Senin, 25 Desember 2023

Israeli airstrikes kill more than 100 as assault on Gaza widens - The Guardian

The Gaza Strip is facing some of the deadliest fighting to date in the present war as Israel expands its offensive just days after the UN security council passed a resolution calling for more aid and urgent steps for a sustainable ceasefire.

More than 100 people were killed in Israeli airstrikes late on Sunday in the centre of the besieged Palestinian territory, including at least 70 in bombings that hit a residential block in the Maghazi refugee camp near Deir al-Balah, health officials in Gaza said.

Deir al-Balah was also hit overnight despite previously being identified by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) as an “evacuation zone” for Palestinians fleeing the fighting.

The Palestinian Red Crescent published footage from al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital, in Deir al-Balah, showing dazed and bloodied children covered in rubble dust. There were also dozens of white body bags.

At the scene of the attack on Maghazi, people screamed and shouted in the dark as they tried to dig for survivors from the collapsed buildings.

“We were all targeted,” Ahmad Turkomani, who lost several family members, including his daughter and grandson, told the Associated Press. “There is no safe place in Gaza anyway.”

The Israeli military said it was reviewing the Maghazi incident.

The latest casualties came after an earlier announcement on Sunday from the Gaza health ministry that Israeli airstrikes had killed 166 Palestinians in 24 hours, one of the single deadliest days of the 12-week-old conflict.

More than 20,400 Palestinians have been killed since Israel declared war in response to the 7 October attack by Hamas on Israel, in which the Palestinian militant group killed 1,140 people and seized another 240 as hostages.

This year’s Christmas celebrations across Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories were cancelled in solidarity with the people of Gaza.

Instead of the traditional parade and joyous midnight service in the occupied West Bank town of Bethlehem, where Jesus was believed to have been born, Palestinian Christians held a subdued mass with hymns and prayers for peace.

“This day is supposed to be a day of love and happiness but look around you, there are no smiles on people’s faces. Bethlehem is sad and dark. There are no decorations, no carols or a Christmas tree,” said the Reverend Louis Salman. “I blame the decision-makers who watch what is happening to the children of Gaza and do nothing.”

For Israel, the war has also exacted what the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, called on Sunday a “very heavy cost” – 15 Israeli soldiers have been killed in intense ground skirmishes with Hamas since Friday, bringing the total to 156 combat losses.

Hamas cells are using IEDs, ambushes and their extensive tunnel network to inflict significant losses on the Israel Defence Forces in house-to-house combat, aided by knowledge of the densely packed urban territory.

Despite the long-awaited UN security council resolution, on Friday, which called for urgent action from all parties to work towards a ceasefire, fighting on the ground has intensified since the collapse of the seven-day truce at the start of December.

Israel has expanded its operations into the southern half of the 365-sq-km strip, raising fears for the territory’s 2.3 million residents, almost all of whom have already sought shelter south of the Gaza River after being told by the Israeli army it would be safer there.

The UN has warned that a quarter of the population is starving and that an increase in aid since 17 December amounts to a fraction of what is needed for people to survive the cold and wet winter conditions.

Aid that did arrive, the World Food Programme said, was difficult to distribute because of the fighting and lack of fuel and usable roads. In some cases desperate people have looted arriving aid vehicles.

Over the weekend Israel’s military chief of staff, Herzi Halevi, said his forces had largely achieved operational control in the north of Gaza, and would broaden the offensive further into the south, but residents still present in Gaza City and the north’s Jabalia camp said the fighting had worsened.

On Monday, details emerged of a ceasefire proposal put forward by Egypt, a key mediator between Israel and Hamas.

Talks mediated by Qatar, which led to a seven-day ceasefire at the end of November, and the release of 100 hostages in exchange for 240 Palestinian women and children held in Israeli jails, appear to have stalled.

Israel’s security cabinet was expected to discuss the Egyptian plan on Monday night.

