Jan 16, 2011

Overthrow delivers a jolt to Arab region

By Liz Sly and Leila Fadel
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, January 16, 2011; A11

BAGHDAD - Moments after Tunisian president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali was ejected from his palace, tweets began flying across a region that was at once enthralled and appalled by the specter of an Arab leader being overthrown by his own people.

"Today Ben Ali, tomorrow Hosni Mubarak," gloated one tweeter, referring to Egypt's long-serving president. "Come on Mubarak, take a hint and follow the lead," urged another.

And prominent Egyptian blogger Hossam el-Hamalawy observed: "Revolutions are like dominos."

On Saturday, a day after Tunisia's president was forced into exile by massive street demonstrations, the Middle East was still reeling, with calls for copycat protests reverberating across the Internet, in cafes and on street corners as far afield as Jordan and Yemen. For the first time in the history of a part of the world long calcified by autocratic rule, a dictator had been forced from office by a popular revolt, and it was all broadcast live on television

Leaders braced for the fallout. Elites analyzed the potential for the revolution to spread. Ordinary people celebrated, marveled, gossiped and wondered: Will it happen here? What can we do? And, perhaps most important, who will be next?

Only one certainty stood out: The turmoil in tiny Tunisia, long ignored as a sleepy outpost of relative stability on the fringe of a volatile region, will have profound ramifications for the rest of the Arab world.

"Things will not be the same any longer," predicted Labib Kamhawi, a political analyst in the Jordanian capital of Amman. "2011 will witness drastic change, and it is long overdue."

The rumblings are already there. Jordan, Algeria and Libya have all seen violent protests in recent weeks, spurred by rising prices, unemployment and anger at official corruption - much the same issues that precipitated the snowballing street protests in Tunisia a month ago.

As the ousted Ben Ali flew into exile in Saudi Arabia on Saturday, the Saudi government issued a statement that seemed designed to forestall unwelcome comparisons between the new guest and the ruling Saudi monarchy.

"The government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia announces that it stands fully behind the Tunisian people," it said.

Almost no government in the region is immune from the combustible combination of grievances that sparked the uprising in Tunisia. Inflation, joblessness and the hopelessness of living in a country where opportunity is the preserve of a tiny ruling elite are steadily fueling frustrations from Algiers to Amman, from Tripoli to Sanaa and Damascus.

With the exception of Lebanon, whose democratically elected government also collapsed last week, for reasons related to Lebanon's own complicated sectarian politics, and Iraq, still battling the scourge of a lingering insurgency, every country in the region is ruled by some form of undemocratic autocrat.

"We could go through the list of Arab leaders looking in the mirror right now and very few would not be on the list," said Robert Malley, who heads the Middle East and North Africa program at the International Crisis Group. Rumblings in Egypt


Perhaps nowhere do the lessons of Tunisia resonate more loudly than in nearby Egypt, where Mubarak has been president since 1981, six years longer than his toppled Tunisian counterpart. Egypt, like Tunisia, is grappling with the challenges of a rapidly growing population, limited job opportunities and deep resentment of the entrenched privileges of a ruling clique.

In a possible foreshadowing of what may lie ahead, police broke up an attempted demonstration outside the Tunisian Embassy in Cairo on Saturday night and blocked all but a few dozen protesters from reaching the site of another planned protest.

"It is our turn," chanted a small crowd of about 70 activists who managed to break through the police cordon. "Revolution is coming, by any means."

But it is far from certain that what happened in Tunisia will be replicated in other parts of a region whose governments have a practiced record of suppressing dissent. Tunisia was at once better and worse off than other Arab nations, in that its government had both allowed the development of a free economy in which many citizens prospered and ruthlessly repressed the emergence of any form of Islamist opposition.

"What is happening in Tunisia is Tunisia-specific," said Christopher Alexander, a Tunisia specialist and director of the Dean Rusk International Studies Program at Davidson College in North Carolina. "Each country is struggling with its own political, social and economic challenges. But just because some of the challenges are similar doesn't mean that trouble erupting in one place will spread to another."

If it did, the trouble might take a very different form.

In Egypt, the most potent opposition movement is the Muslim Brotherhood, whose supporters are dedicated to imposing Islamist rule on a country with a long secular tradition. Islamists are also the most vocal opponents of the regimes in Saudi Arabia and Jordan, which, like Egypt, are key U.S. allies, as well as in Syria, which is not.

"Change could come not for the better but for the worse, if fundamentalist forces succeed in taking over," said Kamhawi, the Jordanian analyst. "Tunisia was not that important at the end of the day. But what if a more important ally, such as Egypt or Saudi Arabia, was at stake? Would the Americans risk serious change in a more important country?"

The experience of 2005, when the region witnessed a somewhat similar moment, suggests that they would not. Powerful calls for democracy by the Bush administration had seemed to herald a new mood, encouraged by Iraq's first democratic election and the Cedar Revolution in Lebanon, in which hundreds of thousands of protesters forced the departure of occupying Syrian troops.

But the moment quickly faded. The United States backed off after strong showings by Islamists in regional elections, and Lebanon's revolution foundered in the face of the country's fierce sectarian rivalries and waning U.S. interest.

In a speech in the Qatari capital of Doha last week, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered a measured critique of Arab regimes, emphasizing the need for leaders to reform their economies and stamp out corruption rather than outright political change. Unknown change ahead


Yet the upheaval in Tunisia may herald the stirrings of another new moment for the Middle East, one in which the United States perhaps becomes irrelevant, analysts say. U.S. officials noted that at no point did the protests in Tunis turn anti-American, despite U.S. support for the dictator they were seeking to dislodge.

Claire Spencer, who heads the Middle East department at the London-based Chatham House think tank, detects the beginnings of a new form of opposition among what she called the "post 9/11 generation," one that is as alienated from Islamic extremism as it is from its own governments.

"Tunisia has kick-started the region's imagination," she said. "There's a lot of frustration out there that could unleash change of some sort, though what it will look like, we still don't know."

