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Ramin Abdollahi's mother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

A mother’s grievances for her son incarcerated at MEK Camp in Albania

Ramin Abdollahi deceived by the MEK operatives into joining the group about 17 years ago.Since then he have had no contact with his family.

His aging,ailed mother regularly send letters to the international human rights bodies in order to help her contact his beloved son.

her recent letter to the Albania’s PM, reads:

“Mr. Edi Rama, Prime Minister of Albania,
I, as a heartbroken mother, ask you and all the officials of the Government of Albania to accelerate the conditions and help me visit my dear son even just for a few seconds.
Thank you in advance for taking steps to respect human rights.“

July 15, 2020 0 comments
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Abdollahi and Orjola Pampuri
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Mothers, the forgotten victims of MEK, respond to Orjola Pampuri

Ms. Pampuri, former MP

Greetings and kind regards,

According to a website of the Albania based Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK, MKO, Rajavi Cult), you have made a speech as an MP (even though you had resigned in 2019) for “the International Online Conference on Freedom and Democracy in Iran” on June 20, 2020, in an online conference held connecting about 2,000 locations around the world.

In your political message you addressed the people of Iran and showed your sympathy for them to the best of your knowledge. However, it appears you are not fully aware of the real situation of the MEK members in your own country, their estranged families and how much suffering they have endured for not having contact between loved ones for decades.

We are mothers of the Rajavi cult members. They are trapped in the MEK camp in Albania with no access to the outside world and they are banned from contacting their families. We wish to bring this painful situation to your attention.

We wish to draw your attention to the cultic practices imposed inside the camp and ask you to learn more about this from former members, the families and the critics of the MEK. If the MEK officials can connect 2000 locations at once, why can’t they arrange for their members to call their families?

The truth is that the MEK, like all other destructive mind control cults, has the following characteristics:
1. Suppressing critical thinking about the leader and the cult by the members, or even by outsiders, in the harshest possible way (no criticism);
2. Isolating members from the outside world, in particular their family and friends (no contact);
3. Penalizing the members for even thinking about leaving (no exit);
4. Seeking inappropriate loyalty to their leaders which means the members are practically the possessions of the leaders Massoud and Maryam Rajavi (modern slavery);
5. Denying the formation of family units (no marriage, no children, no family relations – mothers, fathers, spouses, offspring are considered as the main enemies, even more than the Iranian government);
6. Imposing strict boundaries of behavior (perverting normal emotional responses and spiritual beliefs and denying personal ownership);
7. Perversion from mainstream religious practices and imposing invented cultic doctrines outside actual scripture (under the guise of modern Shiite Islam).

We have just one humanitarian and rightful request. Since you have a close relation with the MEK and Maryam Rajavi, would you kindly act as an intermediary for the families, in particular the elderly mothers, to get in touch with their loved ones so we can at least, in the last days of our lives, hear their voice after the long decades.

Sorayya Abdollahi, on behalf of “Mothers, the forgotten victims of MEK”

July 15, 2020 0 comments
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Mazandaran families of nejat
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Make us happy by removing visa barriers to meet our loved ones in MEK Camp

Following the nationwide petition of the families with nearly 11500 signatures, a number of families of the members trapped in the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK) camp in Albania from Mazandaran province (north of Iran), have sent separate messages and letters to the Albanian prime minister, urging him to enable them to visit or at least have video or audio contact with their loved ones.

Each of these letters was accompanied by photographs, specifications, and documents, and copies were sent to other Albanian officials, as well as to European and international officials and to the Albanian and international media.

The families also expressed concern about the health of their loved ones in the context of the outbreak of coronavirus disease.

Families are waiting for the Albanian government, as a humanitarian gesture, to respond appropriately to these demands and solve the problems ahead. Many of these families have not heard from their loved ones for decades now.

It should be noted that during these years, many families in Mazandaran province died while waiting to see their loved ones, and they never managed to find out about them, whose names are now missing in the attached list.
Other Mazandarani families also keep sending letters and messages to the Albanian Prime Minister.

