Eye on Extremism: July 15, 2025
Top Stories
Axios: Hundreds of Jewish groups urge NEA to reject ADL ban
Nearly 400 Jewish organizations are urging the nation's largest teachers' union to reject a member-approved proposal that would sever ties with the civil rights group Anti-Defamation League (ADL) over the war in Gaza.
When Israeli strikes hit Iran on June 13, it wasn’t only nuclear sites and senior Iranian commanders that were taken out: A covert army of bots meddling in British politics went dark, too. That’s according to Cyabra, a Tel Aviv-based disinformation detection company that uncovered the operation. For 16 days, the network — which began operating in May — vanished, according to Cyabra’s report published last week. No posts, no replies, no trace of the 1,300 fake profiles that had posed as British users and fueled online debate around Scottish independence, Brexit and institutional collapse. The accounts had already reached more than 200 million people through over 3,000 posts, the company said.
Analysis
Euractiv: Inside the growing judicial cloud over France’s far-right party
France’s far-right Rassemblement National (RN) is entering the political summer under a cloud of deepening judicial scrutiny. From alleged misuse of EU funds to questionable campaign financing, the party aiming for presidency in 2027 faces mounting legal headaches, many of which strike at the heart of its financial and political machinery. Top figures on the far right, including the party's president and MEP Jordan Bardella, have characterised the various legal proceedings as politically motivated, describing one of the cases as "clear harassment' against the party."
The British government announced in early July that a far-right group called the Russian Imperial Movement (RIM) will be banned under terrorism legislation. This will make it a criminal offence in the UK to be a member of the group or to express support for it. The RIM was at the centre of a string of letter bomb attacks targeting high-profile people and institutions in Spain in 2022. These included a bomb addressed to the official residence of Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez, which was intercepted by his security detail.
The 9/11 Al Qaeda terrorist attack on this city and this nation occurred nearly two dozen years ago and has long entered the history books, but chapters are still being written about the perpetrators and the victims. While Osama Bin Laden and the 19 hijackers he sent are dead (and are the only individuals not included in the lists of the 2,977 fatalities) the mastermind of the attack, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, is being well cared for by the U.S. military in his cell in Guantanamo.
United States
Colorado prosecutors are set to lay out their evidence Tuesday against a man charged with murder, attempted murder and other crimes in a firebomb attack on demonstrators showing their support for Israeli hostages in Gaza. Investigators say Mohamed Sabry Soliman told them he intended to kill the roughly 20 participants at the weekly demonstration on Boulder’s Pearl Street pedestrian mall on June 1. But he threw just two of more than two dozen Molotov cocktails he had with him while yelling, “Free Palestine!” Police said he told them he got scared because he had never hurt anyone before.
I24 News: Ted Cruz aims to label the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization
The Texan senator introduced a bill on Monday that will designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO) based on their support of Hamas and calls for terror against the US and Israel. This move would lead to global sanctions being placed upon the group, as well as increased economic pressure.
Missourinet: Missouri to create task force to protect churches, other nonprofits from terrorism
Gov. Mike Kehoe has signed a bill into law that will form a statewide task force to study and recommend safety and security changes for churches and other nonprofits. The members will be responsible for issuing an annual report of its findings and recommendations. The new law is part of a bill to offer free college tuition to Missouri’s first responders and their dependent children.
A little-known creek in the Aleutian Islands in Alaska had been officially named “Nazi Creek” for 80 years — until this week. Following a campaign by a local advocate, the creek was given a new name in the language of the local Indigenous people, in a move supported by an Anchorage synagogue.
E&E News: A terrorism case is shaping one climate lawsuit
A Supreme Court decision that recently allowed Americans who were injured by acts of terror to sue Palestinian groups is being invoked in a climate lawsuit against the oil and gas industry. The seemingly unconnected ruling could hinder the Puerto Rico climate case if the judge is persuaded that she lacks jurisdiction over the foreign companies named in the lawsuit. The high court’s ruling centered on a legal technicality called personal jurisdiction — which is used to determine whether a court has the power to make a decision about the parties being sued and if it can enforce the ruling.
