Kamis, 03 September 2020

Alexei Navalny: Two hours that saved Russian opposition leader's life - BBC News

By BBC Russian
Moscow

Alexei Navalny
image copyrightReuters

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny is in a coma in a Berlin hospital, and Germany has revealed he was poisoned by a Novichok nerve agent.

He was taken ill on board a return flight from Siberia to Moscow and the plane made an emergency landing in Omsk. Two days later Russian officials were persuaded to let him be airlifted to Germany.

BBC Russian has pieced together the story of how flight attendants and medics fought to save his life over the skies of Siberia. This is the dramatic two-hour timeline of that perilous journey.

How the morning unfolded

It was 20 August, and Alexei Navalny was taking an S7 airlines flight from Tomsk to Moscow. He didn't eat or drink anything all morning - apart from a cup of tea he bought at Tomsk Bogashevo airport, according to his press secretary Kira Yarmysh.

Ilya Ageev with Alexei Navalny before the flight
image copyrightIlya Ageev

Another passenger on the flight, Ilya Ageev, saw Mr Navalny drinking the tea about an hour before the plane was due to take off. The Kremlin critic was smiling and joking with fellow passengers who recognised him.

Graphic - 08:01

During the first half hour of the flight, Mr Navalny started to feel unwell. Flight attendants were handing water out to passengers, but he turned it down. He then got up to go to the toilet.

08:30

Another passenger tried to use the toilet at the same time, but Alexei Navalny was inside for about 20 minutes. A queue began to form outside the door.

08:50

By now all four flight attendants on board were aware one of their passengers was unwell.

09:00

Minutes later, a flight attendant made an announcement asking if any doctors were on board. The other passengers now realised the situation was serious.

The rest of the cabin crew informed the pilot and tried to administer first aid to Mr Navalny.

His assistant, Ilya Pakhomov, walked down the aisle appealing for medical assistance. A woman, who hasn't been identified, came forward to say she was a nurse.

For the next hour she and the flight attendants focused on keeping Mr Navalny conscious until the pilot could make an emergency landing, according to S7 airlines.

'He wasn't speaking - he was just screaming'

Sergey Nezhenets, a lawyer, was sitting in the back row close to where Mr Navalny was being treated. He was due to transfer in Moscow before flying on to Krasnodar in southern Russia.

"I started paying attention to what was going on when a flight attendant asked for medical professionals on board to come forward," Mr Nezhenets told the BBC.

"A few minutes later, the pilot announced we would be landing in Omsk, because a passenger was unwell. I only realised the passenger in question was Navalny after we landed, when I checked Twitter and saw his spokeswoman's posts.

"A few minutes after the call-out for a doctor, Alexei started moaning and screaming. He was clearly in pain. He was lying on the floor in the part of the plane reserved for cabin crew. He wasn't saying any words - he was just screaming."

Ambulance on the runway at Omsk airport
image copyrightIlya Ageev

That was when a nurse went forward to offer medical assistance, he explains.

"I don't know what they were doing, I didn't see," he says. "But I heard them keep on saying 'Alexei, drink, drink, Alexei, breathe!'

"When he was moaning, the rest of us felt better, in a way because we could tell he was at least still alive. I stress, at that point I didn't know it was Navalny."

Two of Mr Navalny's assistants were standing nearby; one was his press secretary Kira Yarmysh.

"She was very nervous," Mr Nezhenets says. "The medic asked her what had happened to him, and Kira said: 'I don't know, he was probably poisoned'."

08:20

The crew moved fast to ask permission for an emergency landing at Omsk, the airline says, and it was given immediately.

It took little more than 30 minutes for the plane to land after passengers were told there would be an emergency landing.

But the cabin crew "kept checking the windows and complaining that, because it was so cloudy, it was taking longer to land while Alexei was so unwell."

The lawyer heard retching noises as they urged him to drink.

Was his stomach pumped?

Omsk airport's chief doctor, Vasily Sidorus, has refused to confirm or deny this. All he would say was "There was everything."

