Treaties
AGREEMENT ON SOUTH ASIAN FREE TRADE AREA (SAFTA)
AGREEMENT ON SOUTH ASIAN FREE TRADE AREA
(SAFTA)
The governments of the SAARC (South Asian Association
for Regional Cooperation) member states comprising the People's
Republic of Bangladesh, the Kingdom of Bhutan, the Republic
of India, the Republic of Maldives, the Kingdom of Nepal, the
Islamic
Republic of Pakistan and the Democratic Socialist Republic of
Sri Lanka hereinafter
referred to as "Contracting States".
Motivated by the
commitment to strengthen Intra-SAARC economic cooperation to
maximize the realization of the region's potential for trade
and development for the benefit of their people, in a spirit
of mutual accommodation, with full respect for the principles
of sovereign equality, independence and territorial integrity
of all states;
Noting that the Agreement
on SAARC Preferential Trading Arrangement (SAPTA) signed
in Dhaka on the 11th of April, 1993 provides for the adoption
of various instruments of trade liberalization on a preferential
basis;
Convinced that preferential
trading arrangements among the SAARC member states
will act as a stimulus to the strengthening of national and
SAARC economic resilience,
and the development of the national economies of the Contracting
States by expanding investment and production opportunities,
trade, and foreign exchange earnings as well
as the development of economic and technological cooperation;
Aware that a number
of regions are entering into such arrangements to enhance trade
through the free movement of goods;
Recognizing that
Least Developed Countries in the region need to be accorded
special and differential treatment commensurate with their development
needs; and
Recognizing that it is necessary to progress beyond a Preferential
Trading Arrangement
to move towards higher levels of trade and economic cooperation
in the region by removing barriers to cross-border flow of goods;
Have agreed as follows:
Definitions:
For the purposes of this Agreement:
1. Concessions mean tariff, para-tariff and
non-tariff concessions agreed under the
Trade Liberalization Programme;
2. Direct Trade Measures mean measures conducive to promoting
mutual trade of Contracting States such
as long and medium-term contracts containing import and supply
commitments in respect of specific products, buy-back arrangements,
state trading operations, and government
and public procurement;
3. Least Developed Contracting State refers to a Contracting
State which is designated
as a "Least Developed Country"
by the United Nations;
4. Margin of Preference means percentage of tariff by which
tariffs are reduced on products imported from
one Contracting State to another as a result of preferential
treatment.
5. Non-Tariff Measures include any measure, regulation, or practice,
other than "tariffs" and"paratariffs".
6. Para-Tariffs mean border charges and fees, other than "tariffs",
on foreign trade transactions of a tariff-like
effect which are levied solely on imports, but not those indirect
taxes and charges, which are levied in the same manner on like
domestic products. Import charges corresponding
to specific services rendered are not
considered as para-tariff measures;
7. Products mean all products including manufactures and commodities
in their raw,
semi-processed and processed forms;
8. SAPTA means Agreement on SAARC Preferential Trading Arrangement
signed in
Dhaka on the 11th of April, 1993;
9. Serious injury means a significant impairment of the domestic
industry of like or
directly competitive products due to
a surge in preferential imports causing
substantial losses in terms of earnings,
production or employment unsustainable in
the short term;
10.Tariffs mean customs duties included in the national tariff
schedules of the
Contracting States;
11.Threat of serious injury means a situation in which a substantial
increase of preferential imports
is of a nature to cause "serious injury" to domestic
producers, and that such injury,
although not yet existing, is clearly imminent. A determination
of threat of serious injury shall be
based on facts and not on mere allegation, conjecture,
or remote or hypothetical possibility.
Article – 2
Establishment:
The Contracting States hereby establish the South Asian
Free Trade Area (SAFTA) to promote and enhance mutual trade
and economic cooperation among the Contracting States, through
exchanging concessions in accordance with this Agreement.
Article – 3
Objectives and Principles
1. The Objectives of this Agreement are to promote
and enhance mutual trade and economic
cooperation among Contracting States by, inter-alia:
a)Eliminating barriers to trade in,
and facilitating the cross-border movement of goods between
the territories of the Contracting States;
b)promoting conditions of fair competition
in the free trade area, and ensuring
equitable benefits
to all Contracting States, taking into account their respective
levels and pattern
of economic development;
c)creating effective mechanism for the
implementation and application of this Agreement,
for its joint administration and for the resolution of disputes;
and
d)establishing a framework for further
regional cooperation to expand and enhance
the mutual benefits
of this Agreement.