Islamic Jihad, a smaller Palestinian militant group allied to Hamas, said a delegation led by its exiled leader, Ziad al-Nakhala, was in Cairo on Sunday. His arrival came after talks attended by Hamas’ chief based outside Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, in recent days, in a positive sign that indirect discussions were under way.

The three-stage plan would entail an initial cessation of hostilities for at least a week and the release of all remaining Israeli civilian hostages held in Gaza; then a week in which female soldiers would be released in return for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails; and finally a month-long negotiation period for release of male soldiers in exchange for Israeli withdrawal.

On Monday night it emerged Hamas and Islamic Jihad had reportedly rejected the Egyptian proposal.

Separately, three security sources said an Israeli airstrike outside the Syrian capital Damascus had killed a senior adviser in Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

The sources told Reuters the adviser, known as Sayyed Razi Mousavi, was responsible for coordinating the military alliance between Syria and Iran, which supports Hamas in Gaza.

The Revolutionary Guards, in a statement read on Iranian state television, said Israel “will pay for this crime”.

Washington, Israel’s most important ally, has urged Israeli officials to shift away from large-scale aerial and ground operations in the Gaza Strip to a new phase in the war focused on precise targeting of Hamas leaders.

But despite rising international outcry over the humanitarian disaster in Gaza, including growing criticism from the US, Netanyahu has said that Israel will push on until “complete victory” over Hamas was achieved.

“We wouldn’t have succeeded up until now to release more than 100 hostages without military pressure,” Netanyahu said during a speech in the Knesset in Jerusalem on Monday. “And we won’t succeed at releasing all the hostages without military pressure.”

Families of the more than 100 Israeli hostages still held in Gaza watched Netanyahu’s speech from the parliamentary gallery, many of them holding signs calling for Israel to reach a deal and chanting “Now!”

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2023-12-26 02:30:00Z
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Bodies of five people found in flat in Paris suburb of Meaux - BBC

File photo of French police tapeGetty Images

Prosecutors in France have launched a homicide investigation after five bodies were found in a town north-east of Paris.

According to local media reports, the victims are a woman and her four young children.

Their bodies were found in the town of Meaux which is just over 41km (25 miles) from the French capital.

They were discovered in an apartment, the local prosecutor told France's AFP news agency.

According to news website Actu17, which first reported the case, police are looking for the 33-year-old father, who is "on the run".

Prosecutor Jean-Baptiste Bladier confirmed to French media the Versailles judicial police service was investigating.

The Paris region has recently seen a series of infanticides:

  • In late November, a 41-year-old man confessed to killing his three daughters, aged four to 11, and turned himself in. Police found them dead in his home in the town of Alfortville, in the south-eastern suburbs of the capital
  • In October, a policeman killed his three daughters before killing himself at his home in Vemars in Val-d'Oise.
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2023-12-26 02:59:40Z
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Ukraine officially celebrates Christmas on December 25 for the first time - Al Jazeera English

The change reflects Ukrainians’ dismay at the 22-month-old Russian invasion and their assertion of a national identity.

Ukrainians have celebrated Christmas on December 25 for the first time, as part of an ongoing effort to remove Russian influence from their country.

The change was enacted in a law signed by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in July, reflecting both the Ukrainians’ dismay with the 22-month-old Russian invasion and their assertion of a national identity.

Ukraine previously marked Christmas in January as the Russians do.

“It’s historical justice,” said Yevhen Konyk, a 44-year-old serviceman who, along with his family, participated in traditional celebrations at an open-air museum in Kyiv.

“We need to move forward not only with the world but also with the traditions of our country and overcome the imperial remnants we had.”

Ukraine is largely Orthodox Christian but the faith is divided between two churches, one of which has a long affiliation with the Russian Orthodox Church.

The Orthodox Church of Ukraine, which does not recognise the authority of the Russian church and had been regarded as schismatic, was granted full recognition in 2019 by the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Orthodoxy’s top authority.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which had been a branch of the Russian church, announced in 2022 after the start of the Russia-Ukraine war that it was breaking ties with Moscow and becoming autonomous.

Its parishes, however, continue to follow the same liturgical calendar as the Russian church and will observe Christmas on January 7.