Photo taken from the plane
image copyrightIlya Ageev

Had they suspected food poisoning, the crew may have tried to, says Israeli intensive care expert Mikhail Fremderman. "But that wouldn't have helped in a case of poisoning with organophosphorus compounds, which is what the Germans are now talking about."

And if Mr Navalny's food or drink had been poisoned, throwing him would have posed a risk to those offering him medical assistance, as well as those cleaning up the plane later.

09:01

At 09:01 Omsk time, the plane landed.

09:03

Medical staff at the airport boarded the plane just two minutes after landing.

As soon as they had examined Mr Navalny, the medics said "this is not a case for us - he needs intensive care", Mr Nezhenets recalls.

He then heard one of the medical staff phoning for an ICU ambulance. They asked for it to drive straight on to the landing area, saying that the patient was in a serious condition.

He then heard a medic explaining over the phone what colour the plane was and telling the driver to park close to the steps.

"We waited for another 10 minutes for the ambulance to arrive," he says. "During this time, the doctors took Navalny's blood pressure and gave him an intravenous drip - but I think it was clear to them that it was of no use."

Ambulance on runway
image copyrightSibir.Realii

Dr Sidorus says he did not treat Alexei Navalny personally, but that his colleagues did their best to save his life.

"It was hard to understand what was going on, as he could not speak," he says. "They did everything they had to do, saved a man's life and made sure he was transferred to an appropriate hospital."

Passengers we spoke to believe the medics spent about 15 to 20 minutes examining Mr Navalny on board the plane.

09:37

He was then taken off the plane and his stretcher loaded into an ambulance, which straight to Omsk Emergency Hospital No 1.

The plane was re-fuelled and, after another half an hour, continued its journey to Moscow, Mr Nezhenets told the BBC.

Airport staff on the plane
image copyrightDJPavlin

"When we landed at Moscow Domodedovo airport, several policemen and plain-clothed men entered the plane.

"They asked passengers seated in the rows closest to where Alexei had been sitting to stay, while the rest were free to go. Alexei had been sitting somewhere in the centre of the plane, row 10 or 11."

It seemed strange to have police come on board. "At that point, the case did not look criminal. And yet, here was the security service."

'Poisoned with Novichok'

For two days, the hospital in Omsk kept Mr Navalny in its acute poisoning department. Initially they would not allow him to be flown to Germany, citing his unstable condition.

However, on 22 August, he was airlifted to the Charité clinic in Berlin and two days later German doctors said their tests showed he had been poisoned.

Doctors in Omsk, including the chief doctor of the Emergency Hospital No 1 and the chief toxicologist, insisted that no poisonous substances had been detected in Mr Navalny's body when he was under their care. They said a metabolic disorder was one potential, alternative diagnosis.

BBC Russian has asked Omsk health authorities for a comment and a detailed account of Navalny's hospital stay, but has not received a reply.

Reporting by Anna Pushkarskaya, Elena Berdnikova, Timur Sazonov, Andrei Soshnikov and Ksenia Churmanova.

Related Topics

  • Alexei Navalny
  • Russia

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2020-09-03 23:11:00Z
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Rochester Mayor suspends officers involved in the fatal March arrest of Daniel Prude - Daily Mail

Rochester Mayor suspends officers involved in the fatal March arrest of Daniel Prude, 41, who suffocated after cops put a 'spit hood' over his head and pressed his face down until he stopped breathing

  • WARNING: Disturbing content 
  • Daniel Prude was left brain dead after the incident and later died on March 30 when he was taken off of life support - seven days after the encounter
  • His brother phoned for help on March 23 at 3am after he left his house in Rochester in the snow, wearing nothing but underwear
  • Prude was behaving erratically, stripping as he walked through the streets and - according to police - smashing windows
  • Four cops responded; they told him to sit on the ground, which he did, and handcuffed him 
  • He yelled at them that he had COVID-19 and they put a 'spit hood' over his head then laughed while he yelled profanities at them
  • When he tried to get to his feet, three cops pounced to hold him on the ground 
  • After three minutes of holding him down, they noticed fluid coming out of his mouth and that he was unconscious
  • He was taken to the hospital but never woke up and was taken off life support three days later  
  • The medical examiner ruled his death a homicide, on account of complications caused from asphyxia from physical restraint, as well as PCP intoxication   
  • All of the officers involved in his arrest have been suspended with pay, pending the outcome of an investigation by the New York General Attorney's Office

All of the Rochester police officers involved in the fatal March arrest of Daniel Prude, who died after officers placed a hood over his head and pressed his face into the pavement until he stopped breathing, have been suspended, the city’s mayor announced Thursday.

