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In a message dated 27/03/02 02:23:56 Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


http://www.crisisweb.org/projects/showreport.cfm?reportid=592

Courting Disaster: The Misrule of Law in Bosnia & Herzegovina


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS


The law does not yet rule in Bosnia & Herzegovina. What prevail instead are
nationally defined politics, inconsistency in the application of law,
corrupt and incompetent courts, a fragmented judicial space, half-baked or
half-implemented reforms, and sheer negligence. Bosnia is, in short, a land
where respect for and confidence in the law and its defenders is weak.

Bosnians are unequal before the law, and they know it. Exercise of the
legal rights to repossess property or to reclaim a job too often depends on
an individual's national identity - or that of the judge before whom she or
he appears. Even when citizens do get justice in the courts, the chances of
having decisions enforced can be slim, since the execution of court orders
is often prolonged unlawfully or hedged in arbitrary conditions. Obtaining
justice is also subject to geographical chance. War crimes in one entity or
canton are still hailed as acts of heroism in another.

Ethnicity and geography are not the only brakes on justice. An individual's
position in or relationship to one or another national-political elite also
counts. Punishing the powerful and the well connected for milking public
coffers or appropriating public goods - whether in the name of the
'national cause' or for private gain - remains virtually unknown. Although
allegations of corruption in high places appear in the newspapers every
day, and formal investigations are nearly as common, not a single past or
present national party leader has yet been convicted and sent to prison.

Unlike for the majority of law-abiding Bosnians, national discrimination
and 'ethnic justice' do not apply to smugglers, racketeers, tax evaders,
gunrunners, drug dealers, white slavers, and their patrons. These groups
rejoice in what remains of old Yugoslavia's "brotherhood and unity", doing
business across internal and external borders and national or confessional
divides. Their community of interest - in getting rich and defying the law
- contrasts with the disunity of those who want to uphold the law.

Not only is Bosnia divided juridically into three, four, fourteen, or
sixteen territorial- hierarchical jurisdictions (depending on how the one
state, two entities, one autonomous district, eight unitary cantons, and
two mixed cantons are counted); it also has three separate sets of laws,
two of which are replete with contradictory provisions. This fragmentation
is a boon to criminals and a pitfall for would-be reformers and enforcers
of the law.

The discontinuity of the territorial structure bequeathed by the Dayton
Peace Accords is compounded by Bosnia's mixed legislative inheritance. The
statute books contain a multitude of outdated, overlapping and inconsistent
laws from the pre-war, wartime and post-war periods. They are applied (or
not) by courts which are too numerous, too expensive, too inefficient, and
too vulnerable to political influence.

The brain drain of legal talent that accompanied the war continues today.
This, coupled with the 'politically correct' appointments that have
prevailed throughout, means that the country's several executive
authorities wield influence over judges' minds as well as their purses. The
courts are simply in no position to resist either the power of the
executive or the temptations of national solidarity.

The dysfunctional nature of Bosnia's legal and judicial system has been
long apparent to both domestic legal experts and international officials.
The Office of the High Representative (OHR), the United Nations Mission in
Bosnia & Herzegovina (UNMIBH), the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Independent Judicial Commission (IJC),
and various NGOs have regularly reiterated both their keen appreciation of
the centrality of the rule of law and their commitment to establishing it.

But this recognition of the problem and an appreciation of its dire
consequences have not led to the adoption and implementation of adequate
remedies. There has been no coherent, coordinated and thoroughgoing program
of judicial and legal reform. Rather, international efforts have typically
been timorous, incremental, piecemeal and disjointed, leading to long
delays, the loss of institutional memory and periodic re- launches of
reform schemes. In particular, international agencies have sought quick
fixes for systemic problems. The saga of the now abandoned program of
"comprehensive" judicial review is the most depressing case in point.

As a consequence, millions of dollars have been spent since 1996 by an
assortment of international agencies to promote the rule of law in Bosnia,
including hefty salaries for over 200 foreign legal experts who have worked
to improve the performance of Bosnia's 1,200 judges and prosecutors. In
comparison to the sums expended, the results achieved have been pitiful.
Brcko District, in northern Bosnia, is the positive exception to the
general sorry record, and proves that successful reform is possible.