Mazandaran families of nejat

The mailing list sent so far from Mazandaran province is attached.

Here are some examples of Mazandaran’s elderly mothers and fathers’ messages to the Albanian Prime Minister, whom Rajavi calls agents and terrorists:

Khadijeh Rezvan Yar Sarai, the mother of Mohammad Reza Khazaei, wrote to Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama:”As a mother, why shouldn’t I even have a phone call with my son?”

Ali Asghar Ahangar, son, and Nasibeh Ahangar, daughter of Abdol Hossein Ahangar, wrote:”The MEK has deprived us of a father. Why shouldn’t we be able to talk to our father and hear his voice after so many years?”

Fatemeh Ashouri, Maryam Ramezani’s mother, wrote:”I miss my daughter very much. Why shouldn’t I hear her voice after years?”

Houshang Babaei Chamazekti’s father wrote:”I miss my son very much. Is it true that after so many years I cannot meet my son who is in your country, or at least hear his voice?”

Mohammad Reza Tavakoli the father and Zahra Rajabpour the mother of Alireza Tavakoli wrote:”We have not seen our son for more than 30 years. We miss him very much now and we suffer daily. As parents, why should we not meet or at least talk to our son?”

Safar Zare, the father of Ramazan Zare, wrote:”As a father, why shouldn’t I have the right to meet with my son or at least see his picture and hear his voice?”

Mohammad Oladi, the father of Abbas (Javad) Oladi, wrote:”I miss my son very much. The lack of communication and the inability to meet is very sad.”

Roghayeh Babaei, the mother of Majid Mohammadi Golafshan, wrote:”I have not heard from my son, who is at the camps of the MEK for more than 30 years. Make me happy by removing the obstacles on his way to meet or call me.”

Mrs. Ganjian, the mother of Mostafa and Mahnaz Ganjian, wrote:”As a mother, I miss my children very much. But unfortunately, your government is obstructing the issuance of visas to visit them.”

Farideh Abui, the mother of Mohammad Jafari Keshtali, wrote:”His father died while parting with our son, and I will always remember him. I request that an arrangement be made so that I can have a meeting with my son in Albania before I die.”

Kaveh Latifi, son of Mahmoud Latifi, wrote:”I have not heard from my father for more than 30 years. I am very eager to hear his voice at least once.”

Abbas Famil Zakeri, the father of Mohammad Hossein Famil Zakeri wrote:”I request you to make me happy by removing visa barriers to meet with my son.”

Ghanbar Ali Shabanpour, father of Hassan Shabanpour, wrote:”I miss my son very much. Why don’t you allow me, an old father, to visit my son once before I die?”

“I have raised my children with great difficulty over the years. Why can’t my husband at least talk to his children?“Wrote Mahrokh Rabbani Div Sheli, the wife of Massoud Tusi Bakhsh.

Hassan Tusi Bakhsh and Milad Tusi Bakhsh, sons of Massoud Tusi Bakhsh, wrote:”We are very sad that we cannot hear our father’s voice. Rajavi deprived us of having a father and did not even allow us to hear his voice once.”

Abazar Zabihi, the son of Fatemeh Fekrian, wrote:”Why shouldn’t I have the right to hear my mother’s voice after 30 years and communicate with her?”

“Is it a crime to want to hear my daughter’s voice after 30 years?“Wrote Roghayeh Kiani, Mehri Qadirzadeh’s mother.

Shahnaz Bagheri, the wife of Ahmad Rezaei, wrote:”After my husband was captured, I raised my children with great difficulty. Now why don’t they at least allow him to visit his children?”

Khairullah Sabet Rostami, father of Mohammad Mehdi Sabet Rostami, wrote:”I miss my son very much. Doesn’t this make you wonder why the MEK prevents a son from having at least one contact with his father?”

Hadi Shabani, Iraj Salehi, Mohammad Goli – Nejat Society, Mazandaran Representative

July 14, 2020 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq Organization as a terrorist group

A Step Further Than Saddam Hussein!