Their immediate suspension, ordered by Mayor Lovely Warren, comes less than one day after Prude’s family released horrifying police bodycam footage of his final moments, and five months after the 41-year-old’s death.

Prude was left brain dead after his March 23 encounter with Rochester PD. He died seven days later when he was taken off life support.

The Monroe County medical examiner ruled his death a ‘homicide caused by complications of asphyxia in the setting of physical restraint’. The report also listed excited delirium and acute intoxication by phencyclidine, or PCP, as contributing factors.

Prude’s family members have called for the seven officers involved in his arrest to be charged with murder. 

All of the officers have now been suspended immediately with pay, pending the outcome of an investigation conducted by New York Attorney General Letitia James. 

‘I have never shied away from taking action and holding our police — or anyone that fails in their duties in our community — accountable,’ Mayor Warren told reporters Thursday. ‘That is why I am suspending the officers in question today, against the advice of counsel.

‘You cannot stand around and allow these types of things to happen. You have a duty,' she continued. 'Mr. Daniel Prude was failed by the police department, our mental health care system, our society, and he was failed by me.'

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While the fatal incident occurred on March 23 ¿ weeks before George Floyd would die in Minnesota police custody in May, sparking nationwide protests ¿ Prude¿s death received no public attention

While the fatal incident occurred on March 23 – weeks before George Floyd would die in Minnesota police custody in May, sparking nationwide protests – Prude’s death received no public attention

Following an order issued by Mayor Lovely Warren, all seven officers involved in the arrest have been suspended. The move comes less than one day after Prude¿s family released horrifying police bodycam footage of his final moments, and five months after the 41-year-old¿s death.

Following an order issued by Mayor Lovely Warren, all seven officers involved in the arrest have been suspended. The move comes less than one day after Prude’s family released horrifying police bodycam footage of his final moments, and five months after the 41-year-old’s death.

Daniel Prude was left brain dead after the incident and later died on March 30 after he was taken off of life support ¿ seven days after the encounter with police in Rochester
Prude, known to his big Chicago-based family by the nickname ¿Rell,¿ was a father of five adult children and had been working at a warehouse within the last year, said his aunt Letoria Moore.

Daniel Prude was left brain dead after the incident and later died on March 30 after he was taken off of life support – seven days after the encounter with police in Rochester

Prude’s brother Joe had phoned 911 for assistance on March 23, as his sibling began suffering a mental health episode. The 41-year-old, who had been visiting Rochester from his hometown of Chicago, walked out of Joe’s house at around 3am in frigid temperatures, wearing only underwear, a tank top and socks.

As he made his way through the neighborhood, he started removing his clothes. Police claim he also smashed windows. Several other people encountered him, with at least one calling 911 to report his erratic behavior.

WHO WERE THE OFFICERS INVOLVED? 

There were seven officers of Rochester PD present on the night Daniel Prude died in police custody.

Six of them have so far been named: 

Officer Mark Vaughn;

Officer Paul Ricotta;

Officer Andrew Specksgoor;

Officer Josiah Harris;

Officer Troy Talladay;

Sgt. Michael Magri.

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Prude was then stopped by Officer Mark Vaughn from the Rochester PD. Vaughn, pointing a taser, ordered him to lay on the ground and put his hands behind his back, to which he complied. Officer Vaughn then handcuffed Prude as he lay on his stomach.

The bodycam footage shows Prude sitting in the ground in handcuffs. He is heard yelling incoherently at the officers, shouting ‘Jesus Christ’ and ‘Give me your gun, I need it'. At one point, he invites officers to ‘come and look at this big d***,’ to which the cops on scene respond with laughter.

