January
11, 2024
Lawyers
for South Africa argued before the World Court in The Hague on Thursday why
Israel was committing genocide in Gaza and why the court must stop them now,
reports Joe Lauria.
Adila Hassim, attorney for South Africa, addressing the World Court, with the Israel delegation looking on. (UN TV screenshot)
South
Africa asked the International Court of Justice on Thursday to order Israel to
stop its genocidal rampage against Palestinians in Gaza, saying that the “very
reputation of international law … hangs in the balance” in the historic case it
has brought.
The
South Africans laid out what seems like a difficult case to refute that Israel
is violating four sections of Article 2 of the Convention on the Prevention and
Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, which Israel ratified, namely that:
“… Genocide means any of the following acts
committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical,
racial or religious group, as such: (a) Killing members of the group; (b)
Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately
inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its
physical destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to
prevent births within the group.”
South
Africa was not arguing on Thursday the merits of the case of whether Israel is
or isn’t committing genocide, which will be decided much later, but rather
whether there is sufficient evidence at the outset for the Court to issue a
“provisional measure” ordering Israel to immediately end its military
operation.
Genocidal
Intent
Proving
intent is crucial to arriving at a finding of genocide, and the South Africans
laid out in great detail the “genocidal rhetoric” of Israeli officials and how
it has influenced Israeli soldiers and airmen attacking Gaza. Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu twice referred to an Old Testament genocide implying the
same was needed for Gaza.
“The
genocidal invocation to Amalek was anything but idle,” said attorney Tembeka
Ngcukaitobi. He then showed a video of
Israeli soldiers singing in celebration of a victory in Gaza, in which they
mention Amalek.
On
Oct. 9, Defense Minister, Yoav Gallant, Ngcukaitobi said:
“gave a situation update to the Army where
he said that as Israel was imposing a complete siege on Gaza, there would be
‘no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel,’ everything would be closed
because Israel is fighting human animals. Speaking to troops on the Gaza
border, he instructed them that he has released all the restraints and that
Gaza won’t return to what it was before.
‘We will eliminate everything. We will
reach all places. Eliminate everything there, reach all places without any
restraints.’
Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu said that
Israel must find ways for Gazans that are more painful than death. It is no
answer to say that neither are in command of the army. They are ministers in
the Israeli government. They vote in the Knesset and are in a position to shape
state policy. The intent to destroy Gaza has been nurtured at the highest
levels of state. …
Senior political and military officials
encouraged without censure, the 95 year old Israeli army reservist Ezra Yachin,
a veteran of the Deir Yassin massacre against the Palestinians in 1948, to
speak to the soldiers ahead of the ground invasion in Gaza. In his talk, he
echoed the same sentiment while being driven around in an official Israeli army
vehicle dressed in Israeli army fatigue.
‘I quote the triumphant and finish them off
and don’t leave anyone behind. Erase the memory of them. Erase them, their
families, mothers and children. These animals can no longer live. If you have
an Arab neighbor, don’t wait. Go to his home and shoot him. We want to invade.
Not like before. We want to enter and destroy what’s in front of us and destroy
houses.'”
The
lawyers for South Africa put the current catastrophe in Gaza in historical
context of years of violating Palestinians’ rights and pointed out that, “For
more than half a century those violations occured in a world where Israel for
years has regarded itself as beyond and above the law.”
Preempting
Israel’s Defense
The
South Africans anticipated Israel’s defense, which will be delivered on Friday.
Vaughan Lowe, a British barrister representing South Africa, dismissed Israel’s
often repeated argument that it is only targeting Hamas, and not the
Palestinian people.
“Months
of continuous bombing, flattening entire residential blocks and cutting off
food, water electricity and communications to an entire population cannot
credibly be argued to be a manhunt for members of Hamas,” Lowe said.
While
South Africa condemned Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, “Nothing can ever justify
genocide, no matter what some individuals within the group of Palestinians in
Gaza may have done,” he said.
Lowe
also dismissed the mantra repeated by Israel and its allies, that it has “a
right to self-defense” in Gaza. He referred to a 2004 World Court decision
against the legality of Israel’s wall, which is built on occupied Palestinian
territory.