Parroting at least part of the international community's charge sheet,
Bosnia's governments and politicians never fail to take an opportunity to
castigate their country's politicised and ineffectual judiciary, blaming it
for all manner of societal ills. Yet they have refused to free judges and
prosecutors of political manipulation and make the judiciary an independent
pillar of a lawful state. Rather, the political parties keep the judiciary
obedient by seeking always to appoint their own 'good' judges in place of
other parties' 'bad' ones, railing against the continuing indignity of
foreign judges on Bosnian benches, and ensuring their own discretionary
powers in the distribution of justice remain intact.

Now, belatedly, the international community is giving the establishment of
the rule of law the priority it deserves. The High Representative is
expected to create a new, state-wide High Judicial Council in the first
week of April. This step will likely be followed by the swift passage or
imposition of a package of some 52 laws on legal and judicial reform. This
new initiative probably represents the last chance for fundamental reform.
A new, serious and long-term commitment by Bosnians and foreigners alike is
required if the complex judicial and legal measures essential to the rule
of law are to be implemented while the international community is still on
hand to help.

The increasing complexity and ubiquity of cross-cantonal, cross-entity and
cross- border criminal networks; the legal challenges posed by a transition
economy; the need to try thousands of war crimes cases in the country; the
faltering interest of the international community in Bosnia; and the
increased pressure to uphold legal standards and human rights posed by
Bosnia's imminent membership of the Council of Europe and other European
bodies - all point to the unsustainability of the current legal and
judicial disorder. But they also testify to the inadequacy of past and
present international approaches to reform.

If Bosnia is to be ruled by laws and not by wilful men, let alone to
progress towards European Union membership, then the responsible
international agencies (above all OHR and the IJC) and Bosnian jurists and
politicians should consider the following recommendations and undertake
reforms in a coordinated, coherent and consistent manner, applying the
lessons drawn from Brcko. The recent decision of the Peace Implementation
Council (PIC) to scrap peer review of judges and the priority now being
accorded to rule of law issues by the High Representative, his designated
successor and at least some Bosnian leaders are encouraging signs that the
challenge may finally be confronted.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Bosnia requires uniform, comprehensive reform of its various judicial and
legal systems, simultaneously in both entities and at the state level. This
reform should:

embrace the judiciary and, in particular, the judicial appointment mechanism;
harmonise legislation;
include the adoption of new civil and criminal legislation;
remove the grip of the executive on the financing of courts, and the grip
of the legislature on the hiring and firing of judges;
streamline the bloated and very expensive court structures, improve court
management;
professionalise the legal profession, modernise legal education; and,
pursue a cultural revolution in the attitudes and practices of court personnel.



CONSTITUTIONAL AND LEGAL REFORM

Legislation to regulate and institutionalise obligatory and automatic
cooperation in criminal and other legal matters among the courts,
prosecutors and police of the state, the entities and Brcko District should
be enacted by the state, entity and district assemblies by June 2002.

Bosnia's parliamentary assemblies, advised by OHR, should amend the state
and entity constitutions and laws by June 2002 to:

Provide for the establishment of a state-level Judicial Commission; and

Reform the court structure in the Federation and Republika Srpska to reduce
the number of municipal and cantonal courts and prosecutors' offices,
switching from a system based on administrative-territorial units to one
based on court-to-population ratios.

By September 2002, the state and entity parliaments should pass criminal
and civil legislation - uniform throughout the country and in conformity
with European standards - to establish effective legal procedures for the
delivery of thorough and expeditious criminal investigations, civil
litigation and fair judicial processes.

The state and entities should enact legislation by the end of 2002 that
provides for the financial independence of the judiciary and the reform of
court administration, as recommended in the IJC strategy document.

The High Representative should brook no further delay in ensuring the
adoption of the draft law on inter-entity judicial cooperation, and the
draft state-level law that would require all lawyers to be certified by and
registered with the BiH Bar Association.

THE JUDICIARY

The Constitutional Court's decision on the equality of the "constituent
peoples" must be fully applied to the judicial system. Furthermore, as the
decision is implemented, the judiciary must be empowered to take
responsibility for upholding the integrity of the process and the
permanence of its results.