Saddam Hussein’s regime was widely regarded as the sole state supporter of the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK, MKO, Rajavi Cult). Massoud Rajavi went to Iraq in June 1986 after meeting with then Iraqi Foreign Minister and Vice President Tariq Aziz, and moved his forces there, forming the National Liberation Army as a ‘private army’ in Saddam Hussein’s military and security system.

At that time Iraq became the main stronghold of the MEK, and Saddam Hussein became the only state supporter of Massoud Rajavi and his armed forces. Rajavi was actively involved in the Iran-Iraq war, though on the side of the aggressor enemy and against the border guards and defenders of the homeland, and because of this great national betrayal, he became extremely hated by the Iranian people. He destroyed what was left of his popular base in exchange for Saddam Hussein’s substantial support for gaining power in Iran.

This situation continued until the coalition forces invaded Iraq in 2003 and Saddam Hussein was toppled. During this period Massoud Rajavi and his forces continued their terrorist activities inside Iran with the full support of the Ba’athist regime in Iraq. The fall of the dictator in Baghdad brought about dramatic changes for the MEK. Massoud Rajavi’s time was over and he was forced into hiding. Maryam Rajavi went to Paris as the new figurehead of the cult, and the MEK forces in Iraq were disarmed and corralled into a single US guarded camp.

Iraqi police at ashraf camp

The MEK leaders had enjoyed extremely good conditions in Iraq under Saddam Hussein and were able to gather their forces in isolated and remote camps where they could cut off members’ contact with the outside world, especially with their families and friends.

After the fall of Saddam Hussein, each successive sovereign government of Iraq, one after another, called for the expulsion of the MEK as a threat to national security. Rajavi did his best to stay in Iraq and not lose Ashraf garrison and the border with Iran; he hoped that a spark would re-ignite the war between the two countries. He even opened an account for the US invasion of Iran and planned the conditions for entering the country. Finally, after many hardships, the rest of the MEK left Iraq in late summer 2016 and arrived in Albania under an unconventional agreement. Albania was the only country ready to accept them. Members of the organization were admitted collectively without proper asylum status or travel documents in violation of UN rules.

How Could Albania's Hosting of the MEK Affect Its Inclusion in the FATF’s Grey List?

Unlike in Iraq, the MEK in Albania did not have an isolated and remote camp to gather in. This was not sustainable for the organization as it experienced a daily decline with tens of members deserting the group. The original plan was for Albania to be the mediator country and from there the process of deradicalization, rehabilitation and distribution of the MEK combatants into various European and American countries would begin. Accordingly, a number of them were accepted by the United States. But with the emergence of the Trump administration and the rise to power of warmongers such as John Bolton, this trend changed and the MEK were moved to a US-provided camp, where the leaders were able again to impose coercive methods of control in the same way as Camp Ashraf in Iraq. Interestingly, this new camp was given the name Ashraf 3 – an acknowledged continuation of Ashraf’s infamous and notorious garrison in Iraq.

In Iraq under Saddam Hussein, Rajavi and his cult had restrictions imposed on them because of national security issues. They were not allowed to leave their camps. Their movement outside the camp for essential matters such as visiting doctors or attending hospital was possible only with the escort of Estekhbarat (the Intelligence Protection Organization of the military and law enforcement forces) agents. They did not have the right to communicate with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Members of Parliament, Ministers, government officials, businessmen, police officers, municipal authorities, and so on. They were limited to communicating with the Ministry of Defense and the Army. They were not even allowed to communicate with the Mokhaberat (Intelligence and Security Organization). They were not allowed to refer to the Iraqi media and citizens. Even to buy their necessities, they had to act through army intelligence officers who were permanently stationed in the MEK garrisons. They had no right to engage in any economic, social, political, or propaganda activities inside Iraq, and were entirely under the control of Iraqi military intelligence. The routine meetings of Massoud Rajavi and other leaders of the organization took place only with officials of this body and they resolved all their issues through it. Even to leave the country or enter Iraq, they had to go through this channel and not through the normal and official channels of the country. Immediately after accepting the ceasefire between Iran and Iraq under Saddam Hussein, Iranians could easily obtain visas and visit Iraq. Instead of restricting all Iranian citizens, the government restricted the MEK.