“In
its advisory opinion on the wall case, the court noted that the threat that
Israel had argued justified the construction of the wall was not imputed to a
foreign state, but emanated from the occupied Palestinian territory over which
Israel itself exercises control,” Lowe said.
“For
those reasons, the court decided, as a matter of international law, the right
of self-defense under Article 51 of the charter, the U.N. Charter, had no
relevance in such circumstances,” he said.
Just
three weeks ago the U.N. Security Council reaffirmed that Gaza is occupied
territory, he said. “The tightness of its grip may have varied, but no one can
doubt the continuous reality of Israel’s grip on Gaza,” Lowe said.
“The
court’s legal holding from 2004 holds good, and a similar point is to be made
here what Israel is doing in Gaza, it is doing in territory under its own
control. Its actions are enforcing its occupation. The law on self-defense
under Article 51 of the U.N. Charter has no application,” he said.
Urgency
Irish
lawyer Blinne Ni Ghralaigh, representing South Africa, argued why the Court
must urgently act to stop Israel. She said:
“There is an urgent need for provisional
measures to protect Palestinians in Gaza from the irreparable prejudice caused
by Israel’s violations of the Genocide Convention. The United Nations
Secretary-General and its chiefs describe the situation in Gaza variously as a
crisis of humanity, a living hell, a bloodbath, a situation of utter, deepening
and unmatched horror where an entire population is besieged and under attack,
denied access to the essentials for survival on a massive scale.
Supplies are inundated by desperate people
seeking safety. A public health disaster is unfolding. Infectious diseases are
spreading in overcrowded shelters as sewers spill over. Some 180 women are
giving birth daily. Amidst this chaos, people are facing the highest levels of
food insecurity ever recorded. Famine is around the corner.
Reports of executions and torture and ill
treatment are mounting, as are images of decomposing bodies of Palestinian men,
women and children left unburied where they were killed. Some are being picked
upon by animals. It is becoming ever clearer that huge swathes of Gaza, entire
towns, villages, refugee camps are being wiped from the map, as you have heard.
But it bears repeating. According to the
World Food Program, four out of five people in the world in famine or a
catastrophic type of hunger are in Gaza right now. Indeed, experts warn that
deaths from starvation and disease risk significantly outstripping deaths from
bombings. The daily statistics stand as clear evidence of the urgency and of
the irreparable prejudice on the basis of the current figures.
On average, 247 Palestinians are being
killed and are at risk of being killed each day. Many of them literally blown
to pieces. They include 48 mothers each day to every hour and over 117 children
each day, leading UNICEF to call Israel’s actions a war on children.
On current rates, which show no sign of
abating each day over three medics, two teachers, more than one United Nations
employee and more than one journalist will be killed, many while at work or in
what appear to be targeted attacks on their family homes or where they are
sheltering.
And the risk of famine will increase each
day. Each day, an average of 629 people will be wounded some multiple times
over. As they move from place to place, desperately seeking sanctuary each day.
Over ten Palestinian children will have one or both legs amputated, many
without anesthetic. Each day on current rates, an average of 3900 Palestinian
homes will be damaged or destroyed. …
Repeating a long history of mass forced
displacement of Palestinians by Israel, there is no indication at all that
Israel accepts responsibility for rebuilding what it has destroyed. Instead,
the destruction is celebrated by the Israeli army. Soldiers film themselves,
joyfully detonating entire apartment blocks and towns squares, erecting the
Israeli flag over the wreckage, seeking to reestablish Israeli settlements on
the rubble of Palestinian homes, and thus extinguishing the very basis of
Palestinian life in Gaza. …
Despite the horror of the genocide against
the Palestinian people being live-streamed from Gaza to our mobile phones,
computers and television screens, the first genocide in history where its
victims are broadcasting their own destruction in real time in the desperate,
so far vain hope that the world might do something.
The world should be absolutely horrified.
The world should be absolutely outraged. There is no safe space in Gaza and the
world should be ashamed.”
The
hearing continues on Friday.
Will the ICJ find Israel guilty of genocide?
Attorney
Michael Sfard outlines what could play out as the world’s top court decides if
and how to intervene in Israel’s war on Gaza.
