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Guatemalan Women File Claims against Canadian mining conglomerate: Puts Focus on the Conduct of Canadian Firms Abroad

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"109460728"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div><div class&equals;"separator" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><a style&equals;"margin-left&colon;1em&semi;margin-right&colon;1em&semi;" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;konniemoments&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;54243-03guatemala-1-blog427&period;jpg" rel&equals;"prettyPhoto"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;konniemoments&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;54243-03guatemala-1-blog427&period;jpg&quest;w&equals;263" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"560" height&equals;"640" border&equals;"0" &sol;><&sol;a><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;660000&semi;"><b><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-large&semi;"><i> &&num;8216&semi; The men who came to evict me from my land said it belonged to a Canadian mining company&comma; also took turns raping me&period; After that&comma; they dragged me from my home and set it ablaze&period;&&num;8217&semi;<&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<h4 class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><b><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-large&semi;"><i><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;660000&semi;">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The fear is not over&comma;” &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I still fear&comma; all the time&period;”<&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;"> &&num;8211&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;b><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;"><b><i> Mrs&period; Caal said&comma;<&sol;i><&sol;b><b><i> recently<&sol;i><&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;h4>&NewLine;<h4 class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;660000&semi;"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;"><b>  Filed her negligence suit&comma; Caal v&period; Hudbay Mineral Inc&period;&comma; not in Guatemala&comma; where Mayan villagers like her&comma; illiterate and living in isolated areas&comma; have had little legal success&comma; but in Canada&comma;<br &sol;>&NewLine;Law suit has sent shivers through the vast Canadian mining&comma; oil and gas industry&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;"><span style&equals;"color&colon;blue&semi;">Continue for full story &&num;8230&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;h4>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><a name&equals;"more"><&sol;a><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;134f5c&semi;"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-large&semi;"><b>For decades&comma; overseas subsidiaries have acted as a shield for extractive companies even while human rights advocates say they have chronicled a long history of misbehavior&comma; including environmental damage&comma; the violent submission of protesters and the forced evictions of indigenous people&period;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">Her husband was away in the fields&comma; in lake Ocho Guatemala she said&comma; when the truckloads of soldiers&comma; police officers and mining security officials arrived&period; A half-dozen armed men swarmed into her one-room house&comma; blocking her exit and helping themselves to the meal she had made for her children&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">For a long time&comma; the woman&comma; Margarita Caal Caal&comma; did not talk about what happened next that afternoon&period; None of the women in this tiny village high in the hills of eastern Guatemala did&comma; not even to each other&period; But that day&comma; Mrs&period; Caal said&comma; the men who had come to evict her from land they said belonged to a Canadian mining company also took turns raping her&period; After that&comma; they dragged her from her home and set it ablaze&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;The fear is not over&comma;” she said recently&comma; staring down at her hands while her daughter served coffee to visitors&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;I still fear&comma; all the time&period;”<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>Mrs&period; Caal has taken her case to the courts&comma; but not in Guatemala&comma; where Mayan villagers like her&comma; illiterate and living in isolated areas&comma; have had little legal success&period; She has filed in Canada&comma; where her negligence suit&comma; Caal v&period; Hudbay Mineral Inc&period;&comma; has sent shivers through the vast Canadian mining&comma; oil and gas industry&period; More than 50 percent of the world’s publicly listed exploration and mining companies had headquarters in Canada in 2013&comma; according to government statistics&period; Those 1&comma;500 companies had an interest in some 8&comma;000 properties in more than 100 countries around the world&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">For decades&comma; overseas subsidiaries have acted as a shield for extractive companies even while human rights advocates say they have chronicled a long history of misbehavior&comma; including environmental damage&comma; the violent submission of protesters and the forced evictions of indigenous people&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"separator" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><span style&equals;"clear&colon;right&semi;float&colon;right&semi;font-size&colon;large&semi;margin-bottom&colon;1em&semi;margin-left&colon;1em&semi;"><img