Thursday, 23 February 2012

PHOTOS: NIGERIAN IDOL HONOURS WHITNEY HOUSTON AS A.Y.O AND IBINABO EXIT


Tiwa Savage, Kehinde Dacosta Lawrence and Yinka Davies sing ‘Greatest Love’
It was a night of brilliant music and amazing performances as Nigerian Idol joined the global music industry in paying tribute to the late pop legend, Whitney Houston.
The finalists rendered the late singer’s popular songs like ‘I wanna dance with somebody’ and ‘saving all my love’ while judges including guest judge Lara George nodded in approval.
Also one of the Judges Yinka Davies, co-host Tiwa Savage and music directorKehinde Dacosta teamed up to bring the show to a final end with Whitney’s ‘Greatest Love of All’.
It was however not all rosy as the number of contestants was also cut down to 10, with A.Y.O and Ibinabo’s elimination.
In April, a new winner will be announced at a grand gala show carting home a prize worth $100,000 and an SUV.

Mecinda

Nikki

Honey Adum

Diwari

Linda Giami

Mecinda

Najite

Sly

Stephen

Joe Blue

Chinedu

Nigerian Billionaire In UK Allowed To Settle Divorce Via 'Tribal Law'

A wealthy Nigerian-born, British-based oil baron has been granted permission to use Nigerian tribal law to appeal a $21 million divorce payout to his former British wife, the Telegraph has reported.
Michael Prest, the 50 year-old founder of Nigerian energy trading firm Petrodel Resources, split from his wife in an acrimonious divorce in 2008. During a British High Court hearing on the divorce in October last year, the presiding judge ordered the tycoon to pay his former wife cash and assets worth over $20 million.
  


 However, Prest has applied to appeal the court’s decision on the grounds that his Petrodel’s assets do not belong to him, but are held in trust for his children, siblings, nephews and nieces in Nigeria, under Nigerian Itsekiri customary law.
The oil baron claims that his company, Petrodel Resources Ltd, was established in 1992 with $13,000 in start-up capital which was provided by his late father. As a result, under traditional law, his company and assets are not owned entirely by him, but by his extended family; he mainly acts as custodian of the wealth.

The tycoon’s attorney Martin Pointer disclosed to the court that under customary law in Nigeria, Prest (who is the first-born son of his family) has a historic responsibility to use the family “inheritance” to look after his siblings and their children.
Prest’s case is also helped by the fact that his younger brother went to a Nigerian High Court in 2009 and obtained a declaration which states that Petrodel Resources is a part of their late father’s estate. Michael Prest also previously acquired a court order from a Nigerian court which forbids him from sharing information about Petrodel and its assets with third parties. Hence, it is difficult to ascertain the true market value of Petrodel resources.


But the former wife, Yasmin Prest, 49, is crying foul. She told the court that Petrodel is “100 per cent owned and controlled” by her former husband. Last October, during the original court case in London, she had claimed that her former husband was worth ‘many tens, if not hundreds, of millions of pounds’. She demanded a divorce payout of about $40 million, plus about $1 million a year for upkeep of herself and the four children she bore with the tycoon. Prest had previously offered her the equivalent of $35,000 a year and a lump sum of about $2.5 million.

The court has not yet set a date for the full appeal.
Michael Prest, an extremely reclusive oil trader and former protégé of controversial commodities trader Marc Rich, founded Petrodel resources in 2001. The company has extensive oil exploration interests in Nigeria, Tanzania, Zambia and Uganda.



Correct sharp man!, You are true son of your father, Imagine she wants $1M for maintenance, what is she maintaining?


3 Fake Prophets in court for alleged N1.7 m fraud

 Three men, who claimed to be prophets, were arraigned on Wednesday before an Apapa Chief Magistrates’ Court, for obtaining N1.7 million under false pretences from a businessman, Mr Dama Lawan.

The accused persons are Merchart Joseph 25, Lukeman Rasheed 49 and David Agha 40.



Prosecutor John Iberedem said the accused would be tried for stealing and obtaining money under false pretences.

He told the court that the accused persons deceived Lawan into believing that they were prophets of God and had the power to make him rich.

He said that the trio, knowing full well that they had nothing to offer Lawan, disappeared immediately after collecting the money.