The
International Court of Justice (ICJ) today began a landmark hearing to
determine whether Israel’s devastating war on the Gaza Strip amounts to the
crime of genocide. While the deliberations on that question could take years,
South Africa, which filed the lawsuit, is aiming for the ICJ to issue several
interim orders, including requiring Israel to immediately suspend its military
operation; a ruling on these provisional measures could be issued within weeks.
Whether or not Israel would obey is another matter.
In
an 84-page document submitted ahead of the hearing, South Africa alleges that
Israel has violated the 1948 Genocide Convention — to which both states are
signatories — because its current actions “are intended to bring about the
destruction of a substantial part” of the Palestinian population in Gaza. At
the time of the hearing’s opening, Israel is reported to have killed over
23,350 Palestinians and forcibly displaced 85 percent of the Strip’s population
over the past three months of hostilities. The tightening of the siege since
the Hamas-led attacks of October 7 has also resulted in conditions of severe
starvation and the growing risk of mass death from disease.
In
a move that bucks its longstanding proclivity for boycotting hearings at
international courts, Israel has chosen to assemble a legal team to defend
itself. Two decades ago, Israel refused to participate in an ICJ hearing
concerning the legality of the separation barrier it had built in the occupied
West Bank, and has likewise snubbed more recent proceedings regarding the
legality of the occupation. Israel has also boycotted hearings into its conduct
at the International Criminal Court (ICC), a separate entity from the ICJ which
is located just across the street in The Hague.
Michael
Sfard, one of Israel’s leading human rights attorneys who deals extensively
with the state’s violations in the occupied territories, is very familiar with
this arena. Like many lawyers, he is in no hurry to wager on the outcome. That
said, in an interview in his office earlier this week, he told +972 and Local
Call that South Africa can certainly reach the threshold of proof required at
this stage for an interim order instructing Israel to stop the fighting in
Gaza. An order could also be issued requiring that Israel report to the Court
on how it is acting to prevent genocide, and how it is dealing with the
incitement to genocide emanating from its own political leaders.
While
noting that the ICJ is in many respects a “conservative tribunal,” Sfard adds
that it nonetheless represents the entire world — the majority of which is
non-Western. As such, it has historically had empathy for weak and oppressed
peoples, and was instrumental in the struggle to end apartheid in South Africa.
Now, in solidarity with Palestinians, South Africa leads the charge against
Israel.
The
following conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
Set
the scene for us: what is the ICJ, and why is the hearing taking place there?
The
1945 UN Charter — signed by all UN members, including Israel — affirms that the
ICJ is the UN’s supreme legal organ. The Constitution establishes two powers
for the Court: issuing advisory opinions, and ruling in cases between states.
The Court’s verdicts are binding on the states that have signed the UN
Constitution. A state can agree in an ad hoc manner that a particular dispute
will be litigated by the ICJ, or invoke signed treaties containing a clause
that establishes ICJ jurisdiction over disputes relating to those treaties.
Israel
has always had reservations about the jurisdiction clause, and has refrained
from agreeing to ICJ jurisdiction in all the hundreds of treaties it has
signed, except one: the Genocide Convention. Article 9 of the Convention
stipulated that if disagreements arise between the members over the
Convention’s authority or interpretation, the ICJ is the place to hear them.
ICJ
decrees are enforced by the UN Security Council. Chapters 6 and 7 of the UN
Charter allow for a range of sanctions against countries that violate the
Court’s ruling, such as economic sanctions, arms embargoes, and military
intervention. The latter is rare but it has happened, for example in the first
Gulf War.
Why
did Israel sign up to ICJ jurisdiction in the Genocide Convention?
I’m
not a legal historian; I can only guess. Israel was one of the initiators of
the treaty, and historically one can understand why Israel would have pushed
for such a treaty in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Secondly, I think that
back then, the popular Israeli notion that we do not let gentiles judge us had
not yet developed. We are talking about an era in which the international
system had recently decided to establish a Jewish state. Maybe there was a
little more trust in that system back then.
What
constitutes a violation of the Convention?
The
background to the Convention is World War II, and especially the Holocaust of
the Jewish people. Contrary to what many people think, the Nazis were not tried
for genocide. The crime of genocide did not exist in the “London Agreement,”
which is the charter of the Nuremberg Military Tribunal. They were tried
instead for the crime of extermination. But after Nuremberg, the argument arose
that the crime of extermination was not enough, and that it did not grasp the
peculiarity of mass extermination designed to wipe out a human group.
