Olympic officials have defended
Russia's use of fake TV footage to stop viewers realising the iconic
rings had failed to light during the opening ceremony - claiming: 'I
don't see what the problem is to be honest'.
Minutes
into the ceremony in Sochi, there was a glitch when one of the five
snowflakes failed to open out into an Olympic ring - leading a planned
pyrotechnic display to be cancelled.
However,
state broadcaster Rossiya 1 cut straight to rehearsal footage where the
rings came together and exploded on cue, with producers confirming the
switch had happened to preserve the imagery of the Olympic symbols.
Today, Mark Adams,
of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), said some broadcasters
'decided to take some other footage' while others did not.
Now you see it: Russian state television aired
the moment one of the five snowflakes began to fail at the Olympics
opening ceremony...
Now you don't: ... Until producers, realising
what was happening, cut to rehearsal footage where all five rings had
unfurled without a hitch
Rings fail: Despite the best efforts of Russian
state TV, the image of the malfunctioning rings had been sent around the
world within minutes
Great expectations: The snowflakes were
accompanied by the moon and began to converge into the formation of the
Olympic rings at the start of the ceremony...
Defence: Mark Adams, of the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) defended Russia's use of fake TV footage -
claiming: 'I don't see what the problem is to be honest'
Support: Mr Adams (left), from Britain, said the
ceremony had been 'very well organised' despite the ring blunder
(right) and the show was 'even better on television'.
Controversy: Figure skater Irina Rodnina,
pictured right with Vladislav Tretyak, provoked outrage in September
when she Tweeted a 'racist' photo of Barack Obama
Let there be light! Hockey great Vladislav
Tretiak and three-time gold winner Irina Rodnina lit the cauldron to the
sound of Stravinsky's Firebird Suite, after the torch was brought into
the stadium by Sochi-born tennis star Maria Sharapova and handed to
President Putin's rumoured girlfriend of several years, ex-gymnast Alina
Kabaeva
Connection: Russian gymnast Alina Kabaeva, left,
was one of the final torchbearers in the ceremony - and has been
romantically linked to President Vladimir Putin, right
Rumours: Talk of the pair, pictured, dates back
at least 13 years. In 2001 (when the pair are pictured at an official
event) Putin strongly denied a newspaper report that he had divorced his
wife and planned to marry Kabaeva
Controversy: Irina Rodnina, far left, receives
the torch from Alina Kabaeva. Rodnina posted a 'racist' photo of Barack
Obama on Twitter last year while Kabaeva has long been rumoured to be a
lover of President Putin, which he denied
Racist? Irina Rodnina, right, posted this
doctored photo on Twitter in September showing U.S. President Barack
Obama looking hungrily at a banana. Many observers claimed it was racist
and intended to compare America's first black president to a monkey. At
the time she replied: 'Freedom of speech is freedom of speech'
Diplomacy: The Russian president (centre) knows that the Olympics are a chance to show an image of his country to the world
Looking glum? The eyes of the world have been on
Russia and President Vladimir Putin, pictured standing with IOC
President Thomas Bach during the national anthem
Controversy: 'Faux-lesbian' popstars Yulia
Volkova and Lena Katina of t.A.T.u. performed their 2003 Number 7 hit
Not Gonna Get Us, which depicted them as two runaway schoolgirls in
love, despite the Russian state and violent vigilante groups cracking
down on so-called gay 'propaganda'
Gay rights? tATu made their name with lyrics
about two women falling in love, but hours after their performance
police cracked down on a gay rights protest in Moscow
'It is a very technical
Olympic ceremony, very well organized,' said Mr Adams, from Britain.
'But the show itself was a fantastic one. I don't see what the problem
is, to be honest.'
Mr Adams added that the extravagant event had been 'even better on television'.
Officials
have also spoken out in defence of three-time figure skating gold
medallist, Irina Rodnina, who was chosen to light the cauldron with
hockey legend, Vladislav Tretiak.
On Friday, Rodnina sparked outrage with a tweet from last year featuring a 'racist' photo of US president
Barack Obama doctored to include a banana.
But today, Sochi
organising chief Dmitry Chernyshenko declared Rodnina was one of the
world's 'most respected' athletes and 'the Olympics is not
about politics'.