He said that they were later apprehended by the police.

The prosecutor, who said that the accused had no fixed addresses, alleged that they committed the offences on Jan. 20 at No. 1, Shobayo Close, Apapa.

Iberedem said that the offences contravened Sections 285, 312 (a) and 409 of the Criminal Code, Cap 17, Vol. 2, Laws of Lagos State.

The three accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Magistrate E. A. Ogundare admitted each of them to a bail in the sum of N500,000, with two sureties in like sum.

He directed that the sureties should show evidence of tax payment and have their addresses verified by the prosecutor.

He subsequently adjourned further hearing till March 30. (NAN)

Fisker-Karma-Motoramic-Drives

  This is the Fisker Karma, a $100,000 electric sedan with a backup gasoline engine and the claim on a $529 million government loan meant to build the future of eco-friendly transportation. It may need some spiritual balance to get there.
The brainchild of designer Henrik Fisker, the Karma arrives after years of delays — and a maelstrom of politics and publicity, especially over the U.S. Department of Energy loan meant to fund the next car from Fisker. The company hosted several dozen journalists in Beverly Hills this week, days after laying off a few dozen workers when the Energy department halted the loan over Fisker's missed sales targets.
At least in front of reporters, Henrik Fisker is nothing but determined about the Karma and the future of the company with his name on it. Admitting the company missed the milestones for the rest of the Energy loan, Fisker says the company has 1,500 Karmas built, and delivering 50-some a day to waiting customers. Despite early defects that forced Fisker to issue a recall, along with a personal apology, Fisker still boasts that no other company that took the federal loans — Ford, Nissan and Tesla — has produced an all-new model as Fisker has.
"I think hybrids are the past," says Fisker, a bold claim from a company that's built 1,500 cars.
And he sees the Karma tapping an unmet need for eco-conscious luxury with an unspoken one: the desire for an American car that can command the road the way the cruisers of the '50s and '60s did, and haven't since. "You should feel like you're driving the best car in the class, with the best design," he says.
Getting those two conflicting desires in the Karma required an unprecedented amount of engineering from a start-up automaker. There's a 2-liter, turbocharged gas engine, a generator, two electric motors and several hundred pounds of batteries, all in a chassis designed from scratch -- along with speakers in the fenders that make the car sound like it borrowed an impulse drive from the starship Enterprise.
Similar to the Chevy Volt and other hybrids, the Karma can be driven on electricity only drawn from its batteries (which take about eight hours to charge on a regular house plug.) Unlike even the Volt, the Karma only rides on electricity; when its batteries deplete, it automatically kicks on its gas engine to turn the generator and recharge the batteries. That gives the Karma a 300-mile range, about three times greater than the Nissan Leaf or similar electric cars.
Fisker contends pure electric vehicles demand too many compromises, especially in range, to be big sellers; hybrids "are the past." And the Karma contains dozens of touches to bolster its eco-lux cred, from the solar panel on the roof to a certificate guaranteeing that the wood in its dash was not cut but reclaimed from the depths of Lake Michigan.
But how does it work as a car?
"I don't think Americans really want a smaller car," Fisker says, and the Karma lives and dies by that edict; it's wider than a Ford Super Duty pickup. The Karma's most successful in its exterior design; it looks like a luxury car with no lines derived from other brands. Stuck in California traffic, the Karma turned more heads than a volleyball game on a nude beach.
Inside, Fisker the designer made a cabin with only the legally required number of buttons; every function in the dash must be handled through a 10-inch touchscreen with vibrating "haptic" feedback. The dash itself comes wrapped in suede, nubby fabric and a few bits drawn from the GM parts bin.
Yet that exterior space doesn't translate into interior room, thanks to the massive tunnel for the A123 lithium batteries that could leave rear passengers thinking they're in the bathtubs from a Cialis commercial. That pack also compresses the trunk to a mere 6.9 cubic feet of space — about one cubic foot less than a Smart ForTwo.