NDTV: "This Is All Jihad": Zohran Mamdani's Ex-Intern On Protests Against Israel
A former intern for New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani has described political activism as "jihad" and urged Muslims to risk getting suspended or arrested while standing up to "settler colonialism." Hadeeqa Malik, a City College of New York student and activist, was seen in a video encouraging fellow Muslims to accept the consequences, including doxing and disciplinary action, for protesting against Israel's war on Gaza.
ABC 7 News: LIVE: UC Berkeley chancellor testifies in front of House committee over antisemitism
UC Berkeley's chancellor will be facing lawmakers on Capitol Hill Tuesday over claims of antisemitism on campus. Chancellor Rich Lyons will appear before the Education and Workforce Committee along with leaders from Georgetown and the City University of New York.
Washington Jewish Week: Maryland DOE Reworks Curriculum to Focus on Antisemitism, Holocaust
An estimated four in 10 American teens know that approximately six million Jews died in the Holocaust and only one-third of teens know that Adolf Hitler came to power through a democratic process, according to a 2019 survey by the Pew Research Center. Educators and community members hope that will soon change with recent revisions to Maryland’s middle and high school social studies curriculum.
Canada
Global News: Man with al-Qaida ties expected to plead guilty to terrorism, says lawyer
A man with ties to al-Qaida who allegedly threatened to bomb public transit will likely plead guilty, his lawyer said Monday at the Montreal courthouse. Mohamed Abdullah Warsame, 51, appeared in court by video conference from Montreal’s Rivière-des-Prairies detention centre, where he waived his right to a bail hearing.
Argentina
Reuters: A Nazi document trove raises questions for Argentina
The Supreme Court official had a secret to share when he called Eliahu Hamra, the rabbi of Argentina's main Jewish community center, one night around the turn of the year. The court had found a dozen boxes of Nazi documents in its basement archive containing photos of Hitler as well as thousands of red Nazi labor organization membership booklets stamped with the swastika of the Third Reich. Silvio Robles, chief of staff to the court's president, wanted the rabbi's advice about how to handle the discovery, Hamra recalled.
European Union
Iran International: EU sanctions Iran-linked network over alleged role in assassination plots
The European Union on Tuesday sanctioned eight individuals and one entity tied to Iran for what it described as serious human rights violations and acts of transnational repression including assassinations and enforced disappearances of dissidents abroad. The European Council said the designations target actors “responsible for committing serious human rights violations and abuses on behalf of Iranian state bodies outside of Iran,” including extrajudicial killings and arbitrary executions.
France
Reuters: France says UN conference to work on post-war Gaza, Palestinian state recognition
A rescheduled United Nations conference this month will discuss post-war plans for Gaza and preparations for the recognition of a Palestinian state by France and others, France's foreign minister said on Tuesday. France and Saudi Arabia had planned to host the conference in New York from June 17-20, aiming to lay out the parameters of a roadmap to a Palestinian state, while ensuring Israel's security.
The National: Activists in France call for release of Lebanese militant Georges Ibrahim Abdallah
Abdallah was convicted in 1987 over the killings of US and Israeli diplomats and is one of France’s longest-serving prisoners
Germany
Germany’s highest court on Tuesday rejected a case brought by Yemeni plaintiffs who argued the German government failed in a duty to protect relatives who they say were killed in a 2012 drone strike against an attack controlled with help from a U.S. military base in Germany. Ruling in a case that has been making its way through the German judicial system for over a decade, the Federal Constitutional Court found the German government can have a concrete duty to protect foreign citizens abroad in some cases.
Poland
EuroNews: Polish prosecutors probe far-right lawmaker over Auschwitz denial
Grzegorz Braun was widely condemned by leading figures in Poland after labelling Auschwitz concentration camp and its gas chambers as "fake". Polish prosecutors have launched a criminal investigation after a far-right lawmaker and MEP described the Auschwitz concentration camp and its gas chambers as "fake".
Romania
Jewish News Syndicate: Romania’s president blocks law against antisemitic speech
Romania’s president delayed legislation against hate speech and pro-fascist rhetoric on Friday, prompting criticism and alarm among local Jews. “The President’s Office has pushed Romanian Jews into a highly stressful situation,” Maximillian Katz, head of Romania’s Center for Monitoring and Combating Antisemitism, told JNS on Monday following President Nicușor Dan’s decision to have the Constitutional Court review legislation that extended the country’s 2015 laws against hate speech.
Spain
Reuters: Spain arrests 10 after far-right groups and migrants clash
Spanish police have arrested 10 people after three nights of clashes between far-right groups and North African migrants in a town in southeastern Spain, the government said on Monday. In one of Spain's worst such flare-ups of recent times, several dozen youths, some hooded, hurled glass bottles and other objects at riot police in Torre Pacheco on Sunday night, Reuters journalists saw.
United Kingdom
Politico: Prepare for the ‘coming wave’ of AI terrorism, top adviser warns UK government
Artificial intelligence is a “coming wave” which will supercharge terrorist propaganda and aid their preparation for attacks, the British government’s terrorism advisor warned Tuesday. In his latest annual report, Jonathan Hall, the government’s independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, warned of a “daunting” threat from “frontier technology” after a year spent looking the issue.
Thousands of Afghans, including many who worked with British forces, have been secretly resettled in the U.K. after a leak of data on their identities raised fears that they could be targeted by the Taliban, the British government revealed Tuesday. The government now plans to close the route, which the media had been barred by a court order from disclosing.
A pipe bomb found in west Belfast is being linked to a feud between members of dissident group Oglaigh na hEireann (ONH) and a renegade faction that attempted to murder a man earlier this year.
Jerusalem Post: UK should recognize Judaism as ethnicity as well as religion, Board of Deputies says
The UK should recognize Judaism as an ethnicity as well as a religion, the Board of Deputies of British Jews recommended in its new commission on antisemitism, released on Tuesday. Two governmental figures - Lord Mann of Holbeck Moor and Dame Penny Mordaunt - backed the commission, which provides ten main recommendations to the British government regarding antisemitism.
The increase of antisemitism in civil society has left UK Jews feeling they have no one they can turn to outside of their own community, the Board of Deputies of British Jews said in a report released Tuesday that pointed to problems in the health service, unions, and professional bodies. The report was compiled by the board’s Commission on Antisemitism, which took testimonies from organizations, staff networks, students, and the Jewish community, it said in a statement.
Daily Star: Teen, 17, 'plotting Oasis comeback gig attack' shared key al-Qaeda document
A teen was reportedly scheming to strike at the Oasis reunion concert in Cardiff, according to court revelations. The 17 year old lad, who can't be identified due to legal restrictions, also lauded the heinous acts of Southport murderer Axel Rudakubana. Westminster Magistrates' Court heard that the youngster from Cwmbran, south Wales, had a similar Southport-style assault in mind for a dance school near his residence.
Afghanistan
The Taliban’s Minister of Justice, Abdul Hakim Sharie, has told Nanda Avalist, chargé d’affaires of the Indonesian Embassy in Kabul, that the Taliban’s legislative framework is rooted entirely in Islamic law. In a meeting held on Monday, Sharie stated that the Taliban government has drafted dozens of laws based on “the Holy Quran and the traditions of the Prophet,” citing widely recognised sources of Islamic jurisprudence.
Amu: Taliban launch public campaign to promote ‘morality law’
Taliban have launched a public awareness campaign to promote their morality law, a controversial edict that critics say is deepening restrictions on civil liberties, particularly for women. The campaign, organized by the Taliban-run Ministry for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, began this week in Bamiyan Province, where Taliban officials said the aim was to educate the public on the contents of the law, which was formally issued in September 2024.
Iran
Reuters: EU council sanctions Iran individuals over human rights violations
The European Council said in a statement on Tuesday it had imposed sanctions on eight people and one entity from Iran over "serious human rights violations" and "transnational repression". The statement said they are responsible for abuses on behalf of Iranian state bodies outside of Iran, in particular extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions and killings, as well as enforced disappearances of people deemed to be opponents of or critical of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Iran International: Iran may approach bomb-grade enrichment if UN sanctions restored – IRGC media
Iran could boost its uranium enrichment to 90%, weapons-grade level, and consider exiting the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) if European powers move to trigger the UN snapback sanctions mechanism, Tasnim News reported on Tuesday. The report came as France said it would trigger the UN snapback mechanism against Iran by the end of August if no tangible progress is made on a nuclear deal.