Fadel reported from Beirut. Staff writer Joby Warrick in Washington, correspondent Sudarsan Raghavan in Dubai, and special correspondents Sherine Bayoumi in Cairo, Ranya Kadri in Amman and Ali Qeis in Baghdad contributed to this report.
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A Sudanese 'lost boy' brings his dreams home

By Sudarsan Raghavan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, January 16, 2011; A10

IN JUBA, SUDAN Abraham Akoi strolled confidently through a door marked with a sticker that read: "Secession."

The tall, rail-thin D.C. resident walked up the stairs of the Ministry of Finance here in southern Sudan, entering a world he had never expected to enter.

As he walked into his office, another man smiled and declared: "Separation!" Hazy sunlight glinted on the man's purple-shaded thumb, a sign that he had just voted.

That morning, Akoi, too, had taken part in Sudan's historic week-long referendum, which ended Saturday. He had voted for the south to secede from the north, as most people in this region were expected to do.

For Akoi, it was the latest stop in an extraordinary journey. It began with a dangerous walk across mountains and deserts when as a child he fled a civil war. It stretched to refugee camps and prestigious American universities and now unfolds back here amid great hope and trepidation over what could soon become the world's newest country.

"I still can't believe that I am here," said Akoi, 31.

Ten years ago, Akoi stepped off a plane in Atlanta, one of several thousand "lost boys" whose hardship and escape from Sudan's brutal 22-year conflict captured the imagination of Americans. Thousands of southern Sudanese were resettled in the United States, and most struggled to blend into their adopted communities. But many, like Akoi, excelled.

Akoi earned a degree in history and economics from the University of the South in Tennessee, then a master's degree in government and an MBA from Johns Hopkins University. He had internships at the Carter Center in Atlanta and with Rep. Donald M. Payne (D-N.J.), who has championed causes in Africa.

Today, Akoi's life has come full circle. Southern Sudanese living in the United States could have voted in several U.S. cities. But Akoi and many other "lost boys" chose to return to their homeland to vote and help propel it into its next era.

"It is a fulfillment of a mission we for so long have yearned to accomplish," said Valentino Achak Deng, whose own journey was portrayed in the novel "What Is the What." "It is a day when I feel like someone has finally given me my voice. It was important for us to be here, to be on this soil." 'Thinking about the past'


The day Akoi voted, the memories flooded back: fleeing his village at the age of 11. Walking, hungry and tired, to neighboring Ethiopia. Fleeing militias and bombers. Then returning to southern Sudan, only to flee again to a refugee camp in Kenya. Learning that his father and three brothers had died in the war.

As he stepped up to the cardboard booth to cast his vote, his hands shook.

"I was thinking about the past, all that we've been through," Akoi said. "I voted on behalf of all who lost their lives. I voted for my brothers."

He paused and added: "I looked at the ballot for a few seconds, as if it would fly away, and then I dropped it into the box."

In a couple of weeks, he'll know whether his dreams of secession will come true. If the referendum passes, as expected, southern Sudan will declare its independence in July.

On a recent day, Akoi drove through Juba. He noted how much the capital has improved since his first visit back, in 2009.

A few years ago, "this road was not paved," he said with pride.

He pointed at a sign for a local relief agency: "That was started by Sudanese in the U.S.," he said.

Akoi knows that significant challenges lie ahead. So many key issues dictating the relationship between north and south remain unresolved. Will the oil-producing border region of Abyei, contested by both sides, erupt into war? Will revenue from Sudan's massive oil reserves, the majority in the south, be shared equitably?

"Our political and financial institutions are weak," he said. "Civil liberties are not strong. There are no good hospitals and no good supply of medicines.

"And only 15 percent of south Sudanese know how to read and write. That's not very good for democracy."

Like most southern Sudanese, Akoi blamed Sudan's government, which is dominated by an Arab elite, for the region's woes. For decades, the Khartoum government sought to repress the south. Akoi noted how the vast majority of universities were located in the north. "We can't have good governance if the institutions of higher learning are not there," he said.

Akoi has already begun playing a role in shaping his homeland. He has declined to seek the six-figure salaries in the United States that come with earning an MBA. Instead he has chosen to live here and work with the government. His current job in the Ministry of Finance is to make sure government ministries and departments spend money efficiently and according to the annual budget. Water and mangoes


It's a delicate balancing act. The government is led by and filled with former rebels who have little experience. Corruption is rife; jobs are often handed out based on tribal allegiances. And despite his history, many perceive Akoi as an outsider.

"How do I tell them what to do without them thinking that I am some guy from the U.S. talking big? It's a very tough job," he said.

A few months ago, as global oil prices fell, he told officials they had to cut spending.

"They were not happy, but I had to do it," Akoi said. "They didn't understand that the oil revenues were based on market prices. They thought they would always get the same price."

Salva Kiir Mayardit, south Sudan's president, has tapped Akoi to become the deputy director of administration and finance - a sign that the government is reaching out to qualified technocrats in the diaspora. Many of southern Sudan's educated professionals, including lawyers, doctors and economists, died in the war or fled the region.

Akoi vowed not to be influenced by corrupt bureaucrats.

"I have a commitment and integrity to do the right thing for south Sudan," he said. "Our biggest challenge is creating a system that is bigger than one person, to create a system that will stand the test of time."

On most weekends, Akoi walks along the banks of the Nile, which snakes through Juba. When he looks at the lush mango trees, he sees the potential for southern Sudan to export their fruit. When he looks at the brown waters, he sees the potential to harness hydropower to light up the electricity-starved region.

"When I look at the water and the mangoes, they are indicators of how beautiful south Sudan is," Akoi said. "This is a place where people should not go hungry. If you plant anything here, it will grow."
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Bull market? No, sheep are the newest commodity.


By Anthony Faiola
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, January 16, 2011; A01

IN WINDERMERE, ENGLAND The rolling hills of the English Lake District, home to the stories of Peter Rabbit and endless acres of misty farms, seem the last place on Earth for a crime wave. But farmer, beware: Thieves are stalking the puffy white gold of the British countryside.

"They want our sheep," said Andrew Allen, 46, surveying his flock, now thinned after the recent theft of 45 head.

Allen is one of 19 farmers to fall prey to sheep rustlers in the majestic lake region over the past 12 months, with the thefts here only one part of a bizarre surge in rural crime that has seen incidents of sheep rustling skyrocket across Britain.

The culprit? Globalization.

The ovine crime wave began, insurance company and farm union officials say, after global food prices started jumping again. With bouts of bad weather in major producers such as Russia, Argentina and Australia and increasing demand in Asia, the price for many grains is now busting through the record highs they set in 2008. But meat prices have also surged, particularly for lamb.

Because of escalating world demand and scaled-back production in such nations as New Zealand, a farmer's price per pound for lamb here is now about 35 percent higher than in 2008. The 45 head of sheep stolen from Allen in late September, for instance, were worth $6,400 - or twice the price they would have fetched five years ago.

Rising prices have fueled what authorities here describe as a thriving black market for lamb and mutton, with stolen animals butchered in makeshift slaughterhouses before their meat is illegally sold to small grocery stores, pubs and penny-wise consumers.

But farmers here are counting more than lost sheep. Britain is also witnessing a surge in the theft of tractors and other farm machinery, with authorities blaming organized crime rings smuggling the stolen equipment into Eastern Europe - where farmers are rushing to cash in on high grain prices by cultivating more and more land.

Local authorities in Britain are racing to beef up "farmwatch" programs, with some ranchers in the picturesque countryside long used to sleeping with their doors unlocked and with keys in their tractors now installing video surveillance equipment on their properties.

"I'd see people parked at the roadside and looking at the lambs, and I'd chat with them, quite proud of the sheep myself," said Paul Taylor, 31, whose farm in High Legh, a small village in northwest England, was burgled of 100 sheep worth $16,000. But "nothing is innocent anymore. Now when people drive past, you take their license plate numbers down." Soaring value of lamb


The rural crime wave in Britain underscores the ways in which high food prices are rippling across the world. Although sky-high prices in 2008 eased during the Great Recession, they have shot up again, in part because of bad weather, climbing oil prices and resurgent demand as the global economy recovers.

This month, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization said that its food price index - which includes wholesale costs for such commodities as wheat, corn, sugar, dairy products and meat - had climbed to a record high.

In 2008, high food prices sparked bloody riots in Africa and Asia, and even contributed to bringing down the government in Haiti. In recent weeks, food prices have again contributed to fresh bouts of unrest in Tunisia and Algeria, with some analysts fearing more riots.

Nevertheless, other experts say that abundant harvests in Africa this year, and the still relatively low prices of some grains, including rice, may prevent a more serious wave of violence from recurring this year.

"We are alarmed by the surge, but we do not yet think we have reached the point of a new crisis," said Abdolreza Abbassian, senior economist at the FAO. "Some of the conditions that existed in 2008, like poor harvests in Africa, are not true now,"

Still, high food prices are having other kinds of side effects, such as the resurgence of sheep rustling.

With lamb prices increasing, authorities from Australia to Turkey to Spain are also warning of thieves. But few places have taken as much notice of the surge as Britain, where sheep are as much a part of cherished country life as fresh-baked scones and clotted cream.

"We have been watching what's happening in Britain in amazement, and wondering, frankly, why it isn't happening yet in the United States since lamb prices are at record highs," said Judy Malone, director of industry information at the American Sheep Industry Association in Englewood, Colo. "But I think it has a lot to do with the fact that lamb is so much more popular in Britain than it is in the United States. Everybody there follows the price closely." An economic blow


In Britain, the crime wave is hitting sheep farmers just as their fortunes were beginning to turn. Reduced subsidies have made it less lucrative to raise sheep here in recent years, and though Britain is still the largest lamb producer in Europe, flock numbers have fallen by 21 percent since 2000. Now, just as prices are high, sheep farmers have been hit with a rash of thefts, with more than 10,000 head reported stolen in 2010, double the figure a year earlier.

"There is no doubt that this is directly related to food prices," said Tim Price, spokesman for the National Farmers Union Mutual, Britain's largest agricultural insurer. "The prices went up, and so did the thefts."

Police, however, say their limited resources in the countryside have made it difficult to break up sheep theft rings. Nevertheless, given how difficult it is to round up the animals, many think that rogue farmers or slaughterhouse operators may be involved.

In Windermere, where local gift shops celebrate sheep with stuffed toys, mugs, even milk chocolate "sheep droppings," Allen said he was devastated when he noticed that his flock had shrunk. "I was going to give 'em their delousing dip, you know, everyone likes a good bath, when I noticed they were a bunch of them missing," he said.

How could he tell in a field of 600 sheep?

"Because," he said, "a farmer knows."

Special correspondent Karla Adam contributed to this report.
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Returning to public, with more caution


By Philip Rucker and David A. Fahrenthold
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, January 16, 2011; A01

LAS VEGAS - When Rep. Shelley Berkley decided to hold a "Congress on Your Corner" event here Friday, her plan was to prove that fear hadn't changed the way Congress works. She wound up proving the opposite.

Berkley's event in a small office building off the Strip featured a folding table, two flags and 60 constituents.

And at least 10 police officers.

"I hope this isn't the wave of the future," the Democrat said as she arrived and saw the officers. She hadn't asked for that level of protection: The Las Vegas police decided she needed it. "This should not be the way we have to do business in this country."

This week, it was.

The shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) in Tucson a week earlier left the powerful on Capitol Hill grappling with a very human fear: Just how risky, they wonder, is a life spent shaking hands with strangers?

For members of Congress, it was a week spent reassuring family members and making emergency plans with their staffs. Whose job is it to call 911? Who knows CPR? They read old hate mail, replayed memories of threats. Should we have reported that guy?

A few members talked about arming themselves. One suggested encasing the House's public galleries in Plexiglas.

By the end of the week, a handful started putting on their smiles and going out in public again. Politics is built in part on illusions, but this was a hard one: Do something that was previously utterly routine - and pretend it still was.

"I thought it was very important to send a signal to my constituents and let them know we're open for business," said Berkley, a congresswoman as loud and pugnacious as her city.

In addition to the police, a man stood behind Berkley as she met small groups of residents. It was her son Sam, 25, who had decided she needed him, too.