Despite weighing 5,300 lbs., the Karma can dance around a curve, absorbing blows that might unsettle lighter cars. With 400 hp, the Karma's power delivery acts like no other vehicle — sometimes there's silent acceleration, sometimes the gas engine rushes joules to the fray. It strains to keep its efforts unnoticed, like a waiter in a upscale restaurant, but the electric motors' massive torque declines rapidly under gravity's rainbow. Sixty miles an hour arrives in 6.3 seconds, slower than sporty versions of the Toyota Camry.
"There's a misconception that small equal fuel economy," Fisker says, adding that "the Karma can be driven more fuel efficiently than the Prius." That's no guarantee that it will be, or that every driver will get even Prius-level efficiency. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rates the Karma as having 32 miles of electric-only range, a 52 mpg-e overall rating and only 20 mpg when its engine runs; Fisker claims careful drivers could get well over 100 mpg and 40 electric-only miles on a full charge. My 62-mile test drive though the hills and clogged streets of Los Angeles averaged about 30 mpg.
It's not just government bureaucrats and publicity going against Fisker; from Bricklin to DeLorean, there's no case of a successful American automaker starting from scratch since the beginning of the 20th Century. The Karma has to convince thousands of buyers that despite its shortcomings, it's here from the future -- and not an evolutionary dead end.

2012 Fisker Karma specifications

ClassFour-door range-extended electric luxury sedan
CapacityFour passengers
ConfigurationElectric drive with gas engine for battery charging
MotorsTwo 150kw motors, driving the rear wheels
Generator175kw
Engine2.0 liter, 260hp turbocharged 4-cylinder engine
Battery20kWh pack; 8-hour recharge from 110v
Total power403 hp
Total torque959 lb-ft @ 0 RPM
Top speed125 mph
Zero to 606.3 seconds
Mileage32 miles electric-only; 20 mpg range-extended; 52 mpg-e combined
Base price (incl destination charges)$102,000
Remarkable featuresElectric, but not electrifying

Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Mission Accomplished? 28 Years Old Man That Married Old White Woman Relocates

The young man that was the headline of Naijapals over the weekend for marrying a significantly older white lady was spotted at the muritala international airport in Lagos jetting out of the poverty stricken country with his new bride today

Guess we all know what young talents can do for a foreign visa these days, this just reflects the pathetic state of hope of the country.

Details and Photos From Their Wedding Here:


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Diddy-Launching-His-Own-Tv-Network.

Diddy’s new channel is called Revolt and will launch on Comcast in 2013. Revolt will feature music videos and music news aimed at African-American viewers.
Diddy says,
I’m thrilled to be at the helm to usher in a completely new model of television that brings together the artist community, socia

D'banj In the Act on Stage? What Is He Looking For in the Lady's Blouse?

I think Dbanj is high in this Pictures, If you know what i mean, Else who can explain to me what D'banj is Looking For In This Lady's Blouse?
This type of act explains why a lady jumped naked last year in one of Dbanj;s concert just to have a feel of him.. I still remember that story well
 Girl shows it all at Dbanj's concert (with pix)


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Lagos State Shuts Down Seven Churches Over Noise Pollution

The Lagos State Government has shut down the Lord’s Chosen Charismatic Ministry and six other churches in Lagos, Southwest Nigeria over noise pollution.

Officials of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency, LASEPA stormed a branch of the Lord’s Chosen Church at 25 Omobola Street, Lawanson, Surulere area at the weekend and shut it down.



Other affected churches are Bible Church, FESTAC; The Chapter of Christ Church, Oregun, Ikeja; Assemblies of God Church, Ikeja; The Golden Gate Church, Ifako-Ijaiye and Seek and Save Ministry, Abule Egba.

The closure of the churches is coming after pre-sanction notices were given to the churches to abate the noise pollution emanating from their worship centres.

General Manager, LASEPA, Engr. Rasheed Shabi said the closure of the churches became imperative after several abatement notices issued to them were disregarded.

According to him, some of the churches even rebuffed meetings called by the agency on how to resolve the issue.

“The agency’s stance is clear on issue of noise pollution level permitted. This has been communicated to all worship centres in the state.

“The level of noise pollution allowed in the state is between 55 decibel during the day and 42 to 45 decibel at night,” he said.

Shabi said the state government was determined to reduce noise pollution in the state because of the anomalies and diseases related to it.

He enjoined worship centres in the state to comply with the state’s standard on noise, while suggesting the use of sound proof equipment by churches to reduce noise during their worship services.

