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ISIS WORST NIGHTMARE: THE PESHMERGA GIRLS

. . .
THESE ARE THE WOMEN BATTLING ISIS
By Elizabeth Griffin on October 3, 2014


6b6a5cda650b1d588ec9e33c9447ef2d.gif

Erin Trieb/Esquire

There’s a group of 7,500 soldiers who have been fighting an incalculably dangerous war for two years. They fight with weapons sometimes bigger than themselves. It is a war against a relentless enemy, no less gruesome and lawless and horrible than all of the others.

They are the YPJ (pronounced Yuh-Pah-Juh) or the Women's Protection Unit, an all-women, all-volunteer Kurdish military faction in Syria that formed in 2012 to defend the Kurdish population against the deadly attacks led by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the al-Nusra Front (an al-Qaeda affiliate), and ISIS.

In a recent BBC article, the YPJ, and their male counterpart unit, the YPG, were deemed to have been “extraordinarily successful” in a battle to squash the growing ISIS extremist group, despite limited means. It has been suggested the groups could be an effective ally to the West and just recently, both groups were credited with helping the U.S.-led effort to evacuate thousands of Yazidi refugees stranded on Mt. Sinjar after ISIS invaded their towns.

Photographer Erin Trieb recently spent a week documenting members of the YPJ at several military posts in Northeastern Syria and along the Syrian-Kurdish border. She recalled her time there, remembering the roof knocks of the explosions nearby: “One morning, I heard two loud blasts, one followed by another. I asked my translator, Rama, what it was and she said, ‘That’s just the YPJ and ISIS saying good morning to each other.’”

We asked Trieb to share with us her experience (and photographs) of the YPJ and the harrowing words these women fighters wanted the rest of the world to hear.

eb18f6e77137bfe754fbd4c7d2177253.jpg


Evin Ahmed, 28. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

"We have to be free from the Syrian government," says YPJ member, Evin Ahmed, 28, (pictured above). "We need to control the area ourselves without depending on them. They can’t protect us from [ISIS], we have to protect us [and] we defend everyone… no matter what race or religion they are.”

Ahmed, like many of the YPJ, is fiercely loyal to her fellow-soldiers. She insists, “I love being a YPJ soldier, I love the other soldiers, we are closer than sisters. This is the only life for me. I can’t imagine living any other way.”

This sentiment, says Trieb, is echoed by all members of the YPJ, who live by a code of honesty, morals, and justice. “Their motto is ‘Haval’ or ‘friendship’,” explains Trieb, “and (it) is of utmost importance to them. They treat each other (and treated me) with a sense of solidarity and sisterhood. They address each other as Haval, and when they spoke to me, they would call me 'Haval Erin'. It enforces a constant sense of belonging and support."

The women range in age from 18-40, though there are some younger recruits like the 12-year-old Hevedar Mohammed (pictured below). Recruits under the age of 18 are not permitted to fight, although they go through some physical training and participate in the group by way of carrying out ‘household’ chores. Hevedar, like many YPJ, was inspired to join because of the group’s reputation for developing strong, independent women and because of its positive standing in the community.

1a2ba64d539a9e0744f4eb82fa88c81f.jpg


YPJ soldier, Hevedar Mohammed, 12. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

“At home,” says Hevedar, “I saw all my friends going to join the YPJ. My friends told me that [the YPJ] was amazing and that I should join. One day, I went home and told my mother that I wanted to join. At first she said no, because I was too small. I asked her again and finally she said I could. My father said he was very proud of me.”

Several of the women, like General Zelal, 33, (pictured below) one of the leaders of YPJ, expanded upon the idea of the independence the group brings women of the region: "I don’t want to get married or have children or be in the house all day. I want to be free. If I couldn’t be a YPJ I think my spirit would die. Being a YPJ soldier means being free—this is what it means to truly be free."

79ee6c813c17d93f92a29291cecd8b8b.jpg


General Zelal, 33. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

“There is a sense among the women,” says Trieb, “that the YPJ is in itself a feminist movement, even if it is not their main mission. They want ‘equality’ between women and men, and a part of why they joined was to develop and advance the perceptions about women in their culture—they can be strong and be leaders."

Sa-el Morad, 20, (pictured below), shared with Trieb that she enlisted in order to prove that, “we can do all the same things that men can do; that women can do everything; that there’s nothing impossible for us.