2. SAFTA shall be governed in accordance with the following
principles:
a)SAFTA will be governed by the provisions
of this Agreement and also by the rules, regulations,
decisions, understandings and protocols to be agreed upon within
its framework by the
Contracting States;
b)The Contracting States affirm their
existing rights and obligations with respect to each
other under Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade
Organization
and other Treaties/Agreements
to which such Contracting States are signatories;
c)SAFTA shall be based and applied on
the principles of overall reciprocity and
mutuality of
advantages in such a way as to benefit equitably all Contracting
States, taking into
account their respective levels of economic and industrial development, the pattern
of their external trade and tariff policies and systems;
d)SAFTA shall involve the free movement
of goods, between countries through, interalia,
the elimination of tariffs, para-tariffs and non-tariff
restrictions on the movement
of goods, and any other equivalent measures;
e)SAFTA shall entail adoption of trade
facilitation and other measures, and the progressive
harmonization of legislations by the Contracting States in the
relevant areas;and
f)The special needs of the Least Developed
Contracting States shall be clearly recognized
by adopting concrete preferential measures in their favour on
a non reciprocal basis.
Article - 4
Instruments:
The SAFTA Agreement will be implemented through the following instruments:
1. Trade Liberalisation Programme
2. Rules of Origin
3. Institutional Arrangements
4. Consultations and Dispute Settlement Procedures
5. Safeguard Measures
6. Any other instrument that may be agreed upon.
Article - 5
National Treatment:
Each Contracting State shall accord national treatment to the products of other Contracting States in accordance with the provisions of Article III of GATT, 1994.
Components:
SAFTA may, inter-alia, consist of arrangements relating to:
a) tariffs;
b) para-tariffs;
c) non-tariff measures;
d) direct trade measures.
Trade Liberalisation Programme:
1. Contracting States agree to the following
schedule of tariff reductions:
a)The tariff reduction by the Non-Least
Developed Contracting States from existing
tariff rates
to 20% shall be done within a time frame of 2 years, from the
date of coming into
force of the Agreement. Contracting States are encouraged to
adopt reductions in
equal annual installments. If actual tariff rates after the
coming into force
of the Agreement are below 20 per cent, there shall be an annual
reduction on a Margin
of Preference basis of 10 per cent on actual tariff rates for
each of the
two years.
b)The tariff reduction by the Least
Developed Contracting States from existing tariff rates
will be to 30 per cent within the time frame of 2 years from
the date of coming into
force of the Agreement. If actual tariff rates on the date
of coming into force of the
Agreement are below 30 per cent, there will be an annual reduction
on a Margin of Preference
basis of 5 per cent on actual tariff rates for each of the two
years.
c)The subsequent tariff reduction by
Non-Least Developed Contracting States from 20 per
cent or below to 0-5 per cent shall be done within a second
time frame of 5
years, beginning
from the third year from the date of coming into force of the
Agreement. However,
the period of subsequent tariff reduction by Sri Lanka shall
be six years.Contracting
States are encouraged to adopt reductions in equal annual instalments, but
not less than 15 per cent annually.
d)The subsequent tariff reduction by
the Least Developed Contracting States from 30 per
cent or below to 0-5 per cent shall be done within a second
time frame of 8
years beginning
from the third year from the date of coming into force of the
Agreement. The
Least Developed Contracting States are encouraged to adopt reductions
in equal annual instalments, not less than 10 per cent
annually.
2. The above schedules of tariff reductions will not prevent
Contracting States from immediately
reducing their tariffs to 0-5 per cent or from following an
accelerated
schedule of tariff reduction.
3.
a)Contracting States may not apply the
Trade Liberalization Programme as in paragraph
I above, to the tariff lines included in the Sensitive Lists
which shall be negotiated
by the Contracting States (for LDCs and Non-LDCs) and incorporated
in this Agreement
as an integral part. The number of products in the Sensitive
Lists
shall be subject
to maximum ceiling to be mutually agreed among the Contracting
States with flexibility
to Least Developed Contracting States to seek derogation in
respect of the
products of their export interest; and
b)The Sensitive List shall be reviewed
after every four years or earlier as may be decided
by SAFTA Ministerial Council (SMC), established under Article
10, with a view to
reducing the number of items in the Sensitive List.
4. The Contracting States shall notify the SAARC secretariat
all non-tariff and para-tariff measures
to their trade on an annual basis. The notified measures shall
be reviewed
by the committee of experts, established
under Article 10, in its regular meetings to examine
their compatibility with relevant WTO provisions. The committee
of experts shall recommend the elimination
or implementation of the measure in the least trade restrictive
manner in order to facilitate Intra-SAARC trade.