Meanwhile, the large expanse of land in Ayobo where the temporary headquarters of Deeper Life Bible Church is situated may soon become a subject of litigation, as the Olalere Family has asked the church to vacate the land.

The over 150 acres of land covering Amule, Ayobo and Onikanga communities, currently accommodates the Deeper Life Bible Church main auditorium, the International Bible Training College and the proposed Anchor University owned by founder of the church, Pastor Williams Kumuyi.

Although Deeper Life Bible Church has been in possession of the land for over 30 years, the Olalere Family who now claim ownership of the land has declared the church as an illegal occupant and warned that the family may resort to court action to evict the church if it does not legalise its tenancy of the land.

The Olalere family in a letter to the church dated 7 February 2012 noted that by virtue of a 2010 court ruling by Justice Oyekan Abdullahi, the entire Ayobo community land belongs to them, and any occupant currently on the land must renegotiate their tenancy with the family.

When our reporter contacted the church over the development, secretary to the church, Pastor Jerry Asemota, said he was personally unaware of any letter to the church by the Olalere family.

He, however, said that only the legal department of the church could confirm receipt of such letters.

When asked about the Olalere family’s claim of ownership to the church land, he said: “I can assure you that we are not illegal occupants. We have been in possession of this land for 30 years and if the initial owners have problem among themselves, they should settle it amicably.”


Masturbation Is Not A Sin - Pastor Chris Oyakhilome [Video]

For people worried about offending God on the issue of masturbation, yours trully pastor Oyakhilome reckons it is not a sin to masturbate.

 Video evidence below:






FEAR OF DIVISION? Nigerians move for creation of more states.

The National Assembly has received 45 memoranda requesting the creation of new states from the existing 36 states of the federation.

Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, who stated this at a public lecture organised by a group of lawyers of the South East extraction in Lagos on Friday, said the requests were presented to the National Assembly by various groups from different parts of the country.

Speaking on 'Constitution Amendment and State Creation,' Ekweremadu, who is the Chairman of the Senate's Constitution Review Committee, said about 34 of such memoranda were intra-state demands, seven interstate, while four cut across geopolitical zones.

According to him, minority fears, search for equity, speedy development and quest for political empires and influence by the elite are some of the key factors responsible for the proliferation of states and the agitations for more since independence.

He noted that Nigeria would therefore become a federation of 81 states should all the requests be granted.

Raising fundamental questions on the state creation debate, Ekweremadu stated, “Has the creation of more states allayed the fears of minorities and the feelings of marginalisation and domination?

“Has it resulted in good governance and speedier development at state levels than we had before?

“If it is meant to bring governance closer to the people, what then is the essence of the local government areas? Importantly too, is the proliferation of states and even the extant ones viable and self-sustainable?

“Again, at a time the global trend is aggressively moving towards the contraction of the size of government and cost of governance and at a time the nation is already sweating profusely under the yoke of unwieldy size of government at the federal, state, and local levels, can we really sustain the status-quo let alone create new burdens?” 


ADDICTED THIEF caught again: Jailbird Arrested 4th Time For Robbery

A 27-year old man who had gone to prison thrice for his alleged involvement in armed robbery has been arrested again for the same offence.

He is currently being detained at the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, SARS, cell in Ikeja, Lagos State, Southwest Nigeria.
The suspect, Godly Julius from Benue State, North Central Nigeria, resides in Pate village, Abuja but allegedly shuttles between Abuja and Lagos to rob.
However, luck ran out on him when he allegedly went to Mile 2 area of Lagos with his other accomplices on a motorcycle to snatch a bag from a woman. In an attempt to escape, he was shot in the leg by a mobile policeman who witnessed the robbery.
He reportedly escaped with bullet wounds but eventually fell off the motorcycle at Okokomaiko.
People around the area who saw him with gunshot wound alerted the police at Ojo Divisional Headquarters and he was arrested.
In his confessional statement to the police at SARS, Ikeja, Julius said, “I learnt furniture making. I have been involved in robbery five years ago. I live in Abuja, but I come to Lagos to rob. I usually stay at a hotel at Iyana Isashi, Okokomaiko with a friend, Pere Agbon and Benjamin with their girlfriends. We pay N3,000 per day for the hotel room. From the hotel room we move out for our robbery operations anywhere in Lagos.
“I used to send money into my brother’s account in Abuja to keep for me. From the money I sent into his account, my brother bought a Toyota Camry car for himself.
“On the day I was arrested, we left the hotel on three okada (motorcycles) to Mile 2. When we saw a woman holding a bag, we snatched it. The woman was coming from the bank where she had gone to withdraw money. One of the mobile policemen who saw us opened fire onus. The bullet hit my leg while other members of our gang escaped.
“I fell down at Okokomaiko bus stop and as people gathered to look at me, they called in policemen who took me to their station.
“Pere, who is the gang leader, gave me the gun we used that day.
“The first time I went to prison, I spent one year and three months. The second time, I spent one year and two months, while the third time, I was in the prison for one year.”