But the MEK face no such restrictions in Albania. The open hand that Edi Rama – at what cost and for whose interests it is not clear – has given to the MEK in his country has allowed the MEK to extend its malign influence into every aspect of the country’s governance, while ordinary Iranians are banned from visiting the country. The MEK are free to protest against an article in the Gazeta Impakt that they did not like, and write an open letter, shamelessly calling for legal action against it, and Albanian citizens such as civil rights activist Olsi Jazexhi, lawyer Migena Balla, and journalist Gjergji Thanasi, have been threatened and slandered for displeasing the MEK. Was Rajavi allowed to act in this manner against Saddam Hussein?

It is worth noting then that Albania’s Prime Minister, Edi Rama, has taken a step further than Saddam Hussein to support the Rajavi Cult, to the point where he has endangered the national security of his country and even Europe. If Edi Rama has real authority to govern his country and does not – as it appears he does – have to obey the demands of foreigners, he needs to think a little harder about his country’s national interests and think about why Saddam Hussein had limited the MEK in Iraq so much and why subsequent Iraqi governments after Saddam Hussein insisted on expelling the MEK from Iraq? The answer to this question would certainly serve to enlighten Albanian public opinion and clarify the nature of their current government.

By Atefeh Nadalian, Translated by Iran Interlink

July 14, 2020 0 comments
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Nejat Society meeting at Miyandoab
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

MEK members’ families gathered together

The gathering of suffering families whose beloved ones are being held in an isolated remote camp of MEK in Albania.

meeting- Miandoab- orumiya

The children of some of these families were either soldiers who become POW and then represented to the MEK by Saddam Hussein’s forces after their captivity or they were porters who were captured by Iraqi forces in the border areas and handed over to the MEK or were in Iran’s neighboring countries and have been deceived by the MEK operatives under the disguise of the so called job-finders and sent to Iraq.

Despite the ways the MEK members were captured they all have a common problem:

They are not allowed to visit in person or even make phone call to their own families!

July 13, 2020 0 comments
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Mohamamd reza nowroozi family from sarbandar khuzestan
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Interview: Nowruzi family appeal the Albanian gov. to allow visit their brother in MEK camp

Dr. Olsi Yazhchi interviews Nowroozi pur family

Their brother ; Mohammad Reza joined the MEK in 1985. He is now in his 60s. during all these years he have had no contact with his family except a few calls during the Iran-Iraq War.
Mr. Alireza Nowroozi pur, Mohammadreza’s brother says:” my brother ,Mohamamdreza joined the MEK, 35 years ago. Since then he have had no contacts. He just called us a few times during the war.

The calls was organized in order him to get information from inside the country but not to hear our voice or get news from our well being. When the organization realized that they could not elicit any information from our family,the calls were cut off…

My parents passed away without seeing their dear son. It is a big organized crime against humanity.

Our only request is to know about my brother’s well being.

Watch the full interview and the family’s message to their brother at the MEK Camp :

July 12, 2020 0 comments
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Mujahedin Khalq; A proxy force

Tectonic Shift In World Order After Unforced Error By Trump

Anyone who believes that President Trump’s order to illegally assassinate Quds Force leader Qassem Soleimani, Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, and several more Iraqis, was an act of strength has not been properly paying attention. This is the latest in a series of stupid policy errors by this administration which have not only strengthened the hand of America’s enemies but have also now ensured that the rest of the world, with the exceptions of Israel and Saudi Arabia, now at best views the U.S. with mistrust, or at the very worst hate America more than any other country on earth. This is a remarkable achievement for a man who promised to end the “endless wars” and “drain the swamp.”