Mr Adams added: 'She was
chosen for what she's done in sport. She's a triple gold medalist in
skating and she's done a great deal of work for sport and that's what
she was chosen for.'
The
rings failing to light was the biggest of several embarrassing moments
on the night President Putin wanted to show off his country to the
world.
Konstantin Ernst,
executive creative director of the opening ceremony, told reporters he
called down to master control to tell them to go to the practice footage
when he realised what happened. 'This
is certainly bad, but it does not humiliate us', he insisted, adding
that the use of pre-recorded footage was an 'open secret'.
The show's artistic director George Tsypin confirmed the malfunction was caused by a bad command from a stage manager.
Scare bear: The gigantic, animatronic polar bear
mascot for the Games, centre, caused hilarity on Twitter and quickly
gained the nickname Nightmare Bear
What a trip: Despite being nimble for a living, an unlucky member of
Austria's delegation was photographed after falling over on their face
The five were supposed
to join together and erupt in pyrotechnics similar to those of London
2012 - but instead they were eventually darkened and moved out of the
arena as Russian President Vladimir Putin was introduced.
It
came on a night featuring torchbearers which included Putin's rumoured gymnast lover; pop stars who have pretended to be
lesbians despite real gay people facing a crackdown; and an enormous
droopy-eyed animatronic bear.
And
today, anti-terrorism police are believed to be questioning a Ukrainian
man who reportedly tried to hijack a Turkey-bound flight to Sochi,
Russia, as the ceremony was beginning.
The
man - identified as Artem Hozlov - allegedly claimed he had a bomb and
tried to divert the Pegasus Airlines flight, but was stopped when the
crew tricked him and landed in Istanbul instead, where he was subdued by
security officers who sneaked on board.
Police are currently trying to determine whether the man has any links to any terror groups, according to TRT television.
One of the biggest reactions to the ceremony came on the
internet for mascot The Polar Bear - who was described by Games
organisers as a bobsleigh champion but provoked mirth on Twitter, where
users claimed it would haunt their dreams.
An
enormous robotic incarnation of the bear came out and performed to the
crowd, blinking and bowing accompanied by a snowboarding leopard and a
skiing hare - but his droopy eyes were compared variously to those of a
cannabis smoker, a drunk and a criminal.
Twitter
user @d_a_shin even joked: 'I'm pretty sure North Korea could have done
a better job with #Olympics2014 than Sochi #NightmareBear.'
The cauldron was lit by three-time gold-winning figure skater Irina
Rodnina, accompanied by hockey great Vladislav Tretiak.
But there was anger in some quarters - as Rodnina sparked outrage in September last year when she Tweeted a doctored,
allegedly racist photo of Barack Obama looking hungrily at a banana.
Many observers claimed the photo was an attempt to compare America's first black president to a
monkey. At the time, she replied: 'Freedom of speech is freedom of speech, and you should answer for your own hang-ups.'
Let the Games begin! Fireworks exploded over the
Olympic stadium in the Black Sea resort of Sochi as the 2014 Winter
Olympics got under way
Off with a bang: Fireworks are seen over Olympic Park during the opening ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics
Welcome to Sochi! Fireworks explode over the
Fisht Olympic stadium after the ceremony, which first got under way at
exactly 4.14pm GMT
Opulent: The £32 billion price tag had paid for
the huge stadium, impressive venues in the mountains and a compact
purpose-built Olympic Park on the coast
Hello Sochi! The Russian Olympic team came on in
fur-style coats to the soundtrack of a remix between Not Gonna Get Us,
by tATu, and We Will Rock You
National pride: Suited to the cold weather, the
Russian athletes wore red, white and blue echoing the colours of the
national flag
Pride of Britain: Britain's flag-bearer Jon Eley leads the Team GB contingent onto the stadium during the opening ceremony
Our boys and girls: Short track speed skater
Eley heads a cheering Team GB in dark blues and reds, waving the Union
flag as the walk onto the stadium to applause
Flying the flag: Team GB, led by Jon Eley, wore
Russian-style hats and thick coats as they paraded through the stadium.