Nigerian Children Are The Most Mal-Nourished In The World

Nigeria ranks among India, Bangladesh, Peru and Pakistan  on the basis of countries where half of world’s most malnourished children live, writes JAYNE AUGOYE

Despite her potential for posterity, Nigeria has been listed as one of the five countries where half of the world’s malnourished children live.



According to a report by a UK-based charity organisation Save the Children, titled A life free from Hunger: Tackling Child Malnutrition, Nigeria is listed alongside India, Bangladesh, Peru and Pakistan as countries  faced with malnutrition.

The survey recently published on the organisation’s website was carried out in the five countries by international polling agency,  Globescan, contracted by save the children.

In its analysis of  the causes of malnutrition with a focus on chronic malnutrition and stunting in children, it also identifies solutions that are proven to be effective.

With malnutrition statistics in Africa at a startling high rate, the report indicates, nearly two in five children on the continent – 60 million children — are stunted.

 At least three in 10 in all countries polled, and majorities in two (Peru and Nigeria), say they have reduced the quantity of food they buy for their family.

The poll results suggest that families may be eating less as a response to these rising prices The findings also suggest that variety in people’s dietsare being affected, with at least a third in all countries except Bangladesh saying that, at least sometimes, they eat the same staple food for a week at a time.

The problem of food quality and quality and variety appears most acute in Nigeria, where only one in four say they can ‘often’ afford such food.

The report further notes, “In Nigeria and India, the highest populated countries in Africa and South Asia respectively, parents appear to be struggling the most to feed their children. Specifically, about a quarter of parents in Nigeria (27%) and in India (24%) report that their children go without food for an entire day — not surprisingly, in both countries, those who have more than one child, are less educated or have low income are more likely to report this.”


Tuesday, 21 February 2012

New Lagos bus stops Haven for lovers and homeless people at night

* One-of-the-bus-stops-in-Lagos-360x246[1].jpg (30.9 KB, 360x246 - viewed 71 times.)Driving along Ikorodu Road in Lagos, one cannot help but marvel at the result of the government's efforts to beautify the city. These efforts attract instant attention with the newly-constructed bus stops presenting a stunning spectacle in different parts of the metropolis. The shelters for commuters are constructed with glittering plastic walls, equipped with solar-powered fluorescent lights, which sparkle in the day, and moreso at night.

Since the bus stops were opened, Lagosians have become accustomed to waiting for taxis or buses at night, especially at the Maryland exchange, Surulere and Ojuelegba junction, as well as other parts of the mainland.

In the past, such places were considered to be dangerous and unsafe for commuters waiting to board buses or taxis at night. Often, they were favourite haunts of criminals who hid under the cover of darkness to rob the unwary of their possessions.

Now, following the construction of modern bus stops, Lagosians can wait till 2 am for transportation.

At Palmgrove Bus Stop, taxi drivers and commuters agree that the inovation has turned night into day in Lagos, bringing back pleasant memories of the past.

Arole, a 55-year-old taxi driver, says, “The state government has brought back the nightlife we enjoyed in the 1960s and 1970s.

“We used to come here to pick passengers until 4 am because there was no fear of robbers in those days and electricity was constant.”

Some of the passengers, who were not in a hurry to board a taxi, told our correspondent that the light at the new bus stops had helped reduce the activities of touts on the expressway.