Historically, the most dangerous part of a lawmaker's job has been not violence, but travel. At least 29 members of Congress have died in accidents involving planes, automobiles and ships. One, Rep. Larry McDonald (D-Ga.), was killed when a Soviet fighter jet shot down his airliner in 1983.

Historians count six lawmakers who have been killed by strangers. They include a Republican congressman shot down in Arkansas in 1868, a House member from Texas who died in a riot in 1905 and two senators, Huey P. Long (D-La.) and Robert F. Kennedy (D-N.Y.), who were assassinated. Rep. Leo Ryan (D-Calif.) was killed in 1978 by members of the Jonestown cult in Guyana. Another lawmaker while fighting in the Civil War.

Other attacks have occurred, including one in 1954 when Puerto Rican nationalists shot five members from the House gallery. All survived. In 1998, a gunman killed two Capitol Police officers near an entrance to the building.

Congress members say they knew - at least in theory - that their job might put them in danger. To lower their risk, they used little tricks: Hold town hall meetings in churches or schools, where people are socialized to behave. When someone goes on a wild-eyed rant, start your answer by thanking them. It lowers their temperature.

This week, however, it occurred to some that they might not have understood the dangers after all.

On Thursday, Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) sat down with her staff to talk about the Jan. 8 shootings in Tucson. She got a shock: One aide opened a drawer and pulled out a folder of letters, received in recent years, that they had never shown to the congresswoman.

One said, "You will soon be assassinated." Another said, "They know where you and your family members live." A third said, "It is time for the patriot movement to take things into their hands."

Freshman Rep. Rick Berg's wife and mother called to ask about his safety. "This has been a real transition in our life," he said. "I'd never considered this, and I don't think they'd ever considered this, a life-threatening job."

Berg's biggest fear is that constituents will be too frightened to attend public events featuring members of Congress, saying that the killing of 9-year-old Christina Taylor Green in Tucson will give pause to anyone considering taking a child to a civic activity such as a town hall meeting.

"As a parent, I'd think twice about it, certainly if I were going to one in a big city," said Berg (R-N.D.).

This week, the House's sergeant-at-arms urged members to contact law enforcement officers in their districts. He also suggested installing a "panic button" at local offices so staff members could call police without picking up a phone.

Other members thought of more drastic measures. Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) said he would consider carrying his Glock 23 more often so that, if necessary, he could shoot back. "I'd hate to be in a situation where I don't have the tool to do what needs to be done," he said.

Although the Capitol is protected by roadblocks, metal detectors and hundreds of armed police, Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.) wants another layer. An aide said Burton plans to reintroduce a bill that would enclose the House's public galleries in something like Plexiglas, the kind of arrangement that shields liquor-store clerks.

Some members - concerned about protecting themselves and the constituents who come out to meet them - have sought advice from freshman Rep. Michael G. Grimm (R-N.Y.), who worked as an undercover agent for the FBI.

Grimm already views the world as though he were a hunted mobster: He sits facing the door, looks for emergency exits and notices when people tug at their waistlines. Too much, and they could be carrying a gun. But, after the Tucson shootings, Grimm thought his staff needed more preparation.

He asked one staff member, a retired New York police detective, to lead quarterly classes in which people are assigned roles in a disaster.

"Know what your function is," Grimm said: These could include performing CPR, calling 911 or making detailed mental notes of an attacker's height and hair color. The detective could try to calm a potential attacker. "And know multiple functions - in case one of the victims, God forbid, is the retired detective."

Members said their families began calling in the hours after the attack, pressing them: Could this happen to you?

"I don't tell them when I receive threats. I don't want them to worry," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.). But this week, the conversation was unavoidable: Besides the Giffords shooting, there were news reports about a 2009 case in which a man threatened to attack Lofgren on the street.

"Most of this is not to be taken seriously," the congresswoman told her family. "But, you know, when you say that . . . they're thinking, 'Gabby got shot on Saturday.' "

On Capitol Hill, the week passed in a foggy suspension. There was some talk of gun control: Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.), whose husband was killed in a shooting rampage in 1993, said she plans to introduce a bill that would ban high-capacity gun magazines.

Only at the end of the week did lawmakers begin to talk about other political issues, as Republicans planned for a vote on repealing the new health-care law.

And, as the days passed, a few lawmakers ventured out again for public events. In fact, members said they heard constituents worrying about them.

"They're thanking me and telling me to keep safe," Lofgren said. "That's new."

Security precautions varied. In Silver Spring on Saturday morning, Rep. Donna F. Edwards (D-Md.) didn't alert police before she made an appearance during a food drive at a Giant grocery store. Edwards arrived with only two of her staff members, chatted and playfully bagged groceries for an hour, then left.

In Minneapolis, Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) drew about 100 people to his own "Congress on Your Corner" event. As he sat at a wooden table and took questions, two police officers stood a few feet away.

"I'm very insistent that we have visible, strong security," said Ellison, one of two Muslim members of Congress, who has received threats and angry letters. "Not for myself, I don't think I need any. I think people need to feel safe and be safe."

Ellison said that, for now, a visible security presence made people feel at ease. "We will remain vigilant, but the necessity to have two uniformed people there may not exist in a month or two," he said.

In Las Vegas, Berkley's constituents waited in folding chairs, then went in to see her alone or in small groups. They wanted to talk about foreclosures, taxes, Medicare benefits, or just to have their picture taken.

"After the tragedy in Arizona, we've got to show support for these people," said Cliff Arnold, 67, a retired hard-rock miner who had come to ask Berkley's advice about a problem with the Internal Revenue Service. He thanked her for holding the event. "They're just as vulnerable as a soldier in Iraq. It takes a lot of courage to do this work."

Berkley said she was glad she held the event. Talking to one constituent, she said, "We're going to do another one of these."

Then she turned to the plainclothes officers standing around her. "Sorry, guys," she said.

ruckerp@washpost.com fahrenthold@washpost.com

Fahrenthold reported from Washington. Staff writers Paul Kane, Ben Pershing, Lois Romano and Sandhya Somashekhar in Washington and Nia-Malika Henderson in Minneapolis contributed to this report.
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Dixie and D.C. region drift farther and farther apart

By Steve Hendrix
Sunday, January 16, 2011; A01

Dixie Liquor stands alone. The Georgetown shop, which has been casting its neon glow across M Street NW for more than 50 years, is the only business in Washington and one of the few left in the region with the word "Dixie" in its name.

And it's not just the D-word. The region's Southern accent is also becoming measurably less pronounced, linguists say. The Confederate flag doesn't fly much in these parts anymore. Korean barbecue has taken its place alongside the Southern pit-cooked variety in many neighborhoods, and the "sweet tea line" that once stretched across Virginia has gotten blurry.

In all, according to academics and cultural observers, the Washington area's "Southernness" has fallen into steep decline, part of a trend away from strongly held regional identities. In the 150th anniversary year of the start of the Civil War, the region at the heart of the conflict has little left of its historic bond with Dixie.

"The cultural Mason-Dixon line is just moving farther and farther south as more people from other parts of the country move in," said H. Gibbs Knotts, a professor at Western Carolina University who, with a colleague, conducted a survey of Dixie-named businesses as a way to measure the shifting frontiers of the South. (The Mason-Dixon line, which set the border between Maryland and Pennsylvania, was the symbolic divider between North and South in the Civil War era.) "From what we're finding, D.C. and Virginia are not appearing very Southern at all these days," Knotts said of the survey, published last year.

The trend has been decades in the making, of course. But some observers say the evolution is nearly complete, in good part because of the stepped-up migration of Northerners and immigrants into the Washington area.

"I do think we've reached a critical mass of some kind - we're not a real Southern state anymore," said former Virginia state senator Russell Potts, 71, a longtime lawmaker from Loudoun County and an independent gubernatorial candidate in 2005. "I happen to believe that southern Virginia now actually starts down near Richmond. You can't even say that Fredricksburg is Southern."

That's about right, said Sharon Ash, a University of Pennsylvania linguist and co-author of the 2005 Atlas of North American English. A 1941 study placed the Washington area in the South for pronunciation purposes. But her atlas now draws that line about 45 miles north of Richmond, which was the capital of the Confederacy.

"We put Washington and the northern part of Virginia in what we call the Midland, which also includes Philadelphia and Pittsburgh," Ash said. "Migration patterns are changing things everywhere." No clear boundaries


With all due respect to 18th-century surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, drawing hard lines around a cultural region is always an imprecise exercise, said Harry Watson, director of the Center of the Study of the American South at the University of North Carolina, which last month published several papers on the subject. Pockets of Southernness pop up far from the 11 states that made up the Confederacy, Watson said, from the Eastern Shore of Maryland to Bakersfield, Calif.

"We are never going to get any hard and fast answers on exactly where the South is unless, God forbid, there's another Southern nation with fortified borders," Watson said.

But the frontiers of the core South are clearly shifting away from Northern Virginia and Washington, he said.

"That whole area feels more metropolitan than it does Southern," said Watson, who is based in another evolving corner of the South: Chapel Hill, N.C. "Down here, we make jokes about occupied Northern Virginia."

To northbound Interstate 95 lovers of Southern food, Northern Virginia used to mark the "sweet tea line," beyond which diners could no longer expect to find the hyper-sugared version of the South's national beverage.

A researcher, looking at where McDonald's franchisees stopped offering sweet tea, once mapped the line just north of Richmond. But the chain took sweet tea across the country in 2008 and it is now available nationwide.

In his own attempt to quantify the shifting sands of regional identity, Knotts and a colleague last year reproduced a 1970s study that looked at what names businesses choose for themselves (they excluded the widespread Winn-Dixie grocery stores so as not to skew the sample). The "Dixie" that once proudly figured on signs throughout the region has largely receded to a pocket of the old South in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.

"I would have been shocked to find much identification with Dixie in places like Northern Virginia," Knotts said. "And we didn't."

The Old Dominion received a "D score" of 0.03, which means that three Dixie names were found for every 100 with the word "American." Overall, the study ranked Virginia - along with Florida, Oklahoma and West Virginia - as "Sorta Southern," the least Southern of three categories. Richmond saw its embrace of Dixie business names cut in half since 1976, from 0.12 then to 0.05 last year.

In the District, the D score was never very high, Knotts said. The Georgetown liquor store was the only Dixie business in town both in 1976 and today.

Whether Washington should be defined as a Southern city has been a debate since the Civil War, when it was the seat of the Northern government but a hotbed of rebel sympathy. In modern times, the question has been more cultural than political. Washington's split personality was forever summarized by John F. Kennedy's worst-of-both-worlds description of it as a"city of Southern efficiency and Northern charm." Different perspectives


As the hub of the nation's government, Washington is always home to thousands of newcomers, some of whom cling to their hometown identities. Those who arrive from the North often see the area as Southern, and those from the South feel a Northern vibe.

But Greg Carr, who grew up in Nashville, sees Southern markers here. Carr, chairman of Afro-American Studies at Howard University, said he recognizes the fading signs of the Old South in this region.

"For black folks, this is still very much a Southern city," Carr said. "D.C. has very little in common with a stereotypical Northern city."

Carr cited the presence of an entrenched black elite in Washington as a characteristic of Southern cities, along the lines of Atlanta and Charlotte. Its still-living history of sharply segregated neighborhoods is another sign, as well as the paucity of white ethnic neighborhoods, such as Italian or Irish sections of Baltimore, New York and Boston.

"Even the architecture is more Southern," Carr said. "You have no concrete canyons in Washington."

Even as black residents from other states and countries move to Washington in greater numbers, the cultural feeling of African American communities remains Southern, he said.

"Anacostia, that's the South over there," Carr said. "Folks with their shirts off washing their cars, waving at you as you pass by. That's Southern."

And at least one major retailer still views Washington as a Southern market. Although Safeway has no stores in the deep South, the supermarket chain says its cluster of stores between Culpeper, Va., and Frederick, Md., posts the company's biggest sales of such regional offerings as fried chicken, ham hocks and other "country meats," collard greens and sweet potatoes, spokesman Greg TenEyck said.

Adrienne Carter, 66, is a big buyer of such ingredients. Along with her husband, Alvin, Carter owns the Hitching Post, a soul food restaurant on Upshur Street NW. To her, Washington remains Southern, but the feeling is fading.

Although never as common in Washington as in other Southern cities, the number of neighborhood places serving fried chicken, fish, macaroni and cheese, greens and other Southern delicacies has declined in recent decades.

"I remember my father going to places up and down Ninth and U" streets, Carter said. "Now they call that area Little Ethiopia."

Jan 5, 2011

StumbleUpon

Logo of StumbleUponImage by topgold via Flickr

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Selected Anthropology Learned Societies

Museum of Kent LifeImage via Wikipedia
Museumof Kent Life (BM)

National Associations

AAA, American Anthropological Association
http://www.aaanet.org

AAC-LMK, Asociación de Antropología de Castilla y León “Michael Kenny”
http://www.antropologiacastillayleon.org

AAI, The Anthopological Association of Ireland
http://www.anthropologyireland.org/

AISEA The Italian Association for Ethno-Anthropological Sciences
http://www.aisea.it/

AAS, Australian Anthropological Society
http://www.aas.asn.au/

ABA, Associação Brasileira de Antropologia
http://www.abant.org.br

AFA, Association Française des Anthropologue
http://www.afa.msh-paris.fr/

Anthropological Association of Greece
http://www.aee.gr/

APA, Associação Portuguesa de Antropologia
http://www.apantropologia.net

ASA, Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and Commonwealth
http://www.theasa.org/

APRAS, Association pour la Recherche en Anthropologie Sociale
http://web.mae.u-paris10.fr/apras/

ASA, Anthropology Southern Africa
http://www.asnahome.org/

ASAA/NZ, The Association of Social Anthropologists of Aotearoa/ New Zealand
http://asaanz.rsnz.org/

CASCA, Canadian Anthropology Society
http://casca.anthropologica.ca/

CEAS, Colegio de Etnólogos y Antropólogos Sociales AC, Mexico
http://www.ceas.org.mx/

FAAEE, Federación de Asociaciones de Antropología del Estado Español
http://www.ankulegi.org/castellano/asociacion/index.html

Croatian Ethnological Society
http://www.hrvatskoetnoloskodrustvo.hr

Dansk Etnografisk Forening
http://etnografiskforening.dk/

DGV, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Völkerkunde
http://www.dgv-net.de/

JASCA, Japanese Society of Cultural Anthropology
http://wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp/jasca/

Kula - Slovene Ethnological and Anthropological Association
http://www.kula.si

Malta Anthropology Society
http://soc.um.edu.mt/anthropology/

Mannfræðifélag Íslands
http://www.akademia.is/mi/

MCSS. Masaryk Czech Sociological Association, Section of Social Anthropology
http://www.ceskasociologicka.org/?en=

PAAA, Pan African Anthropological Association
http://www.upe.ac.za/paaa/

SEG | SSE, Schweizerische Ethnologische Gesellschaft| Société Suisse d'Éthnologie
http://www.seg-sse.ch/de

Slovene Anthropological Society
http://www.drustvo-antropologov.si

SSAG, Svenska Sällskapet för Antropologi och Geografi
http://www.ssag.se

Suomen Antropologinen Seura R.Y. / The Finish Anthropological Society
http://www.antropologinenseura.fi/en/home/

Towarzystwo Ludoznawcze (Polish Etthnological Society)
http://ptl.free.ngo.pl

SANT, Swerdish Antropologo Association
http://sverigesantropologforbund.blogspot.com/

NAF Norsk Antropologisk Forening, Norwegian Antrhopology Association
http://www.antropologi.org/

Other Networks and Associations

AEGIS, Africa-Europe Group for Interdisciplinary Studies
http://aegis-eu.org/

CIRS, International Center for Scientific Research
http://www.cirs-tm.org

ESfO, European Society for Oceanists
http://www.esfo-org.eu/

InASEA, The International Association for Southeast European Anthropology
http://www-gewi.kfunigraz.ac.at/inasea/

Indian Anthropological Association
http://www.indiananthropology.org/

IMA, Instituto Madrileño de Antropología
http://www.ima.org.es/index.html

AFS American Folklore Society
http://www.afsnet.org/

MASN, Moving Anthropolgy Student Network
http://www.movinganthropology.de/

MASN-Poland
http://www.masn.poland.prv.pl

MASN-Austria
http://www.movinganthropology.org/http://www.masn-austria.org

SIEF, International Society for Ethnology and Folklore
http://www.siefhome.org/

Society for the Anthropology of Europe
http://www.h-net.org/~sae/sae/index.html

WCAA, World Council of Anthropological Associations
http://www.wcaanet.org/

Antropologi.info
http://www.antropologi.info/

RAI, The Royal Anthropological Institute
http://www.therai.org.uk/
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Guardian - A divided Pakistan buries Salman Taseer and a liberal dream


Liberals have long been a minority force in Pakistan, reviled for importing 'western' ideas and culture; now they are virtually an endangered species

Declan Walsh in Lahore
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 5 January 2011 21.05 GMT
Article history
Prime minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani at the funeral of assasinated Punjab governor Salman Taseer. Photograph: Ilyas J Dean/Rex Features

There was silence in the ancient city of Lahore yesterday as Salman Taseer, a pugnacious son of the soil who made his name by speaking out, was lowered into an early grave.

Soldiers in fantail turbans snapped to attention; a cluster of stone-faced relatives looked on. A helicopter had carried Taseer's body from the governor's residence, a short distance away: authorities feared another fanatic, like the one who gunned down the Punjab governor 24 hours earlier, would show up.

At the graveside Taseer's three sons, men with black shirts and soft red eyes, flung clumps of rose petals into the grave. One was supported by a friend. A bugle sounded.

As graveyard workers shovelled sticky winter clay onto the coffin, many Pakistanis wondered what was disappearing into the grave with the outspoken politician.

Liberals have long been a minority force in Pakistan, reviled for importing "western" ideas and culture; now they are virtually an endangered species. As Taseer was buried, petals also flew through the sky in Islamabad where a cheering throng congratulated his assassin, a 26-year-old policeman named Mumtaz Qadri, as he was bundled into court. "Death is acceptable for Muhammad's slave," they chanted.

Taseer's crime, in Qadri's eyes, was to advocate reform of Pakistan's blasphemy law. Few other Pakistani politicians dared to speak against the law, which prescribes the death penalty for offenders yet is widely misused. Those who did now live in fear.

Sherry Rehman, a female parliamentarian from Karachi who tabled a parliamentary bill advocating reform of the blasphemy law, has disappeared from public view. Supporters have urged her to flee the country; sources close to her say she is determined to stay. Rehman has not yet requested extra police protection. A source said she "wasn't even sure what it means any more".

Religious parties refused to condemn Taseer's death, implying that he got what he deserved; some described him as a "liberal extremist". But intolerance from the religious right is nothing new in Pakistan; more striking is the lack of leadership from the country's secular forces.

The opposition Pakistan Muslim League–N party was conspicuously absent from the Lahore funeral, perhaps mindful of a decree by Barelvi mullahs that those condoling with Taseer also risked death. But capitulation to the religious right has also infected the ruling Pakistan People's Party, of which Taseer was a staunch member.

Since Taseer's death party supporters have burned tyres and chanted the old slogans: "Jiye Bhutto!" and "If you kill one Bhutto another will rise!" Party leaders painted Taseer's death as part of a "conspiracy". "We need to find out if this is an attempt to destabilise Pakistan," said law minister Babar Awan, announcing the inevitable judicial enquiry.

But the tired rhetoric masked a less palatable truth: that Taseer had been abandoned by his own leadership. After Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman, was sentenced to death under the blasphemy laws on 8 November, Taseer visited her in jail with his wife and daughter to show his support.

Shortly after, an Islamic mob rioted outside the governor's house in Lahore, burning his effigy and calling for his death. On television prominent media commentators joined the chorus of criticism.

Senior figures in his own party turned tail. Awan, the law minister, said there was no question of reforming the blasphemy law. "As long as I am law minister no one should think of finishing this law," he said on 26 November. Another minister confirmed that position one week ago.

The U-turn was the product of a huge miscalculation. At the start of the Aasia Bibi affair on 8 November, President Asif Ali Zardari suggested he might pardon the Christian woman if she was convicted. But he stalled, apparently hoping to extract political mileage from the affair.

Then on 29 November the Lahore high court, which had a history of antagonism with Zardari, issued an order forbidding him from issuing a pardon. The issue became a political football, a struggle between the government, the courts and the mullahs. Zardari was powerless to act.

And the Punjab governor was left swinging in a lonely wind.

In his last television interview, on 1 January, Taseer said it had been his "personal decision" to support Aasia Bibi. "I went to see her with my wife and daughter. Some have supported me; other are against me […] but if I do not stand by my conscience, then who will?"

The answer, he knew, was simple: not many. Taseer's liberal politics were controversial in Pakistan's media, which is increasingly dominated by rightwing commentators. He ridiculed his enemies with messages on Twitter, a medium that he relished for its ability to deliver brisk, barbed jabs.

In December even Meher Bokhari – a leading female journalist who had once been ridiculed as a "CIA agent" after attending a US embassy party — asked Taseer if he wasn't following a "pro-western agenda" by supporting the Christian woman. Taseer retorted that he didn't know what she was talking about.

For many, the debacle shows how the heroes of yesteryear have fallen in Pakistan. In 2007 brave journalists, judges and lawyers came together to help oust the military leader President Pervez Musharraf from power. Today the judiciary has become enmeshed in controversy, the media offers an unfiltered platform to extremists, and the lawyers movement has been badly divided.

Ayaz Amir, a progressive commentator, noted yesterday: "The religious parties will always do what they do. You can't blame them. It is up the other sections of Pakistani society to stop the rot and reverse the tide. But it's the political parties and the army should have done it. And they did nothing."

Pakistan's military and civilian leaders face many grave challenges, not least the still-burning Taliban insurgency in the north-west. But for embattled liberals, the death of Taseer exposed something ugly in their wider society, much as the shoulder-shrugging reaction to the massacre of minority Ahmadis in a Lahore mosque last May did.

Lahore is the capital of Punjab, the large and wealthy province that is the boiling cauldron of Pakistan's ideological battle. Punjab is the breeding ground of extremists nurtured by the pro-Islamist policies of Pakistan's army, which has used militants to fight Indian soldiers in Kashmir. According to US assessments in the recent WikiLeaks cables, it still does.

Two years ago extremists attacked the police training centre outside Lahore that is home to the Punjab Elite force, the province's best-trained police commandos. This week a member of that same force – Qadri – was responsible for killing Taseer.

Taseer's death has focused that ideological fight around blasphemy. The law originated under British colonial rule in the 19th century but only acquired notoriety in the 1980s when the dictator Zia ul Haq decreed that blasphemy was punishable by death (a provision that Islamic scholars say has little theological foundation). The law is also of questionable civil law value: it contradicts fundamental rights enshrined in the constitution.

It is a crime where no proof is required. The religious slander allegedly uttered by Aasia Bibi, for instance, has never been repeated by her accusers – to do so would be to blaspheme again. As a result, she has been convicted on the say-so of her neighbours, with whom she was having an argument in a field.

If Bibi's conviction is upheld she will be hanged, the first woman in Pakistan's history to be executed for blasphemy. If freed, she will have to flee Pakistan immediately.

Senior supporters say that Canada has made a tentative offer of asylum. But in the present climate in Pakistan it seems unlikely that Bibi will be set free. Senior human rights campaigners told the Guardian they feared she could be killed by zealots in jail or on the steps of the court, as has happened in other blasphemy cases.

The question now is who will speak up for her. For liberals, Taseer's death is a sign that their political space, already highly constrained, is becoming impossibly small.

"If Pakistan and Pakistanis do not try to excise the cancer within, the future of this country is very bleak," read an editorial in Dawn yesterday.

The face of Mumtaz Qadri, smiling beatifically as he was led away by police after killing Taseer, perhaps dreaming of his rewards in heaven, has become the image of Pakistan's national agony. Qadri claims to act in the name of Islam, the reason that Pakistan was founded.

Yesterday on Twitter, the medium beloved of Salman Taseer, liberal Pakistanis bemoaned the disappearance of "Jinnah's Pakistan" – the tolerant, pluralistic country envisioned by its founder, the lawyer Muhammad ali Jinnah, in 1947. Others tried to remember if it had ever existed.

And in the streets outside Pakistan's silent majority – the ordinary, moderate people who do not favour extremism or violence, and only want their society to thrive – were saying nothing. But in Pakistan, that is no longer good enough. Silence kills.
A very human view

Salman Taseer was one of Pakistan's most prolific and popular tweeters, on everything from politics to cricket, revealing a very human view of the country's troubles. Here are some of his more recent tweets:

3 January: So Facebook the social networking site started by a 26 year old has been valued at $50bn Same as our foreign debt! Something 2 think about?

31 December: Peace prosperity & happiness for new year ( 1 1 11 ) i'm full of optimism



31 December: I was under huge pressure sure 2 cow down b4 rightest pressure on blasphemy. Refused. Even if I'm the last man standing

26 December: Religous right trying 2 pressurise from the street their support of blasphemy laws. Point is it must be decided in Parlaiment not on the road

24 December: Covered in the righteous cloak of religon and even a puny dwarf imagines himself a monster . Important to face. And call their bluff

24 December: My observation on minorities: A man/nation is judged by how they support those weaker than them not how they lean on those stronger

19 December: So Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook fame has been chosen 4 Time Magazine man of the Year. Hmm . Guess I'll have to wait till next year

19 December: What is the qualification 4 issueing a fatwa? A beard? Title Maulana? Owning a madrassa?
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Thai Politics - Andrew Stotz

Thai Politics Andrew Stotz                                                            

Jan 4, 2011

IIAS | ICAS Publications Series

Author(s): Chaiyakorn Kiatpongsan
ISBN: 978 90 8964 164 9
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 296
Price € 44,50
Author(s): John Kleinen, Manon Osseweijer (eds)
ISBN: 978 981 4279 07 9
Publisher: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
Publication year: 2010
Pages 299
Price S$59.90/US$49.90
Author(s): Philip F. Williams (ed)
ISBN: 978 90 8964 092 5
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 176
Price € 37,50
Author(s): Philip Hirsch & Nicholas Tapp (eds)
ISBN: 978 908 964 249 3
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 168
Price € 27,50
Author(s): Rituparna Roy
ISBN: 978 90 8964 245 5
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 180
Price € 27,50
Author(s): Azyumardi Azra, Kees van Dijk, Nico J G Kaptein (eds)
ISBN: 978 981 230 940 2
Publisher: ISEAS/IIAS
Publication year: 2010
Pages 211
Price USD $39.90
Author(s): Mehdi Parvizi Amineh
ISBN: 978 90 5356 794 4
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 312
Price € 44,50
Author(s): Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner
ISBN: 978 90 8964 165 6
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 272
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Author(s): Wen-Shan Yang, Melody Chia-Wen Lu
ISBN: 978 90 8964 054 3
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 264
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Modernization, Tradition and Identity. The Kompilasi Hukum Islam and Legal Pract
Author(s): Euis Nurlaelawati
ISBN: 978 90 8964 088 8
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication year: 2010
Pages 296
Price € 42,00

Jan 3, 2011

Best Websites to Track Popular and Viral Videos Online


1. First-Hand: Most Popular on Youtube, Viddler, etc

Every major video sharing site has its own trending video section. The 7 coolest ones are:
  1. Viddler: Most Popular Today: The list can be sorted by “Most Viewed”, “Most Favorited” and “Most Discussed”
  2. YouTube Charts: apart from the ability to set the period of time (popular today / this week / this month / all time), it also lets you sort the list by multiple criteria: “Most discussed”, “Most liked”, “Most Subscribed”, “Most viewed HD videos”, “Most Favorited” and, obviously “Most Viewed”
  3. Viral videos
  4. Yahoo Popular Today – Yahoo has also “Popular by Category” section
  5. Most Popular Videos on Photobucket (sadly, you can’t set the time frame here);
  6. Funny or Die: Most Viewed: You can filter videos by channel and sort by “Most Buzz” (not sure what this one includes), “Most Viewed”, “Most Favorited”, “Highest Rated”:
  7. Funny or Die
  8. Metacafe – most popular: can be sorted by views and ratings and filtered by time frame: popular this week o this month
  9. DailyMotion: Most Viewed Videos: the videos can be filtered by channel, time frame (today, this month, this week), and by video type (featured videos, HD videos, official content, creative content):
  10. DailyMotion

2. Viral Video Aggregators

Aggregators use multiple sources (like those listed above) to present you with daily (and sometimes hourly) collections of popular videos at a number of platforms.
Here are a few examples:
1. Viral Video Chart: the tool monitors “most contagious” videos on Youtube, Facebook, Twitter and Blogosphere. For each video you can click though to “stats” section where you can see the number of Tweets (as long as the list of most influential ones), Facebook shares and blog posts.
Viral video chart
2. PoPScreen: the home page features videos which are going to become popular videos “now” (you can switch to “today”, “7 days”, “30 days”). The popularity is determined by “Popscore” which includes “hundreds” of undisclosed metrics including “influencer” score (i.e. powerful online media resources and magazines that reflect the public interest to the current topic). The site thus focuses on delivering videos that are making headlines and the stories behind them.
PopScreen measures online videos from over 10,000 sources, including YouTube, Blip.tv, Vimeo and DailyMotion as well as content networks like FunnyOrDie and Cracked.
PopScreen
3. Zoofs is a great way to discover YouTube videos that people are talking about on Twitter. Zocial.tv is a similar one that monitors Twitter and Facebook.
Twitter Facebook video

3. Regular Viral Video round-ups

Some people love browsing video sharing sites and find best videos on his own, others prefer to go through ready-made manually-compiled round-ups. I for one can do both the ways. The two video round-ups I tend to monitor:
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