This
was a fascinating debate between two Jewish jurists, both Holocaust survivors
from Lviv in what is today Ukraine: Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term
“genocide,” and Hersch Lauterpacht, who coined the term “crime against
humanity.” Their disagreement revolved around whether murdering a million
people, because they belong to a certain group and with the aim of eradicating
that group, is worse than murdering a million people without this specific
intention.
Lemkin’s
interpretation was not expressed in Nuremberg, but later the UN decided to
designate genocide as a special category in and of itself, often calling it
“the crime of crimes.” It is defined as an act of extermination, or creating
conditions that will annihilate a particular group with the intention of
eradicating that group or even a distinct part of it.
The
Convention, which was integrated into Israeli law in 1950, states that a
soldier or civilian who kills a person, even one, while aware that he is part
of a system aimed at annihilation, is guilty of the crime of genocide. In
Israeli law, the punishment for this is the death penalty. This also applies to
those who conspire to commit genocide, those who incite genocide, and those who
attempt to participate in genocide.
What
is South Africa basing its lawsuit on?
South
Africa bases its accusation on two elements. One is Israel’s conduct. It cites
a great deal of statistics about the indiscriminate, disproportionate attacks
on civilian infrastructure, as well as about starvation, the huge number of
casualties, and the humanitarian catastrophe in the Strip — horrifying
statistics that the Israeli public is barely exposed to, because the mainstream
media here does not bring them to us.
The
second and more difficult element to prove is intent. South Africa is trying to
prove the intent through nine dense pages of references to quotes by senior
Israeli officials, from the president to the prime minister, government
ministers, Knesset members, generals, and military personnel. I counted more
than 60 quotes there — quotes about eradicating Gaza, flattening it, dropping
an atomic bomb on it, and all the things we’ve gotten used to hearing in recent
months.
South
Africa’s case does not rely only on the fact that some Israel leaders have made
genocidal statements. It further charges that Israel has done nothing in
response to these statements: it hasn’t condemned the statements, it hasn’t
dismissed from office the people who expressed them, it hasn’t opened
disciplinary proceedings against them, and it certainly hasn’t opened criminal
investigations. This, as far as South Africa is concerned, is a very strong
argument.
Even
if we haven’t heard the IDF Chief of Staff or the General of the Southern
Command say these things, and we don’t have an operational order that says, “Go
and destroy Gaza,” the very fact that these statements have been made by senior
Israeli officials without sanction or condemnation sufficiently expresses
Israel’s intention.
South
Africa also pulled a little legal stunt to get here, correct?
Yes.
The jurisdiction of the Court is determined when a dispute arises between the
parties over the interpretation or application of the Convention. South Africa
sent several letters to the Israeli government saying, “You are committing
genocide.” Israel responded, “No we aren’t.” So South Africa said, “Okay, we
have a dispute over the interpretation of the Convention.” That’s how it got
the authority.
What
can we learn from similar ICJ cases in the past, such as those regarding
genocides in Bosnia and Myanmar?
First
of all, we know from these cases that the burden of proof on South Africa is
significantly lower for obtaining an interim order than for ultimately proving
that Israel is committing genocide. We also know that this case will continue
for years: the Bosnia case took 14 years; Gambia v. Myanmar is still ongoing.
But the procedure for an interim order is fast.
Gambia
filed its case against Myanmar on behalf of the Organization of Islamic States.
It asked for an interim order stating that Myanmar must cease its military
operations [against the Rohingya people]. The Court ruled that at this stage of
the hearings, it did not need to determine whether the crime of genocide had
been committed. What it needs to decide is whether, without an interim order,
there is a real danger that the prohibitions set out in the Genocide Convention
will be violated.
An
interesting interim order was issued in that case, which I think has a good
chance of being issued to Israel as well — not in the context of military
activity, but of incitement. The Court’s order also required Myanmar to take
enforcement actions and submit reports to the ICJ and Gambia on what it was
doing to prevent genocide. As for the cessation of Myanmar’s military activity,
this matter went to the Security Council, where both Russia and China
threatened vetoes, but Western countries imposed sanctions and a military
embargo anyway.