“The touts have moved into the inner streets now. In the past, they dominated the parks and extorted money from bus drivers because there was darkness everywhere. There are a few of them now and I think they operate in inner the streets, taking money from commercial cyclists who disobey the government's instruction not to work late at night,” one of the passengers said.

But commuters are not the only ones to be found at the bus stops. In fact, they only constitute a little over 50 per cent of those that loiter around the facilities.

At midnight, a new set of Lagosians or 'visitors' convert the bus shelters to temporary love gardens, which also serve as temporary homes for the destitute, who stay on till the break of dawn.

At night, Ikorodu Road undergoes a shocking but pleasant transformation as men and women of different ages gather under the well-lit bus shelters, chatting and cuddling until early morning.

A relaxed atmosphere pervades these little points of rendezvous that dot the entire length of the road. Obviously, these people are confident that at the end of their adventure, cabs will be waiting to take them to their respective homes.

Strange as it seems, there is an indication that this behaviour might be fuelled by frequent power outages in parts of the city and the current hike in the price of petrol, which makes it difficult for most Lagosians to turn on their power generators.

Added to the aesthetic appeal of the new bus stops, the constant presence of police patrol vehicles on the road at night instills some confidence in the denizens.

Some security personnel, who broke off patrol duty to eat and have drinks at make-shift joints around Ojuelegba, said that the men and women who sit at the bus stops could not be arrested in the absence of a curfew in the state.

One of the men said, “People move around for various reasons during the day and at night. The patrolmen at night are looking out for offenders and criminals, but they cannot arrest anyone who has not broken any law.

“The bus stops are public places and taxis and busses run for 24 hours. What we sometimes fail to realise is that more crimes are committed during the day. A few are recorded at night, especially when there are street lights around the bus stops.”

On Valentine's Day, the Stadium Bus Stop was deserted around 11 pm. But life returned around 12.30 am when a show got under way inside the National Stadium. Again, men and women, who were previously seen making merriment in a popular joint nearby, could be found around the place. While some of them sat inside the bus shelter, others found it convenient to sit on the painted pavement.

A woman, who sells food under the pedestrian bridge at Barrack Bus Stop in Surulere, thinks that the new bus shelter there is home to some of the homeless in the neighbourhood.

She says, “I sell more in the night because the boys no longer go home. They have converted the facility to their temporary home.

“Even bus drivers and conductors are not left out. Since they wake up as early as 4.30 am to start work, they no longer bother to go home. They simply park their vehicles somewhere and eat and sleep.

“They keep small bags in their vehicles, which contain clothes, toothpaste and toothbrushes. In the morning, they eat or pay for take-away food from me before I close at 6 am.”

Yet, there is a disturbing angle to the woman's account. She says that Indian hemp smoking, excessive drinking of illicit spirit, known as ogogoro, constant fighting among the new 'dwellers' of the bus stops and stealing, have become common.
 




NIGERIAN NEEDS UNINTERRUPTED POWER SUPPLY

Story by Adetokunbo Adedayo Onasanya/Nigeriafilms.com



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It is very embarrassing that in 2012 Nigeria as a country is still struggling with efforts to provide power for the majority of its citizens. As a result of greed, poverty and most importantly corruption, we have failed our selves in the provision of the most basic infrastructure that would improve the lives of average Nigerians.

It is easy to heap blame on the government but let us not forget that people that are governed can positively influence the actions of those in power. I agree that the power situation in Nigeria is now a very desperate situation that calls for desperate measures. It is a matter of fact that Nigerians should demand the provision of infrastructure that will improve their lives.

A country with an estimated population of over 180 million citizens and as much as $200 million (USD) daily revenue from oil resources can not boast of providing up to 25% of its population with reliable power supply...we have the resources, the work force and the right ideas. What we lack is proper implementation.

The people should surely demand that this service is provided and until we can find a way to unify our massive population in the demand for what should be provided for us, we will not make meaningful progress in almost every other aspect of national growth. Reliable power supply is key to better existence for every Nigerian. Be it poverty eradication, small businesses, education, health care delivery, rail transportation, telecoms & what have you. It is time to demand for what is right to be done, as complicated as it may seem, it can still be done.

Let us unite with one voice and demand it.

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