Many Ukrainians embraced the move to celebrate Christmas on the date aligned with the rest of Western Europe with enthusiasm.

Oksana Poviakel, the director of the Pyrohiv Museum of Folk Architecture and Life of Ukraine, where Christmas celebrations took place, said celebrating on December 25 is “another important factor of self-identification”.

“We are separating ourselves from the neighbour who is currently trying to destroy our state, who is killing our people, destroying our homes, and burning our land,” she said.

Asia Landarenko, 63, said she prays every day for her son who is in the military.

“The state of war affects everything, including the mood. The real celebration of Christmas will be after the victory, but as the saviour was born, so will be our victory,” she said.

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2023-12-25 23:28:36Z
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Egyptian plan for Israel-Gaza war ceasefire emerges - as Netanyahu aide says Hamas 'must be destroyed' - Sky News

Israel remains committed to destroying Hamas, a senior adviser to the country's prime minister has told Sky News, after Egypt proposed a deal aimed at bringing about a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

Egypt has reportedly proposed a future for Gaza which involves Hamas relinquishing power and elections being held - while offering assurances to Hamas that its members would not be chased or prosecuted.

But Mark Regev, senior adviser to Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu, told Sky News Hamas "must be destroyed" when asked how the Israeli leadership imagines Gaza after the war.

Follow latest:
Iran warns Israel over killing of commander

Earlier, Mr Netanyahu had told members of his Likud Party in Israel that the ground offensive in Gaza will expand over the coming days, after attacks appeared to intensify on Christmas Day.

The Hamas-led Gaza health ministry says 250 Palestinians have been killed and 500 wounded in the past 24 hours - with 106 of those said to have died in a Christmas Eve airstrike on the Maghazi refugee camp.

But despite international efforts to halt the fighting, Israel's prime minister told members of his party the war "isn't close to finished".

"We are not stopping. We are continuing to fight and we are expanding the fight in the coming days," Mr Netanyahu said. "There will be a long battle."

Israel "wouldn't have succeeded" in releasing more than 100 hostages - taken by Hamas from southern Israel on 7 October - without its military pressure, with 129 thought still to be captive in Gaza, Mr Netanyahu argued.

Diplomatic efforts on a new truce to free the remaining hostages have yielded little public progress so far, as Egypt and Qatar mediate talks.

Palestinians gather at the site of Israeli strikes on houses  at the Maghazi camp in the central Gaza
Image: Damage at the Maghazi camp in central Gaza

Cool response to reports of Egyptian proposal

Mr Regev told Sky News Israel wants to see a "demilitarised and deradicalised Gaza" and that Mr Netanyahu "believes in a solution where the Palestinians have all the powers to rule themselves and none of the powers to harm Israel".

His comments about Israel's goal of destroying Hamas appear to make any breakthrough in ceasefire negotiations unlikely, though.

And according to two Egyptian security sources, Hamas and the allied Islamic Jihad have rejected Egypt's proposal for a permanent ceasefire - which would reportedly involve Hamas giving up power in the Gaza Strip.

Hamas, however, said it has "no information" on these reports and that it seeks a "permanent cessation to the aggression and massacres against our people".

"We reiterate that there can be no negotiations without a comprehensive cessation of aggression," Izzat Al Rishq, a member of Hamas's political bureau, said.

"Our people want to see this aggression completely halted, and do not want to wait for a temporary or partial truce for a short period, after which the aggression and terrorism might fatally continue."

Both Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which have been holding separate talks with Egyptian mediators in Cairo, reportedly rejected offering any concessions beyond the possible release of more hostages.

Palestinians gather at the site of Israeli strikes on houses at the Maghazi camp in the central Gaza
Image: Palestinians gather at the site of Israeli strikes on houses at the Maghazi camp

Regev: 'Hamas war machine would use refugee camp'

Meanwhile, Israel continues to bombard Gaza, with Palestinian residents claiming fighting has only escalated in northern districts - where Israel says it has gained control.

