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  • Diar, a 13 year old Syrian Kurd, stands in the ruins of the abandoned Lepida psychiatric hospital. <br />
<br />
Originally constructed, in 1930 by fascist Italy, as barracks for Italian soldiers serving in the aeronautical base of Portolago, it was then, for a short period after WWII, a re-education camp for the children of Greek Communists. In 1958, it was converted into the biggest psychiatric hospital in the country. The conditions for the patients were horrific and it was shut down in the late 1980s and the patients moved into smaller buildings in the grounds and elsewhere on the island.
    24_160601_330.jpg
  • Syrian refugee women and children looking out to sea at Gourna Beach. It is the first time they have been back to the sea since they were rescued by the coast guard after crossing from Turkey.
    65_160602_188.jpg
  • Matina Katsiveli (62), often called Mamma Matina, the founder and director of PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    63_160826_234.jpg
  • Syrian refugee children gather around a man repairing a fishing rod in the gounds of PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    62_160602_089.jpg
  • A Syrian refugee boy checking his smartphone at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    51_160603_044.jpg
  • A barbed wired gate that separates the different communities of migrants and refugees into sections at the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    33_160826_004.jpg
  • Children's drawings on a wall in the kitchen of Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    16_160601_116.jpg
  • A Greek coast guard boat approaching the port of Lakki. It is a boat like that, that transports the refugees and migrants from Farmakonisi to Leros
    02_160602_375.jpg
  • Afternoon, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. After waiting in the Vienna central station for hours to buy a next day train ticket to Munich, Aysha finally rents an apartment for the night. They didn’t have a shower or sleep in a bed since they left Thessaloniki 3 days ago.
    150915_312.jpg
  • Morning, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. At the central station of Vienna there is a huge queue of refugees and migrants waiting to buy a ticket to Germany. Their families and friends are sleeping everywhere at the station. Hundreds of exhausted people.
    150915_186.jpg
  • Morning, Tuesday 15th of September 2015. Aysha and her kids arrive at the back of Vienna central station were a temporary welcome centre has been set up. There are volunteers who give information, food and psychological support.  There are hundreds of people there, reuniting, reorganising and using the free wifi to contact their families and friends.
    150915_151.jpg
  • Early morning, Monday 14th of September 2015. We arrived at Belgrade and hit the rush hour traffic. Bisan woke up and start crying.
    150914_055.jpg
  • Sunday 13th of September 2015, afternoon. Aysha is carrying Bisan through a field meters away from the Macedonian - Serbian border. About an hour ago a train full of immigrants and refugees arrived at the border village of Slanishte after 4 hrs of travelling across the Republic of Macedonia. A group of Danish volunteers gave Aysha a pram to carry her daughters. The path is uneven and it will take her more than an hour to walk to the Serbian town of Preshevo.
    150913_467.jpg
  • Afternoon, Sunday 13th of September 2015. Aysha is looking at me after she crossed into Serbian territory. We said goodbye to each other since we don’t know if we will meet on the other side of the border. The sun is getting down and it’s getting cold.
    150913_473.jpg
  • Sunday 13th of September 2015. A migrant boy looks out of the train window as the train of refugees and migrants passes through the Republic of Macedonia.
    150913_363.jpg
  • Afternoon, Saturday, 12 September 2015. Aysha with her two daughters Bisan 2 ½ (L) and Sham 3 ½ (R) on the deck of F/B Nissos Rodos that took them from Lesbos island to mainland Greece.
    150912_200.jpg
  • A girls rucksack  at the beach of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_781.jpg
  • A dinghy with refugees is landing at e beach of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_627.jpg
  • ActionAid's translator Moustafa  holds Shiraz while his father Ali from Deir ez-Zor Syria is thanking god for making the trip at Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_811.jpg
  • At  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece, minutes after the Portuguese  coast guards towed a boat with around 50 refugees.
    151008_466.jpg
  • At  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece, minutes after the Portuguese  coast guards towed a boat with around 50 refugees.
    151008_445.jpg
  • Moustafa, ARabic translator of ActionAid Hellas, helps a child to get off the Portuguese coast guard boat at  the fishing harbour of Skala Sykamias, Lesvos, Greece.