Prime Minister David Cameron was notably absent
Glittering: Nordic combined skier Todd Lodwick
of the United States Olympic team carried his country's flag as they
became one of the last to emerge into the stadium
Loud outfits: The German Olympic team entered
the stadium in flamboyant fashion with costumes shining in bright red,
yellow, green and blue
Garish: The German entourage certainly wrapped
up warmly - and brightly - as they walked into the Fisht stadium during
the parade of nations
Stars and stripes: Barack Obama did not attend
the opening ceremony in Sochi, instead sending a delegation of gay
athletes in protest at a crackdown on sexuality
One is not particularly amused: The Princess
Royal, Princess Anne, did not seem to find the spectacle at the Fisht
Olympic Stadium interesting enough, so went into her bag to grab a good
book instead
Tonight police were in Moscow's Red Square trying to quell a gay rights protest, hours after the performance by tATu.
During
the ceremony, IOC President Thomas Bach made the strongest reference
yet to the controversy around Russia's apparent state-sanctioned
homophobia.
He
told the packed stadium: 'The Olympic Games are never about erecting
walls to keep people apart. They're a sports festival embracing human
diversity, embracing unity.'
With the eyes of the world fixed on Sochi's 40,000-seat stadium, it was always going to be tough getting everything right.
Spectacular
though it was, however, the Winter Olympics opening ceremony was not perfect.
Arguably the most attention on the internet was handed to not Putin or a sporting celebrity - but a giant
animatronic droopy-eyed bear.
The
official mascot for the 2014 Games quickly gained the nickname
'Nightmare Bear' on Twitter, and its droopy blinking eyes were compared
jokingly to those of a drunk or a cannabis smoker.
The
first whiff of real controversy over the ceremony - which came after
days of complaints about 'shoddy' accommodation - was before it even
started, with a pre-show performance by the faux-lesbian pop act tATu
despite Russian officials cracking down on gay rights protestors in
their own country.
The
duo, Lena Katina and Julia Volkova, sang a Russian version of their hit
single Not Gonna Get Us, holding hands on the stage and surrounded by
Games volunteers. The single, which reached number seven in the UK
charts in 2003, lyrically depicted the pair as teenage runaways-in-love.
The song was then remixed with We Will Rock You for the walking-out of the Russian Olympic team.
Scale: The ceremony featured a 200ft-long lit-up
Troika, an 18th Century carriage pulled by three horses, as part of the
story of Russia's history
History: Performers re-enacted the construction
of Moscow's St Basil's Cathedral, so beautiful its architect was blinded
afterwards so it would be unique
Vibrant: Dancers performed around inflated objects which were designed to represent St Basil's Cathedral
Through the looking-glass: The onion domes of
the cathedral took on a dream-like quality as they were turned into
multi-coloured teapots and inflatables
Jumping for joy: Circus-like performers in
brightly-coloured outfits around the construction of St Basil's
Cathedral in the inside of the stadium
Spectacle: Performers and dancers were lit up during the ceremony into the shape of a bird on the floor of the stadium
Left, dancers perform, while right, 'Lubov'
(Love), the main character featured in the Opening Ceremony, is
suspended over performers in classic Russian costumes
Glimmering: The elaborate costumes made the
performers look like otherworldly shapes - or to some, birds, jellyfish
or lampshades
Dancing for their country: Danila Korsuntsev and
Svetlana Zakharova perform in the ceremony, which featured Russian
classical music and a dramatisation of War and Peace
Choreographed: What the ceremony lacked in the
mass human spectacle of Beijing 2008, for example, it made up for with
modern costumes, dances and lighting
Sailing through the past: At one point a giant
projection on the floor of the stadium depicted a sailing ship, with
people standing on the deck
Inspired: The ceremony began with Lubov, the
so-called 'Hero Girl', being lifted up on strings and into a journey
through Russia's history and culture
Is it over yet? A Russian child yawns while
others wave the national flag as the national anthem is played during
the live broadcast of the ceremony in downtown Sochi
Then, minutes into the ceremony, was an embarrassing glitch when one of the five Olympic rings failed to appear.
The ceremony in the Black Sea resort
began at 4.14 GMT (8.14pm local time) with a small girl called Love asleep being
swept up in the air with the help of a kite.
The
backstory was that she dreams of Russia and that her dream will take us
on a journey of the land. Four kilometres of rail were laid out on
the roof of the Fisht Olympic Stadium to support nine giant floats,
representing different parts of the Russian Federation.