Responding to reports of the Israeli airstrike on the Maghazi refugee camp on Christmas Eve, Mr Regev said Israeli authorities are "looking into that" - but told Sky News nobody should be surprised if Hamas used the camp "for its war machine".

"Unfortunately you have Hamas across civilian neighbourhoods, you have them under hospitals, you've had them under schools, even under UN facilities," he said.

"So you should have no surprises whatsoever in hearing that Hamas would be using Gaza and civilians, including in a refugee camp, for its war machine."

The Hamas-led Gaza health ministry reports 20,674 people have been killed and 54,536 injured in Israeli strikes since 7 October. Around 1,200 Israelis were killed by Hamas raiders that day.

Read more:
The impossible conditions for children born into conflict
Bethlehem praying for a ceasefire as war rages on

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Pope calls for 'end of fuelling of violence'

Situation in Gaza 'desperate'

Israel's response to 7 October has compounded what a Red Cross aid worker described as an "unprecedented" year of human devastation around the world, citing earthquakes, floods and conflict.

Rory Moylan described a "desperate situation" in Gaza, where colleagues have told of children becoming sick as they face winter without proper clothing, having fled their homes.

As the Israeli military assault continues, the UN has warned that more than half a million people in Gaza are starving due to "woefully insufficient" quantities of food entering the territory.

The vast majority of the 2.3 million Gazans have been driven from their homes, and the UN says conditions are catastrophic.

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2023-12-25 22:18:45Z
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Israel-Gaza war live: dozens killed as Israeli strikes on Gaza continue on Christmas Day - The Guardian

Early on Christmas Day, AFP journalists said they heard gunfire and sirens in the West Bank city of Jenin, which has seen near daily raids by Israeli forces.

“How can we celebrate?” Nazeria Yousef Deabis, 76, who has lived in Zababdeh all her life, said.

“People don’t feel festive - they’ve lost friends and relatives in Gaza,” she said.

“The occupation (Israel) is destroying Jenin and children are being brutally killed.”

Palestinian health officials have said Israeli airstrikes, that began hours before midnight and persisted into Christmas Day, have killed at least 78 people in Gaza.

Residents and Palestinian media said Israel stepped up air and ground shelling against al-Bureij in central Gaza.

As we reported earlier, at least 70 people were killed in an Israeli airstrike targeting Maghazi in central Gaza, health ministry spokesperson, Ashraf Al-Qidra, said.

Medics said an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis in southern Gaza killed eight Palestinians, according to Reuters.

These figures have not yet been independently verified.

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the war in Gaza.

Dozens of Palestinians have been killed overnight as Israeli strikes on Gaza continued into Christmas Day.

In one of the deadliest single strikes of the war at least 70 people including at least 12 women and seven children were killed in an attack on Maghazi refugee camp, east of Deir al-Balah, late Sunday, according to Gaza health officials.

The Palestinian health ministry spokesperson, Ashraf al-Qidra, said the death toll was likely to climb. “What is happening at the Maghazi camp is a massacre that is being committed on a crowded residential square,” he told Reuters.

The Israeli military said it was reviewing the incident. A spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces said: “Despite the challenges posed by Hamas terrorists operating within civilian areas in Gaza, the IDF is committed to international law including taking feasible steps to minimise harm to civilians.”

In other developments:

  • Israeli strikes have killed 20,424 Palestinians since 7 October, the health ministry in Gaza said on Sunday after one of the deadliest 24 hours in the conflict, not including those killed in the latest strikes. Thousands more are believed to be buried under rubble and tens of thousands more have been wounded.

  • “People in Gaza haven’t experienced hunger until this war,” UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said, warning of a “man-made famine” in Gaza as Israel continues its attacks across the strip. In a tweet on Sunday, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees added: “Now it is widespread & WFP warns about a looming famine. That would be nothing less than a man-made famine & a stain in our common humanity. We cannot let it happen.”

  • Islamic Jihad, a smaller militant group allied to Hamas, said a delegation led by its exiled leader Ziad al-Nakhlala was in Cairo on Sunday. His arrival followed talks attended by Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh in recent days. The militant groups have so far said they will not discuss any release of hostages unless Israel ends its war in Gaza, while the Israelis say they are willing to discuss only a temporary pause in fighting.

  • Israeli media reported on Sunday that Egypt had put forward to Hamas a three-stage deal that would take several weeks and ultimately end with the release of all hostages and the cessation of hostilities and withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza. “On the surface, the plan appears to be a formula that both parties would be pleased to reject,” Haaretz newspaper wrote.

  • The Israeli military said on Sunday 10 of its soldiers had been killed in the past day, after five killed the previous day, its worst two-day losses since early November. The deaths bring the total number of IDF soldiers killed in Gaza since the ground assault began on 27 October to 154.

  • Israel’s war on Gaza was enacting a “very heavy price” on Israeli soldiers, the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, told his cabinet on Sunday on Sunday. “This is a difficult morning, after a very difficult day of fighting in Gaza,” Netanyahu said. “The war is exacting a very heavy cost from us; however we have no choice [but] to continue to fight.”

  • Thousands of Moroccans took to the streets in Rabat on Sunday in opposition against Israel’s war on Gaza and Morocco’s normalization with Israel. The crowd in Rabat of about 10,000 people denounced what protest leaders called a “war of extermination,” Agence France-Presse reports.

  • A Qatari Armed Forces aircraft carrying 14 tons of aid for Palestinians in Gaza has arrived in El Arish, Egypt on Sunday, the Qatari state news agency QNA announced. Sunday’s aid delivery brings the total number of Qatari aircrafts sent to Gaza to 50, with a total of 1,548 tons of aid.

  • Four trucks carrying 33 tons of aid from UNRWA and the World Food Programme have made its way into Gaza, UNRWA reported on Sunday. The aid trucks consists of 84 packages of biscuits and 16 pallets of easy-to-open food cans.

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2023-12-25 08:21:21Z
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Minggu, 24 Desember 2023

Israel Gaza war: Hamas says 70 killed in Israeli air strike on camp - BBC

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Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry says an Israeli air strike killed at least 70 people in the Al-Maghazi refugee camp in the centre of the strip.

A spokesman said the death toll was likely to rise given the large number of families living in the area.

The Israeli military told the BBC it was looking into reports of the strike.

Israeli and Arab media say Egypt, which borders the Gaza Strip, has put forward a new proposal for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

Dozens of injured people were rushed from Maghazi to nearby Al-Aqsa Hospital with footage showing some children's faces covered in blood and body bags piled outside.

The health ministry says three houses were hit in the attack late on Sunday.

According to ministry spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra, a densely populated residential block was destroyed.

People in Al-Aqsa Hospital after the reported air strike
AP

A father said he had lost his daughter and grandchildren, adding that his family had fled from the north for safety in central Gaza.

"They lived on the third floor of one of the buildings," he said. "The wall collapsed on them. My grandchildren, my daughter, her husband - all gone.

"We are all targeted. Civilians are targeted. There is no safe place. They told us to leave Gaza City - now we came to central Gaza to die."

The Palestine Red Crescent Society says "intense" Israeli air strikes have led to the closure of main roads between Maghazi and two other refugee camps, Al-Bureij and Al-Nuseirat, "hindering the work of ambulances and rescue teams".

In a statement to the BBC, the Israeli military said it had received "reports of an incident in the Maghazi camp".

"Despite the challenges posed by Hamas terrorists operating within civilian areas in Gaza, the IDF [Israeli Defense Forces] is committed to international law including taking feasible steps to minimize harm to civilians," it added.

According to the health ministry, more than 20,000 people have been killed - mostly children and women - and 54,000 injured in Gaza since 7 October, when Hamas and other Palestinian groups attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking about 240 hostages.

Earlier on Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the war had come at a "very heavy price" for his country.

The Israeli military said more than a dozen soldiers had been killed in Gaza since Friday, bringing the total for the ground offensive launched after 7 October to 154.