Officers stood around Prude in a semicircle. He began spitting at them, yelling out to the cops that he had COVID-19.

Prude continued to yell at officers and at one point attempted to get to his feet. Officers were seen pushing him back over and then slamming his head into the ground.

Prude demanded they remove the spit hood, saying, ‘trying to kill me!,’ before making muffled, anguished sounds from under the hood.

For more than two minutes, officers pinned Prude down on the cold ground. Officer Vaughn used both hands to push the side of Prude’s head into the pavement, in a push-up position with his knees suspended off the ground.

Another officer used his knee at one point to hold down Prude’s torso, and a third held down his legs.

Prude is heard screaming under the weight of the officers pinning him down, however his words are muffled as his face is pushed hard into the ground. Officers are heard urging him to ‘stop spitting’.

The officers appear to become concerned when they notice water coming out of Prude’s mouth.

Officer Talladay is seen placing a kneww into Prude's back as he lay on the floor

Officer Talladay is seen placing a kneww into Prude's back as he lay on the floor

For nearly three minutes, officers pinned Prude down on the cold ground. One officer used both hands to push the side of Prude¿s head into the pavement

For nearly three minutes, officers pinned Prude down on the cold ground. One officer used both hands to push the side of Prude’s head into the pavement

Officer Vaughn used both hands to push the side of Prude¿s head into the pavement, similar to a triangle push-up

Officer Vaughn used both hands to push the side of Prude’s head into the pavement, similar to a triangle push-up 

Prude is heard screaming under the weight of the officers pinning him down, however his words are muffled as his face is pushed hard into the ground. Officers are heard urging him to ¿stop spitting¿

Prude is heard screaming under the weight of the officers pinning him down, however his words are muffled as his face is pushed hard into the ground. Officers are heard urging him to ‘stop spitting’

The 41-year-old then suddenly falls deathly silent and still, having lost consciousness under the restraint

The 41-year-old then suddenly falls deathly silent and still, having lost consciousness under the restraint

When EMTs arrive on scene, the officers unhandcuff Prude, roll him on his back and attempt chest compression after realizing he has no pulse

When EMTs arrive on scene, the officers unhandcuff Prude, roll him on his back and attempt chest compression after realizing he has no pulse

The 41-year-old then suddenly falls deathly silent and still, having lost consciousness under the restraint.

NY AG LETITIA JAMES IS INVESTIGATING PRUDE'S DEATH 

New York Attorney General Letitia James said on Wednesday that she would investigate Prude's death.

'The death of Daniel Prude was a tragedy, and I extend my deepest condolences to his family. I share the community’s concerns about ensuring a fair and independent investigation into his death and support their right to protest. 

'Pursuant to Executive Order 147, the Special Investigations and Prosecutions Unit of my office is already actively investigating this incident. 

'As with every investigation, we will follow the facts of this case and ensure a complete and thorough examination of all relevant parties. 

'We will work tirelessly to provide the transparency and accountability that all our communities deserve,' she said. 

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One officer notes that he’s been out, naked, in the street for some time. Another remarks, ‘He feels pretty cold.’

When EMTs arrive on scene, the officers unhandcuff Prude, roll him on his back and attempt chest compression after realizing he has no pulse.

The EMT tells cops not to worry since PCP causes ‘excited delirium’ and says ‘I guarantee you that’s why he coded,’ adding, ‘It’s not your fault guys.’

The medics continue performing CPR on Prude before he's loaded into an ambulance, some 11 minutes after he first encountered police.

He was taken to the hospital and placed on life support, where he was later pronounced brain dead. He died seven days later on March 30.

While the fatal incident occurred just two months before the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, which would go on to spark national and global protests against US police brutality, Prude’s death received no public attention.

However, that changed Wednesday when his family held a news conference to reveal disturbing police body camera footage of his final moments, along with written reports they obtained through a public records request.

‘I placed a phone call for my brother to get help. Not for my brother to get lynched,’ Prude´s brother Joe said during that conference.