5. Contracting Parties shall eliminate all quantitative restrictions,
except otherwise permitted under GATT,
1994, in respect of products included in the Trade Liberalization
Programme.
6. Notwithstanding the provisions contained in paragraph 1 of
this Article, the Non-Least Developed
Contracting States shall reduce their tariff to 0-5 per cent
for the products
of Least Developed Contracting
States within a timeframe of three years beginning
from the date of coming into force of
the Agreement.
Article - 8
Additional Measures:
Contracting States agree to consider, in addition
to the measures set out in Article 7, the adoption of trade
facilitation and other measures to support and complement SAFTA
for mutual benefit. These may include, among others:
a) harmonization of standards, reciprocal
recognition of tests and accreditation of
testinglaboratories
of Contracting States and certification of products;
b) simplification and harmonization
of customs clearance procedure;
c) harmonization of national customs
classification based on HS coding system;
d) Customs cooperation to resolve dispute
at customs entry points;
e) simplification and harmonization
of import licensing and registration procedures;
f) simplification of banking procedures
for import financing;
g) transit facilities for efficient
Intra-SAARC trade, especially for the land-locked Contracting
States;
h) removal of barriers to Intra-SAARC
investments;
i) macroeconomic consultations;
j) rules for fair competition
and the promotion of venture capital;
k) development of communication systems
and transport infrastructure;
l) making exceptions to their
foreign exchange restrictions, if any, relating to
payments for
products under the SAFTA scheme, as well as repatriation of
such payments without
prejudice to their rights under Article XVIII of the General
Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT) and the relevant provisions of Articles
of Treaty of
the International Monetary Fund (IMF); and
m) simplification of procedures for
business visas.
Article - 9
Extension of Negotiated Concessions:
Concessions agreed to, other than those made
exclusively to the Least Developed Contracting States, shall
be extended unconditionally to all Contracting States.
The initial notification shall be made within three months from
the date of coming into force of the Agreement and the COE shall
review the notification in its first meeting and take appropriate
decisions.
Institutional Arrangements:
1. The Contracting States hereby
establish the SAFTA Ministerial Council (hereinafter referred
to as SMC).
2. The SMC shall be the highest decision-making body of SAFTA
and shall be responsible for the administration
and implementation of this Agreement and all decisions and arrangements
made within its legal framework.
3. The SMC shall consist of the ministers of commerce and trade
of the Contracting
States.
4. The SMC shall meet at least once every year or more often
as and when considered necessary by
the Contracting States. Each Contracting State shall chair the
SMC for a period of one year on rotational
basis in alphabetical order.
5. The SMC shall be supported by a committee of experts
(hereinafter referred to as COE), with
one nominee from each Contracting State at
the level of a senior economic official, with
expertise in trade matters.
6. The COE shall monitor, review and facilitate implementation
of the provisions of this Agreement
and undertake any task assigned to it by the SMC. The COE shall
submit
its report to SMC every six
months.
7. The COE will also act as Dispute Settlement Body under this
Agreement.
8. The COE shall meet at least once every six months or more
often as and when considered necessary
by the Contracting States. Each Contracting State shall chair
the COE for a period of one year
on rotational basis in alphabetical order.
9. The SAARC secretariat shall provide secretarial support to
the SMC and COE in the discharge of
their functions.
10.The SMC and COE will adopt their own rules of procedure.
Article - 11
Special and Differential Treatment for the Least Developed Contracting States:
In addition to other provisions of this Agreement,
all Contracting States shall provide special and more favourable
treatment exclusively to the Least Developed Contracting States
as set out in the following sub-paragraphs:
a)The Contracting States shall give
special regard to the situation of the Least Developed
Contracting States when considering the application of anti-dumping
and/or countervailing
measures. In this regard, the Contracting States shall provide
an opportunity to
Least Developed Contracting States for consultations. The Contracting
States shall, to the extent practical, favourably consider accepting
price undertakings
offered by exporters from Least Developed Contracting States.
These constructive
remedies shall be available until the trade liberalization programme
has been completed
by all Contracting States.
b)Greater flexibility in continuation
of quantitative or other restrictions provisionally
and without discrimination
in critical circumstances by the Least Developed Contracting States
on imports from other Contracting States.
c)Contracting States shall also consider,
where practical, taking direct trade measures with
a view to enhancing sustainable exports from the Least Developed
Contracting States,
such as long and medium-term contracts containing import and
supply commitments
in respect of specific products, buy-back arrangements, state
trading operations,
and government and public procurement.
d)Special consideration shall be given
by Contracting States to requests from Least Developed
Contracting States for technical assistance and cooperation
arrangements designed
to assist them in expanding their trade with other Contracting
States and in taking advantage of the potential benefits
of SAFTA. A list
of possible areas
for such technical assistance shall be negotiated by the
Contracting States
and incorporated in this Agreement as an integral part.
e)The Contracting States recognize that
the Least Developed Contracting States may face
loss of customs revenue due to the implementation of the Trade
Liberalization Programme
under this Agreement. Until alternative domestic arrangements
are formulated to
address this situation, the Contracting States agree to establish
an appropriate mechanism
to compensate the Least Developed Contracting States for their
loss of customs revenue. This mechanism and its rules and regulations
shall be established
prior to the commencement of the Trade Liberalization Programme
(TLP).