Iraq
Associated Press: Iraqi oil field on fire after drone strike during attacks in Kurdish region
An oil field in Iraq ‘s Dohuk province was set ablaze Tuesday after being struck by a drone. It is the latest in a series of similar attacks launched recently against oil facilities in northern Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.
The United States denounced on Tuesday recent drone attacks in Iraq, including those that hit oil fields in the autonomous Kurdistan region. “The United States condemns the recent drone attacks throughout Iraq,” including attacks against “critical infrastructure” at oil fields in the Kurdistan Region, said the US embassy in Baghdad. It added on X that “these attacks are unacceptable,” urging Baghdad “to prevent armed actors from launching” such assaults.
Kurdistan24: Peshmerga Dismantle ISIS Hideouts in Qarachogh
In response to an increase in ISIS activity in the security gap between its forces and the Iraqi army—from Khanaqin in Diyala to western Nineveh—the Kurdistan Region's Peshmerga Forces have destroyed several militant hideouts in an operation on Mount Qarachogh. In addition to securing areas under their control, Peshmerga forces continuously conduct operations to counter ISIS, which has exploited the security gap to establish hideouts. During a recent operation on the mountain, forces seized some of the militants' equipment.
Israel
Reuters: Amid heated debate, no real plan for Israel's 'humanitarian city' in Gaza
An Israeli scheme to move hundreds of thousands of already uprooted Palestinians to a so-called "humanitarian city" in Gaza has led politicians to spar with the defence establishment, but officials say a practical plan has yet to be crafted. Even without a clear blueprint, opposition critics have denounced the proposal, with some likening the suggested site to a "concentration camp", which could lead to ethnic cleansing in the coastal enclave devastated by 21 months of conflict.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should not take credit for the return of hostages murdered while in Gaza, the father of one of the most prominent in the group said on Sunday. Jon Polin, the father of murdered Israeli hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin, called on Netanyahu’s office to stop claiming that “military and diplomatic pressure” had caused the release of 205 hostages, from a total of 255 held on Oct. 7, 2023.
Reuters: Netanyahu under mounting political pressure after party quits
A religious party has quit Israel's ruling coalition in a dispute over military service, leaving Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with a razor-thin majority in parliament but still enough political support to secure a potential Gaza ceasefire. Six members of United Torah Judaism (UTJ) handed in resignation letters overnight from posts in parliamentary committees and government ministries, in protest against lawmakers' failure to guarantee future exemption from military conscription for ultra-Orthodox religious students.
Reuters: Attacks against Palestinians intensify in occupied West Bank, says UN rights office
There has been an increase in killings of and attacks against Palestinians by settlers and security forces in the occupied West Bank in recent weeks, the United Nations human rights office said on Tuesday. "Israeli settlers and security forces have intensified their killings, attacks and harassment of Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in the past weeks," Thameen Al-Kheetan, a spokesperson for the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OCHCR), told reporters in Geneva.
Reuters: Israeli defence minister says strikes underway in Lebanon are 'clear message' to Hezbollah
Israel's ongoing military strikes in Lebanon send a "clear message" to Hezbollah, Defence Minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday, accusing the Iran-backed Islamist group of seeking to rebuild its forces in violation of a ceasefire agreement. The Israeli military said earlier on Tuesday it had begun striking targets belonging to Hezbollah's elite unit, the Radwan Force, in the Bekaa region of eastern Lebanon. The Lebanese health ministry said at least six people were injured in the Israeli strikes.
Times of Israel: Three IDF troops killed, officer seriously wounded in northern Gaza tank blast
Three Israeli troops were killed and an officer was wounded when the tank they were in was hit by a blast in the northern Gaza Strip on Monday, the military announced. Investigators were trying to piece together what caused the deadly blast, which came amid ongoing fighting with the Hamas terror group in the north of the enclave, but may have been the result of an operational error.