Pending the completion of a comprehensive reform process, the international
community should not yield to Bosnian arguments against the participation
of foreign judges in the work of Bosnian courts. The removal of such judges
would not increase Bosnian sovereignty but rather diminish the independence
of the BiH Constitutional Court and the rights of Bosnians.

REAPPOINTMENT PROCESS

The failed comprehensive peer review of judges and prosecutors should be
replaced with a general reappointment process (GRP) on the model
successfully applied in both the former German Democratic Republic and
Brcko District.

Incumbent judges and prosecutors (as well as other qualified candidates at
home and abroad) should be invited to reapply (or apply) for all available
positions in a transparent and internationally supervised competition.

Candidates should be required to demonstrate that they meet prescribed
criteria of professional competence, moral integrity and commitment to the
highest standards of human rights, precluding involvement in the
administration of 'ethnic justice' during and since the war.

General reappointment should be completed, within a calendar year, by
spring 2003.

General reappointment should be organised and administrated by a
state-level interim judicial commission, led by the IJC but also including
foreign judges of the BiH constitutional court, distinguished Bosnian
jurists and legal scholars, prominent lawyers from the Ombudsmen offices
and private practice, and representatives of the executive.

The IJC should retain the final say in approving initial appointments for a
probationary period of one year, during which appointees would be trained
to apply the new criminal and civil procedure codes.

Upon expiry of the probationary period, the interim judicial commission
should become a permanent commission, without further IJC participation but
including judges of the entity's supreme and constitutional courts, as well
as their chief prosecutors.

The permanent, state-level judicial commission would confirm or deny life-
time mandates for the probationers.

TRAINING AND STANDARDS

Thoroughgoing reforms are required to entrench high professional standards
in the judiciary. IJC, OHR and other international agencies should organise
training for newly appointed judges and prosecutors on the principles and
application of the new legislation. Training on the new criminal procedure
code should also include police officers, lawyers and academics.

The IJC and other international agencies should assist in the reform of the
legal profession, in particular by creating a state-wide bar association
capable of setting and maintaining ethical and professional standards
across the country and serving as a 'doorkeeper' to the profession.

The international community should encourage the reform and modernisation
of Bosnia's university law faculties and their curricula, bringing to bear
the talents and experience of legal professionals to ensure that graduate
lawyers can be effectively assimilated into the system.

Given that UNMiBH's mandate will expire at the end of 2002, the monitoring
capacity of the UN Mission's Criminal Justice Advisory Unit (CJAU) must be
utilised to the utmost - including oversight of the soon-to-be promulgated
criminal procedure code - while it exists. Also, steps should taken this
year for the IJC to develop or acquire its own monitoring unit, for example
by absorbing CJAU's staff and structures before its demise.

WAR CRIMES

OHR, the IJC and the Council of Ministers should ensure that, by spring
2003, the nascent state court is in a position to begin the trial of
thousands of war crimes cases that will not fall within the purview of the
Hague Tribunal.

The integrity of domestic war crimes trials should be assured both by the
participation of foreign judges and by the previous elaboration of programs
to build capacity among law enforcement agencies and to protect witnesses.

In order to educate the Bosnian public about the future role and
responsibility of the state in prosecuting war crimes, Bosnia's Public
Broadcast Service (PBS) should provide extensive coverage of all trials in
The Hague related to Bosnia.

RESOURCES

The Peace Implementation Council (PIC) and international donors should
provide the IJC with sufficient financial means, human resources and
political support to complete a truly comprehensive program of judicial and
legal reform.
International organisations and donors should continue to finance the
Ombudsman offices and press for the enhancement of their powers and the
implementation of their recommendations.

Sarajevo/Brussels, 25 March 2002

The International Crisis Group (ICG) is a private, multinational
organisation, with 75 staff members on four continents, working through
field-based analysis and high-level advocacy to prevent and contain
conflict. The ICG Board is chaired by former Finnish President Martti
Ahtisaari, and its president is former Australian Foreign Minister Gareth Evans.