    151008_428.jpg
  • Maha’s father showing me what is inside his daughters’ bag in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151008_207.jpg
  • Children’s drawings outside the ActionAid’s office container in Kara Tepe camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_711.jpg
  • A mother with her child waits outside Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_672.jpg
  • An Afghan family at the olive grove next to Moria camp , Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_635.jpg
  • Refugees and migrants  waiting in a muddy field to get registered by the Greek authorities in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_531.jpg
  • Refugees and migrants  waiting in a muddy field to get registered by the Greek authorities in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_528.jpg
  • Daniel 1 year and 8 months old from Teheran, Iran sleeps next to Mohadisha 9 years old at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_379.jpg
  • Daniel 1 year and 8 months old from Teheran, Iran sleeps at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_409.jpg
  • Mahdi 8 months old from Herat Afghanistan in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_291.jpg
  • Abulfaz 11 years old, from Teheran, Iran, outside his tent at Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece.
    151007_373.jpg
  • Nasrullah 6 years old  and his cousin Mohammed 1 year old from Afghanistan lying on a piece of cardboard in in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_156.jpg
  • Bashir 29 holding his daughter Zaahra 2 ½ years old and his wife  Shefqe 24 years old holding her 7 months old girl Hamid from Chardere district of Afghanistan in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_078.jpg
  • Maran 7 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_166.jpg
  • Maran 7 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_164.jpg
  • Hamad  3 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_151.jpg
  • Rayyan 7 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_100.jpg
  • Mashal 6 years old from Iraq in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151008_106.jpg
  • Samer 19 years old from Kobani Syria in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece
    151007_796.jpg
  • Zohre 19 years old old from Herat Afghanistan holding her 8 month old baby Mahdi in Moria camp, Lesvos, Greece
    151007_264.jpg
  • MSF contractors are installing additional portaloos  in Kara Tepe camp in Lesvos, Greece.
    150910_011.jpg
  • MSF psychiatrist Lena Zachou is counselling 40 year old Aysha from Aleppo with the help of MSF Arabic translator Rashid Bech at her tent in Kara Tepe camp
    150911_062.jpg
  • Aysha, 40 yo from Aleppo, Syria being examined by MSF doctor Grigoris Grivas at the medical centre in Kara Tepe camp.
    150911_116.jpg
  • Aysha, 40 yo from Aleppo, Syria being examined by MSF nurse  at the medical centre in Kara Tepe camp.
    150911_109.jpg
  • MSF doctor Grigoris Grivas at the medical centre in Kara Tepe camp.
    150910_061.jpg
  • MSF doctor Grigoris Grivas at the medical centre in Kara Tepe camp.
    150910_052.jpg
  • MSF nurse Ida Tornstensson is clearing the wound in the finger of a young Afghan at the mobile camper van of MSF at Mytiline port, Lesvos, Greece.
    150909_324.jpg
  • Refugees and migrants barding a boat at the port of Mytiline that will take them to the Greek mainland.
    150909_314.jpg
  • Six year old Mohammed from Iraq is checked by MSF doctor Dimitris Giannousis at the mobile camper van of MSF at Mytiline port, Lesvos, Greece.
    150909_203.jpg
  • Six year old Mohammed from Iraq is checked by MSF doctor Dimitris Giannousis at the mobile camper van of MSF at Mytiline port, Lesvos, Greece.
    150909_186.jpg
  • Six year old Mohammed from Iraq is checked by MSF doctor Dimitris Giannousis at the mobile camper van of MSF at Mytiline port, Lesvos, Greece.
    150909_139.jpg
  • Medicine on the cabinet of the camper van of MSF at Mytiline port, Lesvos, Greece.
    150909_081.jpg
  • MSF doctor Dimitris Giannousis  checking the medicine cabinet of the camper van of MSF at Mytiline port, Lesvos, Greece.
    150909_075.jpg
  • MSF doctor Dimitris Giannousis and MSF nurse Ida Tornstensson together with MSF Campaign manager (?) Mitsi Persani walk towards the MSF mobile unit at the pot of Mytiline.
    150909_055.jpg
  • Hassan and Hussein from Syria walk towards Mytiline. Refugees land at the northern shores of the island of Lesbos and then they have to walk the 9 hour distance to one of the camps.
    150720_004.jpg
  • Syrian refugees rest at the village of Mantamado, on their way from the northern shores to one of the  first welcome camps in Mytiline
    150720_105.jpg
  • 50 year old Mamum from Damascus showing me a picture of his son who lives in Germany. He hopes that he will reunite soon with him.
    150718_385.jpg
  • An Afghan man showing a piece of paper with his waiting list number in Moria camp.
    150719_106.jpg
  • Leila 31 and Jorahan 35 from Kunduz Afghanistan boiling water to make tea in Kara Tepe camp.