"When I was at home, all the men just thought that the women are just cleaning the house and not going outside. But when I joined the YPJ everything changed. I showed all of them that I can hold a weapon, that I can fight in the clashes, that I can do everything that they thought was impossible for women. Now, the men back home changed their opinions about me and other women. Now they see that we are their equals, and that we have the same abilities, maybe sometimes more than them. They understand we are strong and that we can do everything they can."

4678de925beae1aa51c1b2b1ab401a0c.jpg


Sa-el Morad, 20. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

According to Trieb, the women are indeed seen as just as strong, disciplined, and committed as their male counterparts. They endure many months and levels of rigorous training in weaponry and tactical maneuvers before they are even allowed to fight. They are also wholly celebrated by their community, which Trieb notes is unexpected in a part of the world where women are often seen as inferior to men.

To some in the region, they are seen as potentially more of a threat to ISIS than male soldiers. As Trieb recalls, “The saying among many Syrian Kurds is that ISIS is more terrified of being killed by women because if they are, they will not go to heaven.”

bad2d7a16f354295b0bef7d3c6509232.jpg


Zevin Botan, 20. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

There is, despite the toughness of the YPJ, another unexpected side to the group that Trieb uncovered. “Though when training or on a mission they're very serious,” she says, “in their downtime they're always joking around. The younger ones were a lot like American teenage girls and my time with them at the training post felt similar to summer camp—daily routine, lots of activities, and new recruits were getting to know one another."

36eacc4d5a458edd36f29cf148927b89.jpg


Mizguin Emraly, 14. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

35d11ab8e11ed784554fd71e4e02d7f7.jpg


YPJ solider, Narlene, 20. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Trieb reveals that the YPJ are also very concerned with America’s perception of them, “worrying that [Americans] think we're terrorists”. The YPJ soldiers would ask Trieb ‘What do they Americans think of us?’. “The truth is,” says Trieb, “most of the West hasn't heard of the YPJ. It was really hard to have to tell them that. Because for them, they've been fighting this war every day for almost three years, so they were shocked to hear that most Americans don't know they exist."

It's difficult to say exactly why the force is largely unknown to Americans and many western nations. It could be in part due to the YPJ (and YPG) being closely linked to another Kurdish fighting force known as the Kurdistan Worker’s Party or the PKK. The U.S. State Department, N.A.T.O., and the European Union have all designated the PKK a terrorist group, mainly due its violent, three-decade (1984-2013) struggle for autonomy from the Turkish State (a N.A.T.O. member). Although some have pointed out the success of the PKK in stopping ISIS, the tag still stands.

For now, the YPJ has no backing from western nations, relying mainly on its community to provide funding and supplies.

8c8c57f9c235054972e7348790c790c5.jpg


Avinar Kolcer, 26. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Nonetheless, the women remain committed to the YPJ and its mission and are dedicated to protecting their people. They are not at all obligated to stay, says Trieb, and she believes all who join remain out of loyalty. None of them sign contracts. They can leave whenever they choose. Since the YPJ exists on a volunteer basis, many of the women are also unpaid. When supporters offer them payment in return for their service, "they will refuse the gift or donate it to the YPJ,” Trieb notes.

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Mizguin Ronahi. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

8be5f25283c12bff27a990ac1d4a485d.jpg


Evin Sadak, 20. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

The YPJ operates in two-week rotations on the front lines. Small groups are stationed at various observation posts all along the border of Rabia to keep the area secured, explains Trieb. They live in abandoned Iraqi army buildings, which, as one might imagine, are run down and lack any luxuries. Often, ISIS snipers are just 500 feet away, ready to shoot. Trieb, who made these photographs using the dilapidated building walls as backdrops, remembers having to duck and run between YPJ buildings to avoid being hit by enemy fire.

22169e7db508c19448ba4fd36fcffe40.jpg


Sosen Shingel, 17. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

f695bf4dc301d926f5bcf9e97c579624.jpg


Shavin Bachouk, 26. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Even under such intense conditions, the YPJ are always “staged and ready for conflict,” Trieb says. She continues, “Some of them had their own personal cars parked outside the building so that they could quite literally ‘drive’ into conflict, should it erupt. They are fearless,” says Trieb, “though they might not say they are. They consider fear and then they go forward anyway."



21bcbd9842b682cd5c57a0b3e66ef97b.jpg


Hasrat Sahad, 23. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Editor’s NOTE: In recent weeks, the YPJ has come under increased attack. Several of the women photographed by Trieb have been injured and some have been captured by ISIS.

Originally published on MarieClaire.com.
 
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1a2ba64d539a9e0744f4eb82fa88c81f-jpg.114214


YPJ soldier, Hevedar Mohammed, 12. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.


36eacc4d5a458edd36f29cf148927b89-jpg.114218



Mizguin Emraly, 14. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

These two will get killed quickly.

bad2d7a16f354295b0bef7d3c6509232-jpg.114217


Zevin Botan, 20. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Pissed on my pants after seeing her face. Battle-hardened.

79ee6c813c17d93f92a29291cecd8b8b-jpg.114215


General Zelal, 33. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Probably from Nicaragua. Was it Sandinista? Foreign fighter, imo.
 
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...................


Guys this is real war.

Please don't post women pictures for PR purposes.

These may be OK for guarding homes etc.

But for war, be serious please.
 
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[quote="Alienoz_TR, post: 6256615, member: 136538"[/quote]
Pissed on my pants after seeing her face. Battle-hardened.[/quote]
I won't mess with her either...There is one thing about them , they are cute!
 
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what's that? your favorite kurdish bang list? :D
You need to ask ISIS...They are hold their own, while men are disrobing and running like they have fire in their behind..To what I have seen in the Middle east, save Lebanese women, the kurdish girl are gorgeous, and seeing them handling a rifle with a bravado, make them more appealing...
 
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YPG does not speak for Kurdish people. There are plenty of Kurds in the IS.
 
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Peshmerga girls are so adulated for their courage that the best western clothier are immortalizing their battle dress uniform..
e12125bd781963da97c2a8ea3e440302.jpg
 
. .
THESE ARE THE WOMEN BATTLING ISIS
By Elizabeth Griffin on October 3, 2014


View attachment 114212
Erin Trieb/Esquire

There’s a group of 7,500 soldiers who have been fighting an incalculably dangerous war for two years. They fight with weapons sometimes bigger than themselves. It is a war against a relentless enemy, no less gruesome and lawless and horrible than all of the others.

They are the YPJ (pronounced Yuh-Pah-Juh) or the Women's Protection Unit, an all-women, all-volunteer Kurdish military faction in Syria that formed in 2012 to defend the Kurdish population against the deadly attacks led by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the al-Nusra Front (an al-Qaeda affiliate), and ISIS.

In a recent BBC article, the YPJ, and their male counterpart unit, the YPG, were deemed to have been “extraordinarily successful” in a battle to squash the growing ISIS extremist group, despite limited means. It has been suggested the groups could be an effective ally to the West and just recently, both groups were credited with helping the U.S.-led effort to evacuate thousands of Yazidi refugees stranded on Mt. Sinjar after ISIS invaded their towns.

Photographer Erin Trieb recently spent a week documenting members of the YPJ at several military posts in Northeastern Syria and along the Syrian-Kurdish border. She recalled her time there, remembering the roof knocks of the explosions nearby: “One morning, I heard two loud blasts, one followed by another. I asked my translator, Rama, what it was and she said, ‘That’s just the YPJ and ISIS saying good morning to each other.’”

We asked Trieb to share with us her experience (and photographs) of the YPJ and the harrowing words these women fighters wanted the rest of the world to hear.

View attachment 114213

Evin Ahmed, 28. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

"We have to be free from the Syrian government," says YPJ member, Evin Ahmed, 28, (pictured above). "We need to control the area ourselves without depending on them. They can’t protect us from [ISIS], we have to protect us [and] we defend everyone… no matter what race or religion they are.”

Ahmed, like many of the YPJ, is fiercely loyal to her fellow-soldiers. She insists, “I love being a YPJ soldier, I love the other soldiers, we are closer than sisters. This is the only life for me. I can’t imagine living any other way.”

This sentiment, says Trieb, is echoed by all members of the YPJ, who live by a code of honesty, morals, and justice. “Their motto is ‘Haval’ or ‘friendship’,” explains Trieb, “and (it) is of utmost importance to them. They treat each other (and treated me) with a sense of solidarity and sisterhood. They address each other as Haval, and when they spoke to me, they would call me 'Haval Erin'. It enforces a constant sense of belonging and support."