---------------------------
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--- Begin Message ---
http://www.crisisweb.org/projects/showreport.cfm?reportid=592

Courting Disaster: The Misrule of Law in Bosnia & Herzegovina


EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS


The law does not yet rule in Bosnia & Herzegovina. What prevail instead are 
nationally defined politics, inconsistency in the application of law, 
corrupt and incompetent courts, a fragmented judicial space, half-baked or 
half-implemented reforms, and sheer negligence. Bosnia is, in short, a land 
where respect for and confidence in the law and its defenders is weak.

Bosnians are unequal before the law, and they know it. Exercise of the 
legal rights to repossess property or to reclaim a job too often depends on 
an individual's national identity - or that of the judge before whom she or 
he appears. Even when citizens do get justice in the courts, the chances of 
having decisions enforced can be slim, since the execution of court orders 
is often prolonged unlawfully or hedged in arbitrary conditions. Obtaining 
justice is also subject to geographical chance. War crimes in one entity or 
canton are still hailed as acts of heroism in another.

Ethnicity and geography are not the only brakes on justice. An individual's 
position in or relationship to one or another national-political elite also 
counts. Punishing the powerful and the well connected for milking public 
coffers or appropriating public goods - whether in the name of the 
'national cause' or for private gain - remains virtually unknown. Although 
allegations of corruption in high places appear in the newspapers every 
day, and formal investigations are nearly as common, not a single past or 
present national party leader has yet been convicted and sent to prison.

Unlike for the majority of law-abiding Bosnians, national discrimination 
and 'ethnic justice' do not apply to smugglers, racketeers, tax evaders, 
gunrunners, drug dealers, white slavers, and their patrons. These groups 
rejoice in what remains of old Yugoslavia's "brotherhood and unity", doing 
business across internal and external borders and national or confessional 
divides. Their community of interest - in getting rich and defying the law 
- contrasts with the disunity of those who want to uphold the law.

Not only is Bosnia divided juridically into three, four, fourteen, or 
sixteen territorial- hierarchical jurisdictions (depending on how the one 
state, two entities, one autonomous district, eight unitary cantons, and 
two mixed cantons are counted); it also has three separate sets of laws, 
two of which are replete with contradictory provisions. This fragmentation 
is a boon to criminals and a pitfall for would-be reformers and enforcers 
of the law.

The discontinuity of the territorial structure bequeathed by the Dayton 
Peace Accords is compounded by Bosnia's mixed legislative inheritance. The 
statute books contain a multitude of outdated, overlapping and inconsistent 
laws from the pre-war, wartime and post-war periods. They are applied (or 
not) by courts which are too numerous, too expensive, too inefficient, and 
too vulnerable to political influence.

The brain drain of legal talent that accompanied the war continues today. 
This, coupled with the 'politically correct' appointments that have 
prevailed throughout, means that the country's several executive 
authorities wield influence over judges' minds as well as their purses. The 
courts are simply in no position to resist either the power of the 
executive or the temptations of national solidarity.

The dysfunctional nature of Bosnia's legal and judicial system has been 
long apparent to both domestic legal experts and international officials. 
The Office of the High Representative (OHR), the United Nations Mission in 
Bosnia & Herzegovina (UNMIBH), the Organisation for Security and 
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Independent Judicial Commission (IJC), 
and various NGOs have regularly reiterated both their keen appreciation of 
the centrality of the rule of law and their commitment to establishing it.

But this recognition of the problem and an appreciation of its dire 
consequences have not led to the adoption and implementation of adequate 
remedies. There has been no coherent, coordinated and thoroughgoing program 
of judicial and legal reform. Rather, international efforts have typically 
been timorous, incremental, piecemeal and disjointed, leading to long 
delays, the loss of institutional memory and periodic re- launches of 
reform schemes. In particular, international agencies have sought quick 
fixes for systemic problems. The saga of the now abandoned program of 
"comprehensive" judicial review is the most depressing case in point.

As a consequence, millions of dollars have been spent since 1996 by an 
assortment of international agencies to promote the rule of law in Bosnia, 
including hefty salaries for over 200 foreign legal experts who have worked 
to improve the performance of Bosnia's 1,200 judges and prosecutors. In 
comparison to the sums expended, the results achieved have been pitiful. 
Brcko District, in northern Bosnia, is the positive exception to the 
general sorry record, and proves that successful reform is possible.