Trump started his presidency with the ambition of overturning the Obama administration’s achievements. However, he inherited a foreign policy already predicated on waging war and which was soon re-staffed and promoted by Republican warmongers. In this context, withdrawing unilaterally from the Iran nuclear deal might have appeared to be a strong-arm tactic to Trump, but to America’s allies in Europe it looked like a betrayal, and a slap in the face. Still, none were willing to come out on the side of Iran at that time. Even Russia and China were holding back at that stage. So, what were the steps in between which culminated in late December in an unprecedented four days of joint naval manoeuvres between Iran, China, and Russia in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Oman? What happened to embolden this trio to flex military muscle in the Middle East?

A review of these steps reveals that the blinkered aim of the Trump administration’s foreign policy to manufacture regime change against Iran by any means possible including all-out war has in fact resulted in the opposite result. Regime change is now in its coffin and the assassination of Soleimani is the last nail hammered in.

Instead of promoting freedom and democracy in the Middle East, American interference is destroying every possibility of ordinary people rising up and demanding change from their own governments. In Syria, the people rose up against President Bashar al-Assad because of genuine grievances against that regime. The outcome of U.S. support for Sunni extremists in Syria has been a swing from people supporting the American aim of ousting Assad to rallying behind their own terrible government to save them from the spread of Islamic fundamentalism. With an irony that can be lost on no one, authoritarian Russia and the theocracy in Iran are now allies of Syria in that struggle.

Tectonic Shift In World Order After Unforced Error By Trump 1

In another reckless act of overturning Obama’s legacy, the new Trump administration halted Hillary Clinton’s plan to de-radicalise the Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK) in Albania. Since then, American anti-Iran politicians have stuffed the MEK down the throats of the international community as the regime change opposition that will bring freedom and democracy to Iran. Since Iranians hate the MEK more than the current Islamic Republic, this has been a gift to the hard-liners in Iran. To quell every protest or demonstration since then, Iran’s security forces have only to claim that MEK are involved in inciting violence for the ordinary people to go home and announce their abhorrence of the MEK.

American actions are consolidating people around their own hated governments instead of helping them express their legitimate demands. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s response to the anti-government protests in Iran in November was to repeat false information published by the MEK about the death toll. When Pompeo retweets MEK propaganda it destroys any trust among Iranians that the U.S. has their interests in mind.

In another remarkable example of how Pompeo has frittered away American power and influence, just weeks ago, disgruntled Iraqi citizens were in the streets demonstrating against Iranian interference in their country. Instead of supporting them, Pompeo oversaw the U.S. bombing of Iraqi militia forces that were fighting against ISIS. The Iraqi people cannot take the U.S. side over this no matter how anti-Iran they are. If America had done nothing, said nothing, Iraqi people would still be in the street demonstrating against their own government. Instead, different Iraqis attacked the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. Now, in a pivotal act of hubris, the illegal assassination of Soleimani and Iraqi militia leaders at an international airport not only allows Iran to describe the U.S. as a terrorist state, but has brought Iranians of every belief together to rally together to mourn a national hero, the man who saved Iran from ISIS.

But it would be a mistake to believe that the U.S.’s Middle East foreign policy mistakes only impacted that region. In 1981, France gifted the CIA some land to host the MEK outside Paris from where they could plan their armed resistance to the new regime. Although France did not use the MEK politically as America did, their presence was tolerated. Until, that is, MEK activities began to impact European security and democracy.

In 2017, John Bolton, just before he became Trump’s National Security Advisor, promised the MEK they would celebrate in Tehran before the 40th anniversary of the Iranian Revolution in February 2019. That did not happen, of course. But events subsequent to this promise certainly indicated there were already plans afoot to use the MEK to undermine European policy toward Iran. A bomb plot against the MEK in France was discovered by security forces in France and Belgium to have been a false-flag operation by the MEK used to blame and demonize Iran. After numerous acts of violence and confirmation that the MEK had funded Spain’s far-right Vox party in its EU election bid, several European countries, including Germany and the Netherlands as well as France and Belgium moved to expel MEK leaders, including leader Maryam Rajavi, to Albania.

In Albania, the MEK have caused multiple headaches for the government and the opposition there. The worst result of which has been the EU’s refusal to allow Albania to join the union. After kicking out the MEK, no European country would allow them to enter through the back door again.