Saturday was one of its deadliest days but Mr Netanyahu said there was "no choice" but to keep fighting.

Mourners attend the funeral of Israeli soldier Staff sergeant David Bogdanovskyi, who was killed in the Gaza Strip during the Israeli army's ongoing ground operation amid the conflict with Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, at a cemetery in Haifa, Israel, December 24, 2023
Reuters

The new ceasefire proposal by Egypt would be implemented in three parts:

  • The first phase of the ceasefire would see a humanitarian pause of seven to ten days during which Hamas would release all civilian hostages in exchange for some Palestinian prisoners from Israeli jails
  • In the week-long second phase, Hamas would release all Israeli female soldiers in return for more prisoners and the exchange of corpses held since 7 October
  • The third phase, which would last a month, would see the release of the remaining hostages and a number of Palestinian prisoners and Israel withdrawing from the Gaza Strip and suspension of all aerial activities.

Indirect negotiations would be held in Egypt with Qatari and US participation.

An Israeli source told Maariv newspaper that the Egyptian initiative could lead to negotiations. Hamas says it is studying the proposal.

In another development, Pope Francis appealed for peace in the Middle East as he presided over a Christmas Eve Mass at Saint Peter's Basilica in the Vatican.

Referring to the war between Israel and Hamas, the Pope said Jesus's message of peace was being drowned out by the "futile logic of war" in the very land where he had been born.

The Pope, 24 December
Reuters

Additional reporting by other BBC News staff

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2023-12-25 02:02:09Z
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Putin rocked by troop revolt as entire Russian military unit rage at Ukraine war 'lies' - Express

The furious reaction of Russian soldiers was filmed just moments after they were told that they were being reassigned from Territorial Defences to "stormtroopers" in the Ukraine war.

In the video, several Russian troops raged at the betrayal, with three of them speaking directly to the camera. One soldier said they "were lied to" by their commanders, as another added the military would "sell them out in Ukraine".

The social media account Visegrad 24 tweeted the video, which was posted on Telegram, adding: "A Russian military unit is upset with its commanders after having been reclassified from territorial defense into stormtroopers They say that they haven’t even been able to practice shooting for weeks, and now suddenly they are to storm Ukrainian trenches."

READ MORE: Tell us if you are worried about Vladimir Putin declaring World War 3

The soldier in the video tells the camera: "We have been here since the 26th of November. Our officers lied to our faces that we are Territorial Defences.

"The Lt. Colonel just came out and said we are now a motor rifle unit. We are stormtroopers! We're stormtroopers now - not Territorial Defences."

He added: "They just told us! They lied to us! We haven't held guns for two weeks. We went to the shooting range to throw grenades, but they had run out of them."

Another soldier chimed in: "They didn't even have a bus for us, we had to walk 10km from here to there."

A third soldier tells the camera: "How the f*** are we meant to fight under these officers? They will sell us out in Ukraine. F*******!"

The video comes less than 24 hours after a similar rant from a frontline soldier who accuses Vladimir Putin of neglecting the country's troops in Ukraine. The soldier deployed near Marinka in Donetsk says that the Russian leadership has left the forces "rot in the trenches".

This follows a new intelligence briefing from the British Ministry of Defence (MoD) which suggests some Ukrainian and Russian troops have likely been enduring large rodent infestations on the front lines. Unverified reports claim that Russian units are beginning to experience heightened sickness cases attributed to the pest problem.

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2023-12-24 22:11:00Z
CBMiX2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmV4cHJlc3MuY28udWsvbmV3cy93b3JsZC8xODQ4OTMyL3ZsYWRpbWlyLXB1dGluLXJ1c3NpYS1taWxpdGFyeS1hcm15LXJldm9sdC11a3JhaW5l0gFjaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZXhwcmVzcy5jby51ay9uZXdzL3dvcmxkLzE4NDg5MzIvdmxhZGltaXItcHV0aW4tcnVzc2lhLW1pbGl0YXJ5LWFybXktcmV2b2x0LXVrcmFpbmUvYW1w