Parroting at least part of the international community's charge sheet, 
Bosnia's governments and politicians never fail to take an opportunity to 
castigate their country's politicised and ineffectual judiciary, blaming it 
for all manner of societal ills. Yet they have refused to free judges and 
prosecutors of political manipulation and make the judiciary an independent 
pillar of a lawful state. Rather, the political parties keep the judiciary 
obedient by seeking always to appoint their own 'good' judges in place of 
other parties' 'bad' ones, railing against the continuing indignity of 
foreign judges on Bosnian benches, and ensuring their own discretionary 
powers in the distribution of justice remain intact.

Now, belatedly, the international community is giving the establishment of 
the rule of law the priority it deserves. The High Representative is 
expected to create a new, state-wide High Judicial Council in the first 
week of April. This step will likely be followed by the swift passage or 
imposition of a package of some 52 laws on legal and judicial reform. This 
new initiative probably represents the last chance for fundamental reform. 
A new, serious and long-term commitment by Bosnians and foreigners alike is 
required if the complex judicial and legal measures essential to the rule 
of law are to be implemented while the international community is still on 
hand to help.

The increasing complexity and ubiquity of cross-cantonal, cross-entity and 
cross- border criminal networks; the legal challenges posed by a transition 
economy; the need to try thousands of war crimes cases in the country; the 
faltering interest of the international community in Bosnia; and the 
increased pressure to uphold legal standards and human rights posed by 
Bosnia's imminent membership of the Council of Europe and other European 
bodies - all point to the unsustainability of the current legal and 
judicial disorder. But they also testify to the inadequacy of past and 
present international approaches to reform.

If Bosnia is to be ruled by laws and not by wilful men, let alone to 
progress towards European Union membership, then the responsible 
international agencies (above all OHR and the IJC) and Bosnian jurists and 
politicians should consider the following recommendations and undertake 
reforms in a coordinated, coherent and consistent manner, applying the 
lessons drawn from Brcko. The recent decision of the Peace Implementation 
Council (PIC) to scrap peer review of judges and the priority now being 
accorded to rule of law issues by the High Representative, his designated 
successor and at least some Bosnian leaders are encouraging signs that the 
challenge may finally be confronted.

RECOMMENDATIONS

Bosnia requires uniform, comprehensive reform of its various judicial and 
legal systems, simultaneously in both entities and at the state level. This 
reform should:

embrace the judiciary and, in particular, the judicial appointment mechanism;
harmonise legislation;
include the adoption of new civil and criminal legislation;
remove the grip of the executive on the financing of courts, and the grip 
of the legislature on the hiring and firing of judges;
streamline the bloated and very expensive court structures, improve court 
management;
professionalise the legal profession, modernise legal education; and,
pursue a cultural revolution in the attitudes and practices of court personnel.



CONSTITUTIONAL AND LEGAL REFORM

Legislation to regulate and institutionalise obligatory and automatic 
cooperation in criminal and other legal matters among the courts, 
prosecutors and police of the state, the entities and Brcko District should 
be enacted by the state, entity and district assemblies by June 2002.

Bosnia's parliamentary assemblies, advised by OHR, should amend the state 
and entity constitutions and laws by June 2002 to:

Provide for the establishment of a state-level Judicial Commission; and

Reform the court structure in the Federation and Republika Srpska to reduce 
the number of municipal and cantonal courts and prosecutors' offices, 
switching from a system based on administrative-territorial units to one 
based on court-to-population ratios.

By September 2002, the state and entity parliaments should pass criminal 
and civil legislation - uniform throughout the country and in conformity 
with European standards - to establish effective legal procedures for the 
delivery of thorough and expeditious criminal investigations, civil 
litigation and fair judicial processes.

The state and entities should enact legislation by the end of 2002 that 
provides for the financial independence of the judiciary and the reform of 
court administration, as recommended in the IJC strategy document.

The High Representative should brook no further delay in ensuring the 
adoption of the draft law on inter-entity judicial cooperation, and the 
draft state-level law that would require all lawyers to be certified by and 
registered with the BiH Bar Association.

THE JUDICIARY

The Constitutional Court's decision on the equality of the "constituent 
peoples" must be fully applied to the judicial system. Furthermore, as the 
decision is implemented, the judiciary must be empowered to take 
responsibility for upholding the integrity of the process and the 
permanence of its results.