Significantly, what these policy steps over time have revealed to America’s foes and her friends alike is that the U.S. cannot be trusted. The Trump administration has shown a reckless disregard for normal behavior in the international scene. It acts with callous cruelty and indifference against enemies and allies alike.

The unwanted assassination of Soleimani will result in tectonic shifts in the world order. No matter how hard mainstream media in the West works to normalize America’s actions, security and military experts the world over will have their own ideas about what the future holds.

Responsible Statecraft,

July 12, 2020 0 comments
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Gholam ali Narimi brother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Ali Narimi’s family want to meet him held in the MEK camp in Albania

Mr. Gholam Ali Narimi from Khoozestan Province is presently in the MEK paramilitary camp of Manza in Albania.
Mr. Gholam was born 1960. He joined MEK in 1976 when he was 16 years old. Today he is 60 years old.

His family in Khoozestan in Iran want to meet him. However the Albanian government does not allow his family to come to Albania since Maryam Rajavi, the leader of MEK cult claims that these Iranian families are terrorist and want to kill their family member.

We have interviewed the brother of Mr. Gholam, Mr. Hamid Reza Narimi and his wife Mrs. Sager to understand if they are good people or terrorists?

They appeal in this video to the Albanian government to allow them to come to Albania and meet their brother. They appeal to Mr. Gholam to abandon MEK and live a free life.

July 11, 2020 0 comments
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Ramin Abdollahi's mother
Mujahedin Khalq Organization members' families

Ramin Abdollahi’s family ask to visit him in MEK camp in Albania

I am the mother of Ramin Abdollahi, known as Pari Shohrati. I have not heard from my son for more than 17 years, and only through some people who had separated from the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK, MKO) have I been able to find out that my Ramin is also there.

Ramin Abdollahi's mother

Despite of many communications that I had with the international bodies, I was unable to contact my son due to the dismissal of the leaders of the MEK.

Mr. Edi Rama, Prime Minister of Albania,
I, as a heartbroken mother, ask you and all the officials of the Government of Albania to accelerate the conditions and help me visit my dear son even just for a few seconds.
Thank you in advance for taking steps to respect human rights.

I also have a message for my son that I would like him to receive:
“Ramin, my dear son, Ramin Abdollahi, I haven’t been able to hear your voice or see your face for years and I long to hug you.”

Pari Shohrati, mother of Ramin Abdollahi a member of the MEK

July 9, 2020 0 comments
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Asieh Rakhshani
The cult of Rajavi

The MEK and Children – Asieh Rakhshani

Asieh is cherished in the MEK’s media as a “Mujahed Martyr”. She was a 28-year old girl when she was killed in a clash between Iraqi forces and the group members in March 2013. She was filming the clashes.

The MEK-run media state that Asieh Rakhshani joined the group in 1998 but as a child of Mujahed parents, she undoubtedly had no other choice except joining the MEK, just like many other children of the Mujahedin Khalq.
Asieh was one of those MEK children who have been separated from their parents and sent to Western countries by the MEK leaders, in 1991. The leaders then chose for her to get back to the group as a fighting force.

Asieh Rakhshani- mek victim

Iraj Mesdaghi former member of the MEK and a severe critic of its leaders write about the girl:
“Asieh Rahkshani is one of those children who were sent from the United States to Iraq… Asieh was not alone. In 1997 and 1998 the MEK mobilized a large number of 15 to 17- year-old children to Iraq. Most of them had no legal status. The story of their lives is a tragedy.”

After the death of Asieh the MEK media published photos and films of an enthusiastic teenager who turned out to become an active force of the group’s media after years of organizational cult-like training. In a heroic-like video the MEK media show her parents saying farewells to the dead body of their daughter. They might have not seen their daughter for a long time before her death. As the rule of living in the MEK, parents are divorced, living separately and family members are not allowed to contact each other except for once a year on the occasion of the New Year’s celebration.

July 8, 2020 0 comments
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