In attendance were dozens of world
leaders, but Barack Obama, Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister
David Cameron were all notably absent.
Present but not looking amused was Britain's Princess Anne, who opened up a
good book and started reading in the middle of the opening ceremony.
Glitches aside, the ceremony
featured spectacular stagecraft in its retelling of Russia's history -
including a 200ft long lit-up Troika, an 18th Century carriage drawn by
three horses, being pulled across the stadium to the sound of
Stravinsky's Rite of Spring.
Other
huge constructions included St Basil's Cathedral, whose multicoloured onion
domes dominate Red Square in Moscow, followed by a huge projection of a
ship crossing the sea across the stadium floor.
The
Russian Revolution loomed large in the ceremony, though some of the decades of Soviet
brutality were depicted almost with nostalgia as 1960s cars zoomed
around the stadium floor to the sound of the Soviet pop hit I Am Glad,
Because I'm Finally Back Home - which has since become a massive
internet meme known as the 'Trololol song'.
A
dazzling array of Russian cultural and social icons including Valentina
Tereshkova, the first woman cosmonaut to travel into space, and
prominent musicians and a journalist carried the Olympic flag.
Unity: International Olympic Committee President
Thomas Bach appeared to condemn Russia's anti-gay 'propaganda' laws,
telling the packed stadium and hundreds of millions of people on TV:
'The Olympic Games are never about erecting walls to keep people apart.
They're a sports festival embracing human diversity, embracing unity'
Stern faces: Russian President Vladimir Putin,
right, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach, centre,
and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, left
Prime seats: Among the guests at the ceremony have been Russian billionaire and the owner of Chelsea FC Roman Abramovich, centre
The eyes of the world: Afghan President Hamid
Karzai watches fireworks from the stands during the opening ceremony of
the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics
Is it better than mine? Lord Sebastian Coe
(centre) who was in charge of the London 2012 Games, had a seat in the
stadium for the vast spectacle
ID please, Princess: Even Britain's Princess
Anne could not forego wearing a huge identity card with her photo
attached. She was later seen reading a book in the stands
Weight of the world on his shoulders: President
Vladimir Putin waits in the presidential lounge of the stadium to be
introduced to the world
Happy waves: Putin and IOC President Thomas Bach greet the audience during the Opening Ceremony
Tennis star: Handed the honour of carrying the
torch into the stadium was grand slam champion Maria Sharapova, who was
born in the Black Sea resort of Sochi
Dreamy landscape: The floats each represented
one specific area of Russia, and were moved around the Fisht Stadium
with the help of four kilometres of rail on the roof
Scenes from some of the seven islands that
represent the diversity of Russia float past during the Opening
Ceremony of the Sochi Winter Olympics at the Fisht Olympic Stadium
The opening ceremony began with mellow music,
showing a little girl in a small Russian village who is lifted up by a
kite in a dreamlike landscape and dreams of the Russian Federation
Get ready, set, go: The sun sets over the Olympic Park before the opening ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi
Mother Russia! An ecstatic spectator in a bear costume waves her patriotic scarf as the opening ceremony approaches
The
torch was then carried into the stadium by tennis star Maria Sharapova -
who was born in Sochi - before being handed to Alina Kabaeva.
The games will last for 16 days, and nearly 100 medals will be handed out to athletes from across the globe.
Sochi
2014 organisers said 66 leaders, including heads of state and
international organisations, were due to make an appearance the ceremony, with
the United Nations' secretary-general Ban Ki-moon and the respective
leaders of China and Japan joining Putin in
the VIP box.
A
£32 billion price tag demonstrates that no expense has been spared in
staging the Games on the Black Sea coast, with impressive venues in the
mountains and a compact purpose-built Olympic Park on the coast.
Around
2,900 athletes are set to compete in 15 disciplines starting on
Saturday, switching the focus from concerns over security, human rights
and last-minute hitches to the sporting action.
The opening ceremony at the Fisht
Olympic Stadium was designed to showcase to the world the ultimate achievement of Vladimir Putin's Russia.