Article - 12
Special Provision for Maldives:
Notwithstanding the potential or actual graduation
of Maldives from the status of a
Least Developed Country, it shall be accorded in this Agreement
and in any subsequent contractual undertakings thereof treatment
no less favourable than that provided for
the Least Developed Contracting States.
Article - 13
Non-application: Notwithstanding the measures
as set out in this Agreement its
provisions shall not apply in relation to preferences already
granted or to be granted by
any Contracting State to other Contracting States outside the
framework of this
Agreement, and to third countries through bilateral, plurilateral
and multilateral trade agreements and similar arrangements.
Article - 14
General Exceptions:
a)Nothing
in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent any Contracting
State from taking
action and adopting measures which it considers necessary for
the protection of
its national security.
b)Subject to the requirement that such
measures are not applied in a manner which would
constitute a means of arbitrary or unjustifiable discrimination
between countries
where the similar conditions prevail, or a disguised restriction
on
Intra-regional trade,
nothing in this Agreement shall be construed to prevent
any Contracting State
from taking action and adopting measures which it considers
necessary for the
protection of:
(i) public morals;
(ii) human, animal
or plant life and health; and
(iii) articles of
artistic, historic and archaeological value.
Article - 15
Balance of Payments Measures:
1. Notwithstanding the provisions of this Agreement,
any Contracting State facing
serious balance of payments difficulties
may suspend provisionally the concessions extended under
this Agreement.
2. Any such measure taken pursuant to paragraph 1 of this Article
shall be immediately notified to the
committee of experts.
3. The committee of experts shall periodically review the measures
taken pursuant to paragraph I of this
Article.
4. Any Contracting State which takes action pursuant to paragraph
1 of this Article shall afford, upon
request from any other Contracting State, adequate opportunities
for consultations with a view to preserving
the stability of concessions under SAFTA.
5. If no satisfactory adjustment is effected between the Contracting
States concerned within 30 days of the
beginning of such consultations, to be extended by another 30
days through mutual consent, the matter
may be referred to the committee of
experts.
6. Any such measures taken pursuant to paragraph 1 of this Article
shall be phased out soon after the committee
of experts comes to the conclusion that the balance of payments
situation of the Contracting State concerned has improved.
Article - 16
Safeguard Measures:
1. If any product, which is the subject of
a concession under this Agreement, is imported into
the territory of a Contracting State in such a manner or in
such quantities as to cause, or threaten
to cause, serious injury to producers of like or directly competitive
products in the importing Contracting
State, the importing Contracting State may, pursuant
to an investigation by the competent authorities of that Contracting
State conducted in accordance with the
provisions set out in this Article, suspend
temporarily the concessions granted
under the provisions of this Agreement. The examination
of the impact on the domestic industry concerned shall
include an evaluation of all other relevant
economic factors and indices having a bearing on the state
of the domestic industry of the product and a causal relationship
must be clearly established between "serious
injury" and imports from within the SAARC region, to
the exclusion of all such other
factors.
2. Such suspension shall only be for such time and to the extent
as may be necessary to prevent or remedy
such injury and in no case, will such suspension be for duration
of more than 3 years.
3. No safeguard measure shall be applied again by a Contracting
State to the import of
a product which has been subject
to such a measure during the period of implementation of
Trade Liberalization Programme by the Contracting States, for
a
period of time equal to that during
which such measure had been previously applied,provided that
the period of non-application is at least two years.
4. All investigation procedures for resorting to safeguard measures
under this Article
shall be consistent with Article XIX
of GAIT, 1994, and WTO Agreement on Safeguards.
5. Safeguard action under this Article shall be non-discriminatory
and applicable to the product imported
from all other Contracting States subject to the provisions
of paragraph 8 of this Article.
6. When safeguard provisions are used in accordance with this
Article, the Contracting State invoking
such measures shall immediately notify the exporting Contracting
State(s) and the committee of experts.