    150718_754.jpg
  • A Syrian refugee shows me a dead dove. He told me that this dead dove represents the people of Syria
    150718_647.jpg
  • rubbish in Kara Tepe camp.
    150718_177.jpg
  • A refugee walks in the Kara Tepe camp
    150718_012.jpg
  • A group of Afghan refugees walking on the road between Mantamado and Mytilini. Most refugees land on the northern shores of the island and they walk for nine hours either to Mytilini port or to Moria  First Reception Centre..Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150519_056.jpg
  • A shirt left on the road between Mantamado and Mytilini. Most refugees land on the northern shores of the island and they walk for nine hours either to Mytilini port or to Moria  First Reception Centre..Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150519_029.jpg
  • A group of Syrian refugees, the moment they disembark from their small inflatable boat and land to Europe, on the beach of Skala Sykaminias. <br />
<br />
Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece. Many spend their life savings, over $1000, to buy a space on those boats.
    150517_318.jpg
  • A group of Syrian refugees on a small inflatable boat minutes before their landing on the beach of Skala Sykaminias. In the horizon the Greek Coast Guard vessel could be seen. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece. Many spend their life savings, over $1000, to buy a space on those boats.
    150517_304.jpg
  • A group of Syrian refugees on a small inflatable boat minutes before their landing on the beach of Skala Sykaminias. In the horizon the Greek Coast Guard vessel could be seen. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece. Many spend their life savings, over $1000, to buy a space on those boats.
    150517_282.jpg
  • A small inflatable boat with more than 40 Afghan refugees,minutes before landing on the beach of Skala Sykaminias, Lesbos island, Greece. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece. Many spend their life savings, over $1000, to buy a space on those boats.
    150517_003.jpg
  • A group of around 50 Afghans, men, women and children are walking the 9 hour distance from Skala Sykaminias to the village of Moria where the First Reception Centre is located. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_338.jpg
  • An Afghan man holding a baby in the port of Molyvos, Lesbos island, hours after his boat has been rescued by the Greek Coast Guard. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_059.jpg
  • Refugees at the port of Molyvos, Lesbos island, forming a queue at a soup kitchen organised by locals.  The people of Lesbos island, many of whom come from families that were refugees themselves, provide meals and cloths for the refugees everyday. Everyday hundreds of refugees, mainly from Syria and Afghanistan, are crossing in small overcrowded inflatable boats the 6 mile channel from the Turkish coast to the island of Lesbos in Greece.
    150515_024.jpg
  • Smiling patient in the Hospital of Ayii Saranta. During the riots of 1997 armed men looted the hospital. Whatever wasn't useful to them was thrown out of the windows.
    BH_101.jpg
  • Kalivia. Chair in the corridor of the school.
    BH_110.jpg
  • Aliko. The statue of a girl with a broken nose. The teachers told me that BEFORE there was a beautiful garden, the pride of the village.
    BH_073.jpg
  • Syrian refugee Ayman Al Abood, 29, fishing in the port of Lakki.
    39_160602_364.jpg
  • Nibal, with her baby daughter Aya, and Samah, from Syria, taking selfies at Gourna Beach. It is the first time they have been back to the sea since they were rescued by the coast guard after crossing from Turkey.
    37_160602_216.jpg
  • Kinaz looks at eight month pregnant Fadwa doing laundry in a bathroom at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    33_160602_068.jpg
  • Najah from Syria with her 11 month infant daughter Amenah in their room in PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors. Amenah was born the day after her father fled to Germany, so she has never seen him.
    31_160603_148.jpg
  • Syrian-Kurdish children, Ronash and Telnas, in a playroom at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    32_160602_042.jpg
  • Refugees outside the main entrance of the PIKPA building. The refuge was opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors. The building has about 20 rooms accommodating 102 people.
    27_160602_306.jpg
  • 12 year old Ayat, from Al-Zabadani a city in the southwestern Syria, at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    29_160603_102.jpg
  • Bunkbeds and a child's cot at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for families and unaccompanied minors.
    30_160602_019.jpg
  • Sheets that have been used to divide a room at PIKPA, a refuge opened in January 2016 by the Leros Solidarity Network as a shelter for refugee families and unaccompanied minors. The building has about 20 rooms accommodating 102 people
    28_160824_019.jpg
  • Yazidi refugees Hazim Elias Khadeda 22  and his sister Leena Elias Khadeda  16 photographed in front of the abandoned building of the Royal Technical School of Leros.<br />
<br />
This building was built in the 1930 by Fascist Italy as barack for the submarine crews stationed in the island. After WWII it  was turned into a a reeducation camp for the children of Greek Communists and into a technical school. From the mid 1950’s until 1967 it was a technical school with boarding facilities. During the Colonel’s Junta in Greece it was turned into a camp for members of the communist party. After the Junta it was abandoned and now it’s about to collapse.