The
ceremony focused on Russia and Olympic ideals of sportsmanship and
achievement. The ceremony's director, Konstantin Ernst, promised
‘relatively simple metaphors’ - and no obscure references, like the NHS
nurses in the London Games' opening ceremony, which he called one of the
most ‘incomprehensible’ moments in Olympic history.
Most
of the performance instead leaned on Russia's rich classical
music traditions, with piano virtuoso Denis Matsuev performing, opera
soprano Anna Netrebko singing the Olympic anthem, and several
compositions by Igor Stravinsky, the Russian composer so avant-garde
that the premiere of his 1913 Rite of Spring prompted riots in Paris.
Let the Games begin: As the sun sets over the
Olympic park, fans are flocking to the Fisht Olympic Stadium for the
opening ceremony of Sochi 2014
Fisheye in Fisht: In a photo taken with a
fisheye lens, spectators arrive at the Fisht Olympic Stadium prior to
the start of the opening ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics
True dedication: A Canadian fan has got the
Olympic rings shaved into his hair to show his love for the Winter Games
which starts tonight
Probably not the Daft Punk song: The Ministry of
Internal Affairs choir sings 'Get Lucky' during the Opening Ceremony of
the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics at Fisht Olympic Stadium
Let's get started: Pre-show hosts Ivan Urgant,
left, and Yana Churikova arrive during for the non-televised part of the
show at Fisht Olympic Stadium
Defending the performance by tATu compared to the country's strict crackdown on gay rights, the event's producer
said Not Gonna Get Us was chosen because it was one of the only
Russian pop songs that international viewers might recognize.
Mr Ernst also argued that the
choice was about motivating athletes with an upbeat dance song that
challenges competitors by saying ‘you're not going to get us.’
While
the singers put on a lesbian act, they have not championed gay rights
and it is largely seen as an attention-seeking gimmick.
It contrasts with the very real anger
over a Russian law banning gay 'propaganda' aimed at minors that is
being used to discriminate against gays.
Some
world leaders and activists have protested the law, and President
Barack Obama is skipping the opening ceremony and sending a delegation
that includes prominent gay athletes instead.
International companies such as Google have changed their logos for the day to include rainbow colours in protest at the law.
The
show was focused for TV audiences, with projections onto the stadium
floor, so fans in the stands won't enjoy the full effect.
Asked
whether Putin might arrive at the ceremony from the air, like stunt
actors playing James Bond and Queen Elizabeth II did at in London, Ernst
said, ‘it's hardly worth hoping for that.’
The
Winter Games ceremony is generally a more low-key event than the summer
opener. Ernst said organizers tried to keep it from dragging out too
long, since most viewers only care to watch their own team and its key
rivals.
Getting ready to rumble: Britain's James Woods
takes a jump during ski slopestyle training at the Rosa Khutor Extreme
Park in Krasnaya Polyana on Friday
Russian pride: Local fans wave as they arrive at the stadium for the opening ceremony of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics
The shiny veneer: The snow-covered Caucasus
Mountains are visible behind the Iceberg Skating Palace and its palm
trees, a result of subtropical Sochi being on the same latitude as
Southern France, inside Olympic Park
Meanwhile,
deputy prime minister Dmitry Kozak has said that the Olympics in Sochi
will be 'just as safe as Boston', less than one year after the terrorist
attack at the Boston Marathon.
The
bombings at the Boston Marathon on April 15, killed three and injured
an estimated 264 people, when two Chechen nationals, brothers Dzhokhar
and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, detonated two pressure cooker bombs near the
finish line.
Mr Kozak said
Russia can guarantee the safety of people attending the Sochi Games as
efficiently as any other government hosting a major event.
'I
believe that warnings about Sochi, about Russia were superfluous, and
the threat levels in Sochi are just like they are in Boston or London,'
he said.
'I would like to reiterate that security in Sochi will be no worse than in New York, London, Washington or Boston.'
Sochi
has already had a bumpy start as journalist arrived to unfinished
hotels, sewage spilling out of the taps and water ‘too dangerous to use
on your face’ – and those were the lucky ones who even got a room.
Journalists
checking in were left stunned as they arrived for bookings made last
summer to be told they would have to wait indefinitely.
The few that did get rooms, were met with stray dogs, half-built walls, and toxic yellow water spitting from the sinks.