So
even if South Africa fails to make the Court issue an interim order to stop
Israel’s military activity, it could be that in the context of incitement —
which enjoys full immunity in Israel — the Court will say that Israel needs to
do something.
What
claims can we expect to hear from Israel’s legal defense?
I
don’t think Israel can dispute the facts [regarding its conduct in Gaza]. On
the margins, it might say, “We didn’t destroy 10,000 buildings, only 9,700.”
The main arena of the legal battle will be over the question of intent. For
example, the forcible transfer of over 1 million Palestinians from the northern
Gaza Strip to the south will be presented by Israel, I suspect, as intended to
prevent harm to civilians.
Whereas
South Africa will argue that transfer endangers their lives.
If
you displace people to an area where there is no food or water, then you are
forcing them to a place where the conditions are such that they are calculated
to cause their death; this, while not [direct] murder, is still considered
genocide.
Will
Israel have to disclose its rules of engagement?
If
it is stated in the army’s rules of engagement [which are kept secret] that you
do not shoot someone whose hands are raised — and I don’t know if it is — then
this is important. It would undermine the thesis that the army went in to
eradicate everyone.
Israel’s
stated efforts in allowing humanitarian aid to enter Gaza — even if it is only
lip service — has created what lawyers call a “paper trail.” But Israel will
still have to explain the genocidal statements made by officials, especially
cabinet ministers.
By
saying that they’re stupid?
Yes.
In general, Israel could say that [certain officials] are stupid or unimportant
— that [Finance Minister] Bezalel Smotrich and [Heritage Minister] Amichai
Eliyahu have no influence over the military operation in Gaza. Israel will have
to make a big deal out of the very minor rebuke that Netanyahu gave to Eliyahu
[after the latter suggested that Israel could drop a nuclear bomb on Gaza] when
he said that Eliyahu was banned from attending cabinet meetings, but Eliyahu
attended them anyway. Israel will say that Netanyahu publicly condemned the
statement.
Will
Israel refer to the Hamas-led attacks of October 7?
Without
a doubt. They will frame the entire war through its own narrative: “This is not
a war that we initiated or wanted. On the contrary, there was an entire
humanitarian system vis-à-vis Gaza, Gazans worked in Israel, and they attacked
us, slaughtered us, raped our women, and then we embarked on a justified
defensive war like no other. Therefore to say that we have some kind of
conspiracy to eradicate the Palestinians is a misunderstanding of the context
in which this military operation took place.”
But
even if it is possible to accept the claim that there was no conspiracy to
eradicate the Palestinians prior to October 7, it does not contradict the fact
that October 7 may have produced such a desire.
Who
is there on behalf of South Africa?
South
Africa sent Dikgang Moseneke, the country’s former Deputy Chief Justice, to be
South Africa’s ad hoc judge in the hearing. Moseneke, who is black, was an
anti-apartheid activist who sat for 10 years in prison on Robben Island at a
time when Nelson Mandela was also incarcerated there.
The
head of South Africa’s legal team is Professor John Dugard, who is white, and
was also an opponent of the regime. He founded the most important legal
institute that fought against apartheid in the 1970s, and was the UN Special
Rapporteur for the occupied Palestinian territories in the 2000s — he knows the
Israeli occupation very well. And, in the interest of full disclosure, I’m also
very friendly with Dugard. He recently published an autobiography in which he
stated that during his life he experienced three apartheids: the first in South
Africa, the second in Namibia, and the third in Israel and the occupied
territories.
These
two figures arrive at the ICJ with significant moral standing. So too does
South Africa itself: the new South Africa brands itself as the spearhead of the
international community when it comes to respect for international law. It is
perhaps the only country in the world that has enshrined international law as a
constitutional principle.
What
do you make of Israel selecting the British barrister Malcolm Shaw to present
its defense, and former Supreme Court President Aharon Barak to be its ad hoc
judge on the panel?
Shaw
is a professor of international law, one of the world’s greatest experts in the
field. In the 1980s, he wrote a book that was very creatively named
“International Law,” and was subsequently reissued six times — I have a copy
here in the office. He also has a lot of experience representing states in
international tribunals, a lot of them to do with border disputes.