    25_160603_298.jpg
  • Syrian-Kurd refugee Shaaf Yunis, 57, pushing her one year old grandson, Leven Kendi, past a yachting marina.
    26_160603_244.jpg
  • Kurdish refugee children, Youssef, 14, and Diar, 13, standing in a window at the abandoned Lepida psychiatric hospital, in whose grounds the Leros ‘Hot spot’ (an EU-run migrant’s reception centre) has been built. <br />
<br />
Originally constructed, in 1930 by fascist Italy, as barracks for Italian soldiers serving in the aeronautical base of Portolago, it was then, for a short period after WWII, a re-education camp for the children of Greek Communists. In 1958, it was converted into the biggest psychiatric hospital in the country. The conditions for the patients were horrific and it was shut down in the late 1980s and the patients moved into smaller buildings in the grounds and elsewhere on the island.
    23_160601_353.jpg
  • Abdulbaki Yunis, a Syrian Kurd refugee from Damascus in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    21_160826_044.jpg
  • A typical prefabricated house in the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece.<br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    22_160826_082.jpg
  • A barbed wired gate that separates the different communities of migrants and refugees into sections at the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    20_160826_004.jpg
  • General view of the First Reception Centre (Hot-Spot) of Leros, Greece. Since there are no trees or other natural cover, the refugees and migrants use olive harvest nets create shade.<br />
<br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    18_160826_007.jpg
  • The remains of the abandoned Lepida psychiatric hospital, in whose grounds the Leros ‘Hot spot’ (an EU-run migrant’s reception centre) has been built. <br />
<br />
The Hot Spot in Lepida opened on the 26th of February 2016 in the grounds of the former Lepida psychiatric hospital.  At the beginning it served as a registration camp for refugees and migrants who were travelling to Europe through Greece but since the closure of the borders in March 2016 it serves as a permanent camp. People are allowed to go out, they have three meals a day, the prefabricated huts have a bathroom and are air-conditioned and compering to other refugee camps in Greece the conditions are bearable.
    16_160826_010.jpg
  • A 15 year old Syrian refugee girl from Hama, who recently attempted suicide, lying on a hospital bed with her sister. She took 30 of her grandmother's pills resulting in her having her stomach pumped. She arrived in Greece in March 2016 after the borders had closed and has since been detained on the island, together with 600 other people at the Lepida 'Hotspot', an EU-run migrant's reception centre camp
    15_160825_001.jpg
  • An abandoned deer soft toy lying on top of a stack of mattresses in Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    13_160601_170.jpg
  • Bed frames in the medical tent at Villa Artemis, a shelter for 30 refugee women and their children in the grounds of Leros Hospital. <br />
<br />
Opened in September 2015, the shelter was run by the Leros Solidarity Network. However, Villa Artemis was closed down shortly after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016. The medical tent was opened just three days before the villa was abandoned.
    14_160601_219.jpg
  • Made up beds in one of the rooms of Villa Artemis.<br />
<br />
The Villa, inside the Hospital of Leros compound opened in September 2015 and it was a shelter for 30 women with their children run by the Leros Solidarity Network. It was abandoned in early April 2016 after the change in EU policy on refugees and the creation of the “Hot Spot” camp in Lepida, Leros.
    11_160601_138.jpg
  • Children's handprints decorate a wall in the former refugee camp at the port of Lakki.<br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    07_160828_639.jpg
  • A boarded up door and graffiti at the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. <br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    06_160601_071.jpg
  • A rain coat and copies of the Quran in a building in the closed down refugee camp at the Port of Lakki. <br />
<br />
The camp was opened by volunteers in the summer of 2015 and later that year UNHCR and MSF expanded it and provided additional tents, toilets and other facilities. The camp was closed soon after the opening of a 'Hotspot' (EU-run migrant's reception centres) camp in Lepida in February 2016.
    04_160601_063.jpg
  • The silhouette on the horizon is the island of Farmakonisi where many refugees and migrants land after crossing from Turkey. It is 5½ miles from the coast of Turkey and 12 miles from Leros. <br />
<br />
Farmakonisi is a Greek military island and access is restricted. Once the refugees land the Greek Army calls the Coast Guard to come and collect them but sometimes it takes days in an island that has no shelters or any kind of infrastructure to host people.
    01_160601_423.jpg
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