One hotel lobby had no floor - but staff had found time to hang a framed photo of Vladimir Putin.
One reporter was told to wait a day for their room, which had no running water, no internet - and no door to access it.
Nearby,
hotel managers advised guests not to splash water on their faces as it
'contains something dangerous' and despite having booked 11 rooms five
months ago, CNN's team were told to share one.
Judged by the eyes of the world: Judges watch an
attempt during the men's normal hill ski jumping training at the 2014
Winter Olympics, Friday
Getting ready for tonight: A performer rehearses
a dance at the Ded Moroz Residence, home of the Russian Santa, at
Olympic Park prior to the start of the 2014 Winter Olympics
On thin ice: Evgeni Plushenko of Russia during
his performance in the Team Men Short Program of figure skating and
Zhang Hao (bottom) and her partner Peng Cheng of China, compete during
the Team Short Program Pairs of Figure Skating
What a dolly day! A competitor makes a jump in
front of a matryoshka doll during snowboard Slopestyle training at the
Rosa Khutor Extreme Park
Hard to pull off: A Japanese speed skater trains with her team as the eyes of the world rest on the Black Sea resort
In
response to the shocking conditions, Russia's deputy prime minister
Dmitry Kozak attempted to argue that the images and tweets were a
deliberate attempt by journalists to paint Russia in a bad light.
When
confronted about the conditions in accommodations, Mr Kozak said he had
proof of 'sabotage' on surveillance footage from hotel rooms.
'We
have surveillance video from the hotels that shows people turn on the
shower, direct the nozzle at the wall and then leave the room for the
whole day,' Mr Kozak said.
A
spokesman for Kozak later told the Wall Street Journal that the deputy
premier had misspoke and there were no surveillance cameras inside hotel
bathrooms.
In a bid to make
the area presentable to welcome in people from around the world, the
animals are being fed poison on the streets and left to die.
The
action, sanctioned by Putin, involves rounding up stray animals,
feeding them poison, and leaving them on the streets to die.
The
strategy has outraged animal rights activists - and baffled journalists
arriving in Sochi this week who claim the city is brimming with ailing
dogs.
The shocking images
and anecdotes comes after it emerged Russia exceeded its budget by
millions and has ended up spending more than $52billion (£31.8billion)
on the games.
Meanwhile, a
top U.S. counterterrorist official says there are 'a number of specific
threats' aimed at the Winter Olympics- with the greatest danger coming
from the Caucasus Emirate, which has threatened to attack the games.
Russia
has mounted a massive security operation for the Olympics, deploying
more than 50,000 police and soldiers amid threats from Muslim
insurgents.
The man in charge: Russian President Vladimir
Putin awaits the arrival of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on
Friday afternoon at his newly built Bocharov Ruchey state residence in
Sochi
Fans arriving: A United States spectator wears a
fuzzy hat decorated with the U.S. and Russian flags, as well as the
Communist hammer and sickle during men's and women's downhill practice
The opening ceremony is not until Friday, but the sparse attendance does not bode well for the Sochi games
Protection in place: Heavily-armed Russian military flash a thumbs up while patrolling Olympic Park prior to opening ceremony
The
athletes hoping to take the spotlight from the logistics disaster,
include Short Track speed skater Jon Eley who is Great Britain's flag
bearer for the opening of a Games.
Team
GB have been set a target of winning at least three medals in Sochi and
Lizzy Yarnold, who tops the current skeleton rankings, is arguably the
strongest bet to deliver.
Yarnold's
Skeleton team-mate Shelley Rudman, the men's and women's curling teams
skippered by David Murdoch and Eve Muirhead respectively, freestyle
skiing slopestylers James Woods and Katie Summerhayes and short track
speed skater Elise Christie are other strong medal prospects.
The
host nation will also be determined to challenge towards the top of the
medals table, having finished in a lowly 11th place in Vancouver.
Norway, Canada and the United States are most likely to be battling it out to top the medals table in Sochi.
Making
their first appearance at the Winter Olympics will be women's ski jump,
luge team relay and biathlon mixed relay, and five gold medals will be
competed for on Saturday in snowboarding, where Britain's Jamie Nicholls
will compete in the final, speedskating, biathlon, cross-country skiing
and freestyle skiing.
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