class&equals;"media-viewer-candidate" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;static01&period;nyt&period;com&sol;images&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;01&sol;world&sol;02guatemala-web&sol;02guatemala-web-articleLarge&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"640" height&equals;"426" &sol;><&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"media-100000004303237" class&equals;"media photo embedded layout-large-horizontal media-100000004303237 ratio-tall">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"media-action-overlay"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i><span class&equals;"visually-hidden">Photo&colon;<&sol;span> Adriana Zehbrauskas&sol;nytimes <&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;div><figcaption class&equals;"caption"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b>Rosa Elbira Coc Ich in Lote Ocho&comma; Guatemala&comma; where she used to live and where&comma; she said&comma; she was among several women gang-raped in 2007&period;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>But Mrs&period; Caal’s negligence claim and those of 10 other women from this village who say they were gang-raped that day in 2007&comma; as well as two other negligence claims against Hudbay&comma; have already passed several significant legal hurdles — suggesting that companies based in Canada could face new scrutiny about their overseas operations in the future&period; In June&comma; a ruling ordered Hudbay to turn over what Mrs&period; Caal’s lawyers expect will be thousands of pages of internal documents&period; Hudbay&comma; which was not the owner of the mine at the time of the evictions&comma; denies any wrongdoing&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">Canadian law does not provide for huge American-style payoffs&comma; even if the court rules in the plaintiff’s favor&period; But the Hudbay case is being watched carefully because it appears to offer a new legal pathway for those who say they have suffered at the hands of Canadian subsidiaries&period; A ruling in this case&comma; experts say&comma; could also help establish powerful guidelines for what constitutes acceptable corporate behavior&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div id&equals;"story-continues-1" class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Up until now&comma; we just have not had judicial decisions that help us consider these sorts of relationships&comma;” said Sara Seck&comma; an expert on corporate social responsibility at the Faculty of Law&comma; Western University&comma; in London&comma; Ontario&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;For once&comma; the court is going to look at what really happened here&comma; and that is important&period;”<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"media-100000004303246" class&equals;"media photo embedded layout-large-horizontal media-100000004303246 ratio-tall">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"image">&NewLine;<p><img class&equals;"media-viewer-candidate" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;static01&period;nyt&period;com&sol;images&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;01&sol;world&sol;02guatemala-web2&sol;02guatemala-web2-articleLarge&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"media-action-overlay"><&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div><figcaption class&equals;"caption"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"credit"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i><span class&equals;"visually-hidden">Photo&colon;<&sol;span> Adriana Zehbrauskas&sol;nytimes <&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b><br &sol;>&NewLine;The Fenix nickel mine in El Estor&comma; a town near Lote Ocho&period;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b> <&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">The behavior of multinational companies working in poor countries has come under increasing fire in recent years&period; Social expectations have changed&comma; experts say&comma; with many citizens of rich countries demanding that corporations be more responsible in the countries where they operate&period; <&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">In Canada&comma; efforts to define a code of good behavior for extractive corporations are longstanding&comma; if so far unsuccessful&period; Many mining companies are based there because Canada offers a concentration of expertise in mining finance and law&comma; and the government offers incentives including tax breaks&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-supplemental">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body">&NewLine;<div id&equals;"story-continues-3" class&equals;"story-body-text story-content">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"separator" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><a style&equals;"margin-left&colon;1em&semi;margin-right&colon;1em&semi;" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;konniemoments&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;51747-south2bamerican2bminig2bmap2b2016-04-022b20-11-59&period;png" rel&equals;"prettyPhoto"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;konniemoments&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;51747-south2bamerican2bminig2bmap2b2016-04-022b20-11-59&period;png&quest;w&equals;300" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"640" height&equals;"386" border&equals;"0" &sol;><&sol;a><&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"separator" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">A bill that would have created an ombudsman to investigate complaints and deny access to government loans &&num;8211&semi; and even consular