7. In critical circumstances where delay would cause damage
which it would be difficult
to repair, a Contracting State may take
a provisional safeguard measure pursuant to
a preliminary determination that there
is clear evidence that increased imports have caused
or are threatening to cause serious injury. The duration of
the provisional measure shall not exceed
200 days, during this period the pertinent requirements of this
Article shall be met.
8. Notwithstanding any of the provisions of this Article, safeguard
measures under this article shall not
be applied against a product originating in a Least Developed
Contracting State as long as its share
of imports of the product concerned in the importing
Contracting State does not exceed 5 per cent, provided Least
Developed Contracting States with less
than 5 per cent import share collectively account for not more
than 15 per cent of total imports of the product concerned.
Article - 17
Maintenance of the Value of Concessions:
Any of the concessions agreed upon under this Agreement shall not be diminished or nullified, by the application of any measures restricting trade by the Contracting States, except under the provisions of other articles of this Agreement.
Article - 18
Rules of Origin:
Rules of Origin shall be negotiated by the Contracting States and incorporated in this Agreement as an integral part.
Article - 19
Consultations:
1. Each Contracting State shall accord sympathetic
consideration to and will afford adequate
opportunity for consultations regarding representations made
by another Contracting State with respect
to any matter affecting the operation of this
Agreement.
2. The committee of experts may, at the request of a Contracting
State, consult with any Contracting
State in respect of any matter for which it has not been possible
to find a satisfactory solution through
consultations under paragraph 1.
Article - 20
Dispute Settlement Mechanism:
1. Any dispute that may arise
among the Contracting States regarding the interpretation and
application of the provisions of this Agreement or any instrument
adopted within
its framework concerning the rights
and obligations of the Contracting States will be amicably
settled among the parties concerned through a process initiated
by a
request for bilateral consultations.
2. Any Contracting State may request consultations in accordance
with paragraph 1 of
this Article with other Contracting
State in writing stating the reasons for the request including
identification of the measures at issue. All such requests should
be notified
to the committee of experts, through the
SAARC secretariat with an indication of the legal basis
for the complaint.
3. If a request for consultations is made pursuant to this Article,
the Contracting State to which the request
is made shall, unless otherwise mutually agreed, reply to the
request within 15 days after the
date of its receipt and shall enter into consultations
in good faith within a period
of no more than 30 days after the date of receipt of the request, with
a view to reaching a mutually satisfactory solution.
4. If the Contracting State does not respond within 15 days
after the date of receipt of the request,
or does not enter into consultations within a period of no more
than 30 days, or a period otherwise
mutually agreed, after the date of receipt of the request, then
the Contracting State that requested the holding of consultations
may proceed
to request the committee of experts
to settle the dispute in accordance with working procedures
to be drawn up by the committee.
5. Consultations shall be confidential, and without prejudice
to the rights of any Contracting State
in any further proceedings.
6. If the consultations fail to settle a dispute within 30 days
after the date of receipt of
the request for consultations,
to be extended by a further period of 30 days through mutual consent,
the complaining Contracting State may request the committee
of experts to settle the dispute. The
complaining Contracting State may request the committee
of experts to settle the dispute during the 60-day period
if the consulting Contracting States
jointly consider that consultations have failed to settle the
dispute.
7. The committee of experts shall promptly investigate the matter
referred to it and make recommendations
on the matter within a period of 60 days from the date of referral.
8. The committee of experts may request a specialist from a
Contracting State not party
to the dispute selected from a
panel of specialists to be established by the committee within
one year from the date of entry into force of the Agreement
for peer review of the matter referred
to it. Such review shall be submitted to the committee within
a period of 30 days from the date of
referral of the matter to the specialist.
9. Any Contracting State, which is a party to the dispute, may
appeal the recommendations of the committee
of experts to the SMC. The SMC shall review the matter
within the period of 60 days from date of submission of request
for appeal. The SMC may uphold, modify
or reverse the recommendations of the committee of experts.
10.Where the committee of experts or SMC concludes that the
measure subject to
dispute is inconsistent with any of
the provisions of this Agreement, it shall recommend that
the Contracting State concerned bring the measure into
conformity with this Agreement. In addition
to its recommendations, the Committee of experts or the SMC
may suggest ways in which the Contracting
State concerned could implement the recommendations.
11.The Contracting State to which committee's or SMC's recommendations
are addressed shall within 30 days from
the date of adoption of the recommendations by the committee
or the SMC, inform the committee of experts of its intentions
regarding implementation of the recommendations.
Should the said Contracting State fail to implement
the recommendations within 90 days from the date of adoption
of the recommendations by the committee,
the committee of experts may authorize other interested
Contracting States to withdraw concessions having trade effