algeria and Morocco, one of the few places you could
glimpse the inner rage of the Tunisians was at football matches. In September
2008 I watched a crowd of no more than a hundred fans of Espérance Sportive
Tunis – the major team of the country – take on the riot police in the
backstreets around Place de Carthage and Place de Barcelone. What impressed me
most was how skilled and organised the "hooligans" were – they were a
quick-moving, agile force, constantly changing while remaining a solid phalanx.
They smashed windows and roared through back alleys. They were completely in
control of the situation and evidently enjoyed this battle with the foot soldiers
of the regime. Later, in the Bar Celestina, a smoke-filled drinking den near
the metro station, I spoke to a group of them. They were quick to make the
point that they were not fighting other teams but only the police, which was
the armed wing of the government. No one mentioned Ben Ali, but he was the
obvious enemy.
So were the French. During the Ben Ali years, Tunisia was
unofficially France's most favoured nation in the Maghreb. The links between
Ben Ali and a succession of French presidents, from Mitterrand to Chirac and
Sarkozy, were always firm and longstanding. Ben Ali travelled often to Paris,
his "real capital", where he lived lavishly and courted not only the
French political elite but also the more dubious figures of the Trabelsi clan.
Ben Ali's second wife, Leila, was a member of the Trabelsi family, a Mafia-like
organisation based in the most expensive quartiers of Paris and Nice, which
effectively ran Tunisia as their private fiefdom. All Tunisians knew that the
fall of Ben Ali was not only because of the ideological sterility of his
government, but also because his large-scale pillaging of the country in
collusion with the Trabelsis was about to be exposed. That is why he fled
Tunisia so quickly.
The mutiny lasted no more than four weeks. But it changed
everything in Tunisia and indeed across the Arab world, as ordinary people from
Morocco to Yemen felt inspired and fearless enough to take on their rulers.
Most Tunisians, not just the Salafists, now feel twice betrayed by France, the
country that has dominated and shaped Tunisia's political and cultural identity
for more than a century. Whether they wanted to or not, they grew up believing
that France was their mother county, and that at the very least the French had
the Tunisians' best interests at heart. During the heady days of the
revolution, France was in fact revealed as a cynical and corrupt enemy.
On the evening of 14 October 2008, there was a friendly
football match at the Stade de France between France and Tunisia. The French
government had been anticipating trouble for months. Ever since the riots in
Clichy-sous-Bois in 2005, all matches with North African teams had become
potential triggers for trouble in Paris. Still,Tunisia was held to be a less
volatile and dangerous place than either Morocco or Algeria and Tunisians in
Paris are not seen as gangsters or Islamic radicals. But to defuse any possible
tensions, the authorities had decided that the teams should mix together as
they lined up and that the Marseillaise should be sung by Lââm, a young R&B
singer of Franco-Tunisian extraction.
As soon as Lââm picked up the mic, the hissing started,
rising quickly to a high-pitched crescendo of whistling which carried through
the stadium like bad feedback. The singer looked around for help but none came.
She fought on through the blizzard of white noise, but it was hopeless. When
she finally stopped, Tunisian fans were laughing and high-fiving as if they
were 3–0 up on the home team. "Where did it come from, this wall of
hate?" I asked a Tunisian bloke next to me in the bar where I was watching
the match. He smiled goofily and slugged back the remains of his beer:
"Made in France!"
© Andrew Hussey
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