services &&num;8211&semi; to companies accused of behaving poorly failed by a narrow margin in 2010 after facing fierce opposition from the extractive industry&period; John McKay&comma; a member of Parliament from the Liberal Party who sponsored that bill&comma; said he expected Canada’s new government to try again soon&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;There are companies out there doing things that they would never do in their own countries&comma;” he said&period; In a <a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;coha&period;org&sol;canadian-mining-in-latin-america-exploitation-inconsistency-and-neglect&sol;">2014 report<&sol;a>&comma; the Council on Hemispheric Affairs&comma; a policy group in Washington&comma; concluded that Canadian companies&comma; accounting for 50 percent to 70 percent of the mining in Latin America&comma; were often associated with extensive damage to the environment&comma; from erosion and sedimentation to groundwater and river contamination&period; Of particular note&comma; it said&comma; was that the industry &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;demonstrated a disregard for registered nature reserves and protected zones&period;”<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">At the same time&comma; the report said&comma; local people were being injured&comma; arrested or&comma; in some cases&comma; killed for protesting&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"media-100000004303241" class&equals;"media photo embedded layout-large-horizontal media-100000004303241 ratio-tall">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"separator" style&equals;"clear&colon;both&semi;text-align&colon;center&semi;"><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div style&equals;"clear&colon;right&semi;float&colon;right&semi;margin-bottom&colon;1em&semi;margin-left&colon;1em&semi;"><img class&equals;"media-viewer-candidate" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;static01&period;nyt&period;com&sol;images&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;01&sol;world&sol;02guatemala-web3&sol;02guatemala-web3-articleLarge&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" width&equals;"640" height&equals;"426" &sol;><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"image">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"media-action-overlay"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"credit"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i><span class&equals;"visually-hidden">Photo&colon;<&sol;span> Adriana Zehbrauskas&sol;nytimes  <&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b><br &sol;>&NewLine;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b>Angelica Choc&comma; at the grave of her husband&comma; Adolfo Ich Chamán&comma; in El Estor&period; Mr&period; Ich was killed during a demonstration against mining in 2009&period;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b> <&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;figure>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">Victims&comma; however&comma; have had little success gaining access to Canadian courts&period; Their lawyers have often tried to get cases heard on the basis of violations of human rights or international criminal law&period; But most were told that Canada had no jurisdiction&comma; and that their claims would be more appropriately heard in the country where the events took place&comma; even if that country’s courts were notoriously corrupt or otherwise dysfunctional&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div id&equals;"story-continues-4" class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">The lawyers for the plaintiffs in the Hudbay case&comma; Murray Klippenstein and Cory Wanless&comma; took a novel approach&comma; however&comma; making a simpler claim&period; They said the Canadian parent company was negligent for failing to put an effective monitoring system in place to understand what its Guatemalan subsidiary was doing&period; Framing the claim in this way allowed the plaintiffs to draw a clear connection between the negligence and Canada&period; In addition to the claims brought by Mrs&period; Caal and the other women who say they were raped in Lote Ocho&comma; Hudbay&comma; based in Toronto&comma; is facing claims over the death of a prominent local leader&comma; Adolfo Ich Chamán&comma; 50&comma; and the shooting and paralysis of a bystander&comma; German Chub&comma; 28&comma; during demonstrations against mining in the nearby town of El Estor in 2009&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"media-100000004303242" class&equals;"media photo embedded layout-large-horizontal media-100000004303242 ratio-tall">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"image">&NewLine;<p><img class&equals;"media-viewer-candidate" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;static01&period;nyt&period;com&sol;images&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;01&sol;world&sol;02guatemala-web4&sol;02guatemala-web4-articleLarge&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;div><figcaption class&equals;"caption"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"credit"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i><span class&equals;"visually-hidden">Photo&colon;<&sol;span> Adriana Zehbrauskas&sol;nytimes <&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b><br &sol;>&NewLine;German Chub&comma; 28&comma; was shot during mining protests in 2009&comma; leaving him paralyzed from the waist down&period;<&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b> <&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">Hudbay lawyers moved to have the case dismissed both because of jurisdictional grounds and because it was &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;plain and obvious” that the claims would fail&period; Before the ruling on jurisdiction&comma; they dropped that claim and went forward with the other one&period; In July 2013&comma; however&comma; the judge ruled it was not obvious that the claims were without merit&period; Turning to the courts has not been easy for the plaintiffs&comma; most of whom speak only Q’eqchi’&comma; a Mayan language&comma; have had little or no schooling&comma; and find the prospect of going to Canada terrifying&period; In addition&comma; they face animosity from a sizable portion of the local population&comma; particularly in El Estor&comma; where there is a giant nickel processing plant&period; Hudbay officials dispute most of the plaintiffs’ claims&period; They say that no mining security officials were present during the Lote Ocho evictions and that no rapes took place&period; The company’s website also points out that at the time&comma; Hudbay had nothing to do with the mine&period; It was owned by Compañía Guatemalteca de Níquel&comma; a subsidiary of another Canadian company&comma; Skye Resources Inc&period;&comma; which Hudbay bought in 2008&comma; assuming its liabilities&period; Hudbay has since sold the mine&period;<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<figure id&equals;"media-100000004303239" class&equals;"media photo embedded layout-large-horizontal media-100000004303239 ratio-tall">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"image">&NewLine;<p><img class&equals;"media-viewer-candidate" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;static01&period;nyt&period;com&sol;images&sol;2016&sol;04&sol;01&sol;world&sol;02guatemala-web5&sol;02guatemala-web5-articleLarge&period;jpg" alt&equals;"" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;<&sol;div><figcaption class&equals;"caption"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"credit"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i><span class&equals;"visually-hidden">Photo&colon;<&sol;span> Adriana Zehbrauskas&sol;nytimes <&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;span><b><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"caption-text"><span class&equals;"credit"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i><br &sol;>&NewLine;<&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;span>Children played on a truck in Lote Ocho&period; The community consists of about a dozen flimsy wooden houses&comma; home to about 100 people&comma; most of them children&period;<&sol;span> <&sol;b><&sol;span><span class&equals;"credit"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><b> <span class&equals;"visually-hidden">Credit<&sol;span> Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times <&sol;b><&sol;span> <&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">Hudbay officials also maintain that there was no negligence in 2009 when it did own the mine&period; Officials say the killing of Mr&period; Ich&comma; a teacher&comma; and the shooting of Mr&period; Chub&comma; a farmer&comma; took place as the mine’s security guards were defending themselves from armed protesters&period; But some recent events appear to lend credence to the plaintiffs’ claims&period; The head of the mine’s security during the 2007 evictions and the 2009 shootings&comma; a former army colonel named Mynor Padilla&comma; is now on trial in Guatemala over the shooting of Mr&period; Ich and Mr&period; Chub&period; Moreover&comma; an army officer and a paramilitary officer were convicted in February of raping and enslaving indigenous women in the 1980s&comma; during Guatemala’s long civil war&comma; suggesting&comma; some advocates say&comma; that such behavior has long been entrenched in this country&period; During the war between the United States-backed government and leftist rebels&comma; the indigenous population in this region was repeatedly attacked for trying to make land claims&period;  Even now&comma; the local Q’eqchi’ population believes much of the land in the area belongs to it&comma; and not to the mining company&period; At the time of Mrs&period; Caal’s eviction&comma; there was no mining anywhere near Lote Ocho&comma; but mining officials moved to evict the villagers anyway&period; The community is made up of about a dozen scattered&comma; flimsy wooden houses&comma; home to about 100 people&comma; most of them children&period; There is no electricity here or a school for the children&period; The village is a bumpy 45-minute ride in a pickup truck uphill from the nearest town&period; But that costs money&comma; so most of the villagers walk there using a footpath&comma; which takes about two hours&period; Mrs&period; Caal said the armed men who attacked her during the eviction were so brutal with her that she could not get up from the spot where they had left her&period; But when her husband asked what had happened to her&comma; she told him only that she had fallen&comma; afraid of how he might react&period; It is still a subject she turns to reluctantly&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Remembering is reliving&comma;” Mrs&period; Caal said&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;It hurts&period; It hurts as a woman&period;”<&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><&sol;div>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"story-body-text story-content"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><i><b>Lets us know what you think of this article&period; Like&quest; Dislike&quest; Funny&quest; Interesting&quest; Cool&quest;  Drop us a line in the comment box or join us on facebook and twitter to help us give you a better reading experience <&sol;b><&sol;i><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;

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