Jewish News Syndicate: Israeli Air Force downs Houthi dronev
The Israel Defense Forces on Tuesday morning intercepted a drone launched from Yemen by Iranian-backed Houthi terrorists. “A short time ago, the air force intercepted an unmanned aerial vehicle launched from Yemen,” said the IDF. “No alerts were activated in accordance with policy,” the statement added.
Saif Musallet was just weeks away from celebrating his 21st birthday, and as he visited his family here, the Florida native’s thoughts began to turn toward marriage. “I think it’s time for me to get married,” Musallet told his father, Kamel, during a phone call last week. “Hopefully while I’m here, I’m able to find a future spouse to get engaged to.” That phone call would be Kamel’s last conversation with his son. Days later, Saif was beaten to death by Israeli settlers, according to his family and eyewitnesses. Musallet was one of two men killed that day by settlers, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry, while they were in the neighboring town of Sinjil, where their families own farmland.
Lebanon
Reuters: Israeli strikes on Lebanon kill 12, including five Hezbollah fighters
Israeli strikes on Lebanon's Bekaa Valley on Tuesday killed 12 people, the region's governor Bachir Khodr told Reuters, in the deadliest air strikes since last year's truce ended months of fighting between armed group Hezbollah and Israel. A security source told Reuters that five of the dead were Hezbollah fighters. Khodr said seven of the dead were Syrian nationals, who often work in the agricultural fields of the Bekaa region.
The Lebanese Army on Sunday denied reports alleging the infiltration of armed groups into Lebanon and the army's withdrawal from border areas in the Bekaa region. In an official statement posted on its X page, the army said, “Further to previous statements, the Army Command denies what is being circulated on a number of social media sites regarding the entry of armed persons into Lebanon and the withdrawal of the army from border areas in the Bekaa.”
Naharnet: Central Bank bars financial institutions from dealing with Hezbollah's Al-Qard Al-Hasan
The Central Bank of Lebanon has said that licensed financial institutions are "barred from any dealings with unlicensed financial institutions, such as the Al-Qard Al-Hasan Association," the financial arm of Hezbollah. In a circular, the Central Bank said banks, financial institutions and other institutions licensed by the Central Bank, as well as financial intermediaries and collective investment schemes, are barred from engaging in any transactions -- financial, commercial, or otherwise, directly or indirectly, fully or partially -- with “unlicensed exchange institutions, money transfer companies, associations and entities.”
Naharnet: MPs meet in plenary session focused on Hezbollah disarmament
Lebanese Forces MP George Adwan criticized Tuesday the government's lack of progress in restoring the state's authority and disarming Hezbollah as lawmakers convened in a plenary session focused on Hezbollah's disarmament. "We don't want the government of hope to become a government of missed opportunities," Adwan said.
Syria
Reuters: Israel strikes Syrian city, vows to protect Druze from government forces
Israel carried out strikes against Syrian government forces in southwestern Syria for a second day on Tuesday, vowing to keep the area demilitarized and to protect the Druze minority as deadly clashes continued in the region at the Israeli frontier. A Reuters reporter heard at least four strikes as drones could be heard over the predominantly Druze city of Sweida and saw a damaged tank being towed away. Bursts of gunfire were heard and three bodies were seen on the ground. Dozens of people have been killed in fighting in the region since Sunday.
Yemen
Yemen Online: Houthi-Controlled Ports in Yemen Remain Operational Despite Israeli Airstrikes
Despite a series of Israeli airstrikes targeting key infrastructure in Yemen, several ports under Houthi control—including Hodeidah, Ras Isa, and Salif—remain operational, according to local sources and regional observers. The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) launched coordinated strikes on July 6, 2025, aimed at dismantling what it described as Iranian-backed military hubs used by the Houthis to facilitate arms transfers and maritime surveillance. Among the targets was the Galaxy Leader, a commercial vessel previously hijacked by Houthi forces and allegedly repurposed for intelligence operations.