The women range in age from 18-40, though there are some younger recruits like the 12-year-old Hevedar Mohammed (pictured below). Recruits under the age of 18 are not permitted to fight, although they go through some physical training and participate in the group by way of carrying out ‘household’ chores. Hevedar, like many YPJ, was inspired to join because of the group’s reputation for developing strong, independent women and because of its positive standing in the community.

View attachment 114214

YPJ soldier, Hevedar Mohammed, 12. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

“At home,” says Hevedar, “I saw all my friends going to join the YPJ. My friends told me that [the YPJ] was amazing and that I should join. One day, I went home and told my mother that I wanted to join. At first she said no, because I was too small. I asked her again and finally she said I could. My father said he was very proud of me.”

Several of the women, like General Zelal, 33, (pictured below) one of the leaders of YPJ, expanded upon the idea of the independence the group brings women of the region: "I don’t want to get married or have children or be in the house all day. I want to be free. If I couldn’t be a YPJ I think my spirit would die. Being a YPJ soldier means being free—this is what it means to truly be free."

View attachment 114215

General Zelal, 33. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

“There is a sense among the women,” says Trieb, “that the YPJ is in itself a feminist movement, even if it is not their main mission. They want ‘equality’ between women and men, and a part of why they joined was to develop and advance the perceptions about women in their culture—they can be strong and be leaders."

Sa-el Morad, 20, (pictured below), shared with Trieb that she enlisted in order to prove that, “we can do all the same things that men can do; that women can do everything; that there’s nothing impossible for us.

"When I was at home, all the men just thought that the women are just cleaning the house and not going outside. But when I joined the YPJ everything changed. I showed all of them that I can hold a weapon, that I can fight in the clashes, that I can do everything that they thought was impossible for women. Now, the men back home changed their opinions about me and other women. Now they see that we are their equals, and that we have the same abilities, maybe sometimes more than them. They understand we are strong and that we can do everything they can."

View attachment 114216

Sa-el Morad, 20. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

According to Trieb, the women are indeed seen as just as strong, disciplined, and committed as their male counterparts. They endure many months and levels of rigorous training in weaponry and tactical maneuvers before they are even allowed to fight. They are also wholly celebrated by their community, which Trieb notes is unexpected in a part of the world where women are often seen as inferior to men.

To some in the region, they are seen as potentially more of a threat to ISIS than male soldiers. As Trieb recalls, “The saying among many Syrian Kurds is that ISIS is more terrified of being killed by women because if they are, they will not go to heaven.”

View attachment 114217

Zevin Botan, 20. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

There is, despite the toughness of the YPJ, another unexpected side to the group that Trieb uncovered. “Though when training or on a mission they're very serious,” she says, “in their downtime they're always joking around. The younger ones were a lot like American teenage girls and my time with them at the training post felt similar to summer camp—daily routine, lots of activities, and new recruits were getting to know one another."

View attachment 114218

Mizguin Emraly, 14. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.
Very cute girl
View attachment 114219

YPJ solider, Narlene, 20. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Trieb reveals that the YPJ are also very concerned with America’s perception of them, “worrying that [Americans] think we're terrorists”. The YPJ soldiers would ask Trieb ‘What do they Americans think of us?’. “The truth is,” says Trieb, “most of the West hasn't heard of the YPJ. It was really hard to have to tell them that. Because for them, they've been fighting this war every day for almost three years, so they were shocked to hear that most Americans don't know they exist."

It's difficult to say exactly why the force is largely unknown to Americans and many western nations. It could be in part due to the YPJ (and YPG) being closely linked to another Kurdish fighting force known as the Kurdistan Worker’s Party or the PKK. The U.S. State Department, N.A.T.O., and the European Union have all designated the PKK a terrorist group, mainly due its violent, three-decade (1984-2013) struggle for autonomy from the Turkish State (a N.A.T.O. member). Although some have pointed out the success of the PKK in stopping ISIS, the tag still stands.

For now, the YPJ has no backing from western nations, relying mainly on its community to provide funding and supplies.

View attachment 114220

Avinar Kolcer, 26. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Nonetheless, the women remain committed to the YPJ and its mission and are dedicated to protecting their people. They are not at all obligated to stay, says Trieb, and she believes all who join remain out of loyalty. None of them sign contracts. They can leave whenever they choose. Since the YPJ exists on a volunteer basis, many of the women are also unpaid. When supporters offer them payment in return for their service, "they will refuse the gift or donate it to the YPJ,” Trieb notes.

View attachment 114221

Mizguin Ronahi. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

View attachment 114222

Evin Sadak, 20. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

The YPJ operates in two-week rotations on the front lines. Small groups are stationed at various observation posts all along the border of Rabia to keep the area secured, explains Trieb. They live in abandoned Iraqi army buildings, which, as one might imagine, are run down and lack any luxuries. Often, ISIS snipers are just 500 feet away, ready to shoot. Trieb, who made these photographs using the dilapidated building walls as backdrops, remembers having to duck and run between YPJ buildings to avoid being hit by enemy fire.

View attachment 114223

Sosen Shingel, 17. Photographed at a YPJ training base near Derek City, Syria, Aug. 20, 2014.

View attachment 114224

Shavin Bachouk, 26. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Even under such intense conditions, the YPJ are always “staged and ready for conflict,” Trieb says. She continues, “Some of them had their own personal cars parked outside the building so that they could quite literally ‘drive’ into conflict, should it erupt. They are fearless,” says Trieb, “though they might not say they are. They consider fear and then they go forward anyway."



View attachment 114225

Hasrat Sahad, 23. Photographed at a YPJ checkpoint-base, on the outskirts of Rabia, Kurdistan, on Aug. 7, 2014.

Editor’s NOTE: In recent weeks, the YPJ has come under increased attack. Several of the women photographed by Trieb have been injured and some have been captured by ISIS.

Originally published on MarieClaire.com.
 
.
‘Sisters in arms’: Kurdish women fighters ready ‘to send ISIS to hell’ (VIDEO)
Published time: October 07, 2014 18:30
Edited time: October 10, 2014 11:34
Get short URL


f24c9cd8dae339e99b2f34814098664d.jpg

RT Photo / Paula Slier



Conflict, Iraq, Military, Paula Slier, Syria,Turkey
Female Kurdish fighters ignite fear into Islamic State militants, who believe that they’ll go straight to hell if they are killed by a woman. RT travelled to Iraqi-Syrian border to meet the YPG, the female battalion fighting IS.

The border area between Iraq and Syria is currently controlled by Kurdish volunteers after both Iraqi and Syrian military forces abandoned the border crossings.

The women fighters occupy the lookout post on the border, which allows them to monitor all IS activities in Iraq and Syria.

Rosarine, one of the women, confessed that she had never fired a gun in her life before the war against Islamic State (IS, formerly known as ISIS) began.


“The first time I fired I was scared, but my love for my country was bigger than my fear,”
she told RT’s Paula Slier. “Islamic State thought women can't fight them, but here we are. We are not afraid because we know what we are fighting for.”

The 19-year-old, who dropped out of school to join the YPG, Kurdish People’s Protection Units, says that now she opens fire “whenever something moves [on the IS side].”





All the women fighters in the battalion are volunteers, who go into battle under the “Hava” (friendship) motto. Rosarine added that she and her ‘sisters in arms’ get full support and encouragement from their families as they’re fighting to protect the Kurdish land and its people.

The commander of the Kurdish women fighters, Dalil Derki, said that his unit strikes terror into Islamic state militants, who have “twisted Islam.”

“In their philosophy women don't have their own role in society. Their philosophy and culture is that they believe that if they are killed by a woman they won’t go to heaven. Instead they will go to hell,” he explained to RT.

According to the YPG commander, half of the jihadists on the border were killed by women fighters and “if they want to go to hell, they should keep fighting us.”

Derki said that he’s proud of his troops and their achievement on the battlefield as they “set an example to women all around the world.”

Another female soldier, Beritan, said that she has already been in many “dangerous fights,” with one battle even lasting “for an entire night and day.”

“I wasn't really scared, I was more focused on killing the terrorists than dying myself,”
she explained.

Many of the girls told RT that they’ll remain soldiers after the war with IS is over as the battle for an independent Kurdish state, Kurdistan, is underway.

The Kurds do not have their own state, with the Kurdistan region spanning adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey.

The Kurdish conflict with various jihadist groups taking part in the Syrian civil war, including IS, started in July 2013 in the Syrian town of Ras al-Ayn.

While Kurdish forces recently managed moderate military gains against IS in northern Iraq.

However, the jihadists seem to be taking the upper hand in the battle for the strategic town of Kobani on the Turkish-Syrian border.
 
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