‘How did you see him and not directly say, “The man is defenseless, buck naked on the ground. He´s cuffed up already. Come on.” How many more brothers gotta die for society to understand that this needs to stop?’  

Protesters gathered Wednesday outside Rochester's Public Safety Building, which also serves as its police headquarters. Demonstrators remained as night fell, demanding for the officers involved to be charged with murder.

Nine people were arrested during the day, most for criminal trespass or resisting arrest, and one for also inciting a riot. One activist was taken to hospital to be treated for injuries sustained during their arrest.

Daniel Prude's brother Joe, right, stands with his son, Armin, holding a photograph up of him outside their home on Thursday

Daniel Prude's brother Joe, right, stands with his son, Armin, holding a photograph up of him outside their home on Thursday

Activists are demanding that officers involved with Prude¿s death be prosecuted on murder charges and that they be removed from the department while the investigation proceeds

Activists are demanding that officers involved with Prude’s death be prosecuted on murder charges and that they be removed from the department while the investigation proceeds

Protesters gathered Wednesday outside Rochester's Public Safety Building, which serves as police headquarters. Demonstrators remained as night fell

Protesters gathered Wednesday outside Rochester's Public Safety Building, which serves as police headquarters. Demonstrators remained as night fell

Demonstrators are demanding for the officers involved to be charged with murder

Demonstrators are demanding for the officers involved to be charged with murder

Lakeisha Harmon, center, speaks to the crowd during a protest, Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, in Rochester, NY, where Daniel Prude was restrained by police officers

Lakeisha Harmon, center, speaks to the crowd during a protest, Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, in Rochester, NY, where Daniel Prude was restrained by police officers

Prude, known to his big Chicago-based family by the nickname ¿Rell,¿ was a father of five adult children and had been working at a warehouse within the last year, said his aunt Letoria Moore.

Prude, known to his big Chicago-based family by the nickname ‘Rell,’ was a father of five adult children and had been working at a warehouse within the last year, said his aunt Letoria Moore.

Attorney Elliot Shields, who is representing Prude's family, said they plan to ‘sue everyone who is responsible for Daniel Prude’s death’.

Prude, of Chicago, had arrived in Rochester via Amtrack train on March 22 to stay with his brother. He was kicked off the train before it got to Rochester, in Depew, ‘due to his unruly behavior,’ according to an internal affairs investigator´s report.

Rochester police officers took Prude into custody for a mental health evaluation around 7pm that day for suicidal thoughts - about eight hours before the encounter that led to his death.

But his brother said he was only at the hospital for a few hours, according to the reports.

Police responded again after Joe Prude called 911 at about 3am to report that his brother had left his house.

The city halted its investigation into Prude's death when state Attorney General Letitia James office began its own investigation in April. Under New York law, deaths of unarmed people in police custody are often turned over to the attorney general's office, rather than handled by local officials.

James said Wednesday that investigation is continuing.

‘I want everyone to understand that at no point in time did we feel that this was something that we wanted not to disclose,’ Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren said at a press briefing. ‘We are precluded from getting involved in it until that agency [the AG´s office] has completed their investigation.’

An activist stops to take a picture of a make-shift memorial for Daniel erected sometime on Wednesday evening

An activist stops to take a picture of a make-shift memorial for Daniel erected sometime on Wednesday evening

The city halted its investigation into Prude's death when state Attorney General Letitia James office began its own investigation in April

The city halted its investigation into Prude's death when state Attorney General Letitia James office began its own investigation in April

Under New York law, deaths of unarmed people in police custody are often turned over to the attorney general's office, rather than handled by local officials

Under New York law, deaths of unarmed people in police custody are often turned over to the attorney general's office, rather than handled by local officials

A makeshift memorial is seen, Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, in Rochester, New York

A makeshift memorial is seen, Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, in Rochester, New York

During a news conference Wednesday, Shields said that the Prude family ¿will sue everyone who is responsible for Daniel Prude's death'

During a news conference Wednesday, Shields said that the Prude family ‘will sue everyone who is responsible for Daniel Prude's death'

Warren said Thursday that Rochester Police Chief LaRon Singletary informed her on March 23 about Prude being unresponsive after the incident with police and that he may die. One week later, she said she was told by Singletary Prude had died due to ‘an apparent overdose.’ She added that August 4 is when she saw the video of Prude and the officers who detained him for the first time.