Much
has already been said about the appointment of Barak. From Israel’s
perspective, it’s a stroke of genius. Barak has a lot of prestige around the
world. Israeli human rights activists like me know two Baraks: the one inside
the Green Line, and the one beyond the Green Line. It really is a case of Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Which Barak will turn up at The Hague? It’s a good
question.
The
fact that Barak is a Holocaust survivor is definitely important. He brings with
him first-hand experience of genocide — it’s not just something theoretical or
legal for him. I think whoever selected him understood that if there is a
chance that any Israeli will be able to sway or convince the other judges in
their internal discussions, it’s him. It’s his charisma, it’s the prestige that
accompanies his name, and it’s his legal mind.
By
the way, those who are saying that he is there “representing Israel” are
shooting themselves in the foot. He is appointed by Israel, but from that
moment on he is supposed to be loyal only to international law and to his own
conscience.
But
if he does not rule in Israel’s favor, he has nowhere to come back to…
Correct.
I
know lawyers don’t like to wager on the results of court hearings, but if the
ICJ does produce an interim order, what will that mean for Israel?
If
the Court issues an order, the question is of course whether Israel will obey
it or not. Knowing Israel, I expect that it will not obey the order, unless it
can present the ending of hostilities as the result of its own independent
decision, unrelated to the Court order.
There
are good reasons for Israel to do this, because disobeying an ICJ order brings
things to the UN Security Council. It’s true that the United States has a veto
there, and therefore a resolution to impose sanctions on Israel would most
likely be blocked. But vetoing an ICJ order regarding concerns that genocide is
taking place would come at an enormous political price for the U.S. government,
both domestically and internationally.
The
Biden administration wants to portray itself as a government that sees human
rights as one of its pillars. So it is likely that the United States would only
veto such a resolution while imposing a significant cost on Israel in order to
justify doing so, such as allowing the residents of northern Gaza to return to
their homes, or entering into negotiations over two states — I don’t know.
But
even if the United States doesn’t use its veto in that scenario, an interim
order from the ICJ is likely to cause Israel serious problems.
There
is such a thing as an international legal “deep state.” Jurists and judges
listen to what important courts say. And when the ICJ, also known as the World
Court, makes its rulings, national courts in most of the Western world take
note. Therefore, if the ICJ rules that there is a danger of genocide being
committed, I can imagine a British citizen turning to a British court and
demanding that the UK cease trading arms with Israel. Another implication is
that such an ICJ ruling would likely force the ICC’s chief prosecutor [Karim
Khan] to open an investigation of his own.
And
what would an Israeli victory in the Court do?
In
the event of a resounding Israeli victory, this will double, triple, quadruple,
quintuple Israel’s hasbara [propaganda] regarding other accusations which may
be easier to prove than genocide. Because if someone says to Israel, “You are
committing the crimes against humanity of forced transfer and of indiscriminate
and disproportionate bombings,” Israel will say, “This antisemitic blood libel
again? We’ve already proven that the accusations against us are false.”
So
South Africa and the Palestinians are taking a gamble here?
It
is a gamble. In every legal proceeding — from a lawsuit over a breach of rental
contract to a lawsuit over genocide — there are always risks. However, I think
that a resounding Israeli victory is very unrealistic, because at least
regarding the incitement, Israel will not have good answers for the Court.
Within
what time period is the Court’s decision expected?
There
are no set rules, but in the Gambia v. Myanmar case, there was a decision
within a month. It should be remembered that this [Gaza] case will continue
after the hearing on the interim order. Israel will have to present evidence
that will exonerate it from the claim that it is committing genocide, but in
doing so could get into difficulties with the ICC. For example, it may explain
that it bombed a certain place because it was pursuing a military objective,
but it may thereby make admissions that create a basis for the claim that it
used disproportionate force.
And
on a personal note, how do you view the fact that Israel stands accused of
genocide?
I
come from a family of Holocaust survivors, and the very fact that we are even
talking about this, and that the accusation is not without grounds, is
heartbreaking. My grandfather, the sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, wrote about the
syndrome of victims who aspire to become victimizers, and why efforts must be
made to prevent this. I fear that we have failed.
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