India
India Today: Threat email warns of bomb attack on Golden Temple langar hall, probe underway
Authorities at Amritsar's Golden Temple, the holiest shrine for the followers of Sikhism, have received a bomb threat, officials said on Monday. A bomb disposal squad has been rushed to the site. The Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC), the highest religious governing body of Sikhs, said that it has lodged a complaint after receiving an e-mail threatening to blow up the langar hall (community kitchen hall) of the Golden Temple, which is also known as Darbar Sahib.
NDTV: S Jaishankar's Sharp Message On Terrorism In First China Visit In 5 Years
Foreign Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday raised the issue of the terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir's Pahalgam at the meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Council in Tianjin and said member countries needed to remain true to the grouping's founding objectives and maintain an uncompromising position on terrorism.
Kenya
Hiiraan: Roadside bomb kills 2 civilians in Kenya’s Garissa County
Two civilians were killed and several others injured Sunday night after their vehicle hit a roadside bomb along the Ijara–Bodhai road in Kenya’s Garissa County, officials said. The victims, identified as Mohamed Shabeel Bashir and Abdiqadir Mahamud Salad, were travelling in a Toyota Probox toward Bodhai town when the explosion occurred. The blast is suspected to have been caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) planted by al-Shabaab militants targeting security patrols in the region.
Libya
Chaos and panic erupted at the Abu Salim District Court in Tripoli, where a militia affiliated with the General Directorate of Security stormed the courthouse armed with weapons, opening fire after a conviction against one of its members. The militia involved is linked to Mohammed Trabelsi, brother of the Interior Minister of the Government of National Unity (GUN), Emad Trabelsi, and known by the nickname “Farawla,” which translates to “strawberry.” According to sources in “Nova Agency"The court was busy issuing a verdict against a militiaman affiliated with the so-called General Security, one of the parallel forces that emerged from the militarization of Tripoli's security sector. Immediately after the verdict was delivered, armed men surrounded the building and fired shots inside and outside the courthouse, disrupting proceedings and sparking intense tensions between judges and administrative staff.
Nigeria
Premium Times: Again, prosecution opens case against alleged masterminds of 2014 Nyanya bombing
The federal government for the second time, on Monday, opened its case against Aminu Ogwuche and five others charged with the 2014 Nyanya bombings. When the matter was called the prosecuting counsel, David Kaswe, told the court of an earlier order allowing his witnesses to be protected. Mr Kaswe said that the only people allowed in the courtroom were lawyers directly involved in the case and accredited media organisations covering the court.
Somalia
Reuters: Al Shabaab captures central Somali town, presses on with advance
Al Shabaab insurgents have seized the town of Tardo in Somalia's central Hiiran region and are pressing on with an advance that has already displaced thousands, a military official said. Tardo, a key crossroads linking larger urban centres, fell on Sunday after the al Qaeda-allied fighters of al Shabaab drove out government-allied clan fighters, Major Mohamed Abdullahi told Reuters.
Sudan
Reuters: Sudanese RSF forces kill almost 300 in North Kordofan, activists say
Sudanese activists said on Monday that the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) killed almost 300 people in attacks in North Kordofan state that began on Saturday. The RSF has been fighting the Sudanese army in that area, one of the key frontlines of a civil war that has raged since April 2023. The army has taken firm control of the center and east of the country, while the RSF is working to consolidate its control of western regions, including North Kordofan.
Technology
CNN: AI’s antisemitism problem is bigger than Grok
When Elon Musk’s Grok AI chatbot began spewing out antisemitic responses to several queries on X last week, some users were shocked. But AI researchers were not. Several researchers CNN spoke to say they have found that the large language models (LLMs) many AIs run on have been or can be nudged into reflecting antisemitic, misogynistic or racist statements.
Nebraska U.S. Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., is among three members of Congress seeking answers from Elon Musk and his xAI Corp. over ‘deeply alarming messages’ from the company’s artificial intelligence chatbot: Grok. Bacon and Reps. Tom Suozzi, D-N.Y., and Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., wrote a Thursday letter to Musk regarding messages they called “numerous and widespread.” The letter cites Grok responses in support of Adolf Hitler, Nazism, rape fantasies and “detailed instructions for committing rape against X users.”
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