Pending the completion of a comprehensive reform process, the international 
community should not yield to Bosnian arguments against the participation 
of foreign judges in the work of Bosnian courts. The removal of such judges 
would not increase Bosnian sovereignty but rather diminish the independence 
of the BiH Constitutional Court and the rights of Bosnians.

REAPPOINTMENT PROCESS

The failed comprehensive peer review of judges and prosecutors should be 
replaced with a general reappointment process (GRP) on the model 
successfully applied in both the former German Democratic Republic and 
Brcko District.

Incumbent judges and prosecutors (as well as other qualified candidates at 
home and abroad) should be invited to reapply (or apply) for all available 
positions in a transparent and internationally supervised competition.

Candidates should be required to demonstrate that they meet prescribed 
criteria of professional competence, moral integrity and commitment to the 
highest standards of human rights, precluding involvement in the 
administration of 'ethnic justice' during and since the war.

General reappointment should be completed, within a calendar year, by 
spring 2003.

General reappointment should be organised and administrated by a 
state-level interim judicial commission, led by the IJC but also including 
foreign judges of the BiH constitutional court, distinguished Bosnian 
jurists and legal scholars, prominent lawyers from the Ombudsmen offices 
and private practice, and representatives of the executive.

The IJC should retain the final say in approving initial appointments for a 
probationary period of one year, during which appointees would be trained 
to apply the new criminal and civil procedure codes.

Upon expiry of the probationary period, the interim judicial commission 
should become a permanent commission, without further IJC participation but 
including judges of the entity's supreme and constitutional courts, as well 
as their chief prosecutors.

The permanent, state-level judicial commission would confirm or deny life- 
time mandates for the probationers.

TRAINING AND STANDARDS

Thoroughgoing reforms are required to entrench high professional standards 
in the judiciary. IJC, OHR and other international agencies should organise 
training for newly appointed judges and prosecutors on the principles and 
application of the new legislation. Training on the new criminal procedure 
code should also include police officers, lawyers and academics.

The IJC and other international agencies should assist in the reform of the 
legal profession, in particular by creating a state-wide bar association 
capable of setting and maintaining ethical and professional standards 
across the country and serving as a 'doorkeeper' to the profession.

The international community should encourage the reform and modernisation 
of Bosnia's university law faculties and their curricula, bringing to bear 
the talents and experience of legal professionals to ensure that graduate 
lawyers can be effectively assimilated into the system.

Given that UNMiBH's mandate will expire at the end of 2002, the monitoring 
capacity of the UN Mission's Criminal Justice Advisory Unit (CJAU) must be 
utilised to the utmost - including oversight of the soon-to-be promulgated 
criminal procedure code - while it exists. Also, steps should taken this 
year for the IJC to develop or acquire its own monitoring unit, for example 
by absorbing CJAU's staff and structures before its demise.

WAR CRIMES

OHR, the IJC and the Council of Ministers should ensure that, by spring 
2003, the nascent state court is in a position to begin the trial of 
thousands of war crimes cases that will not fall within the purview of the 
Hague Tribunal.

The integrity of domestic war crimes trials should be assured both by the 
participation of foreign judges and by the previous elaboration of programs 
to build capacity among law enforcement agencies and to protect witnesses.

In order to educate the Bosnian public about the future role and 
responsibility of the state in prosecuting war crimes, Bosnia's Public 
Broadcast Service (PBS) should provide extensive coverage of all trials in 
The Hague related to Bosnia.

RESOURCES

The Peace Implementation Council (PIC) and international donors should 
provide the IJC with sufficient financial means, human resources and 
political support to complete a truly comprehensive program of judicial and 
legal reform.
International organisations and donors should continue to finance the 
Ombudsman offices and press for the enhancement of their powers and the 
implementation of their recommendations.

Sarajevo/Brussels, 25 March 2002

The International Crisis Group (ICG) is a private, multinational 
organisation, with 75 staff members on four continents, working through 
field-based analysis and high-level advocacy to prevent and contain 
conflict. The ICG Board is chaired by former Finnish President Martti 
Ahtisaari, and its president is former Australian Foreign Minister Gareth Evans.


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