‘What I saw in that video was a man who needed help a man who need compassion, a man who needed humanity, a man who we should have respected, a man who was in crisis,’ Warren said. ‘Our response to him was wrong.’

In future, Warren said she told the police chief he is now required to provide her video of any deaths of a persons in Rochester PD custody within 24 hours for her to review.

‘At no time did I never know the extent, that there was any hands on with these officers until August 4th,’ Warren said. After that time, she said they could not disclose it because the investigation fell to the state under Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s 2015 executive order requiring in-custody deaths to be investigated by the State Attorney General's office.

Prude, known to his big Chicago-based family by the nickname ‘Rell,’ was a father of five adult children and had been working at a warehouse within the last year, said his aunt Letoria Moore.

‘He was just a bright, loving person, just family-oriented, always there for us when we needed him,’ she said, and ‘never hurt or harmed anybody.’

Prude had been traumatized by the deaths of his mother and a brother in recent years, having lost another brother before that, Moore said. In his last months, he´d been going back and forth between his Chicago home and his brother's place in Rochester because he wanted to be close with him, she said.

She knew her nephew had some psychological issues. Still, when he called two days before his death, ‘he was the normal Rell that I knew,’ Moore said.

‘I didn't know what was the situation, why he was going through what he was going through that night, but I know he didn't deserve to be killed by the police,’ she said.

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2020-09-03 22:43:02Z
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Daniel Prude: Mayor suspends officers in 'spit hood' death - BBC News

Seven US police officers have been suspended over the death of an unarmed black man who suffocated after being restrained.

Daniel Prude, who had mental health issues, died after being put in a "spit hood", which is meant to protect officers from detainees' saliva.

Announcing the suspension Rochester's mayor, Lovely Warren, said systemic racism led to the death.

Mr Prude died in March but his story has only just been made public.

The 41-year-old's death came two months before George Floyd's killing, which sparked national and international protests against racism and police brutality. His arrest also bore some similarities to Mr Floyd's, as both were pinned to the ground by officers.

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The move to suspend the seven officers is the first disciplinary action since Mr Prude's death.

Mayor Warren said at a news conference on Thursday: "I am suspending the officers in question today against council's advice, and I urge the attorney general to complete her investigation."

"Daniel Prude was failed by our police department, our mental healthcare system, our society and, he was failed by me," she continued, adding that his death was proof "many of the challenges that we faced in the past are the same challenges that we face today".

How did Daniel Prude die?

Mr Prude's brother, Joe, has said he called police on 23 March as Daniel was showing acute mental health problems. When officers arrived, he had been running naked through the streets in a light snow.

Police body camera video obtained by the family shows Mr Prude lying on the ground as officers restrain him. Mr Prude can be seen complying with officers immediately.

He later becomes agitated, at times swearing at the officers who surround him and spitting, but he does not appear to offer any physical resistance, according to the footage.

An officer says that Mr Prude told them he has Covid-19, and they place the spit hood on him.

One officer can be seen pressing down on Mr Prude's head with both hands, saying "stop spitting". Mr Prude stops moving and goes quiet, and officers note he feels cold.

Paramedics are called and Mr Prude is taken to hospital in an ambulance. He was taken off life support a week later on 30 March.

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2020-09-03 21:54:10Z
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Quarantine fears lifted for English tourists - Sky News

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  1. Quarantine fears lifted for English tourists  Sky News
  2. Coronavirus: UK split over Portugal quarantine rules  BBC News
  3. Brits vent fury as Portugal and Greece stay ON the quarantine-free list despite days of speculation  Daily Mail
  4. UK coronavirus live: highest daily cases since 4 June; Portugal added to Wales quarantine list but not England's – as it happened  The Guardian
  5. BREAKING: Mixed news on quarantine or not for Portugal across UK  Sky News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-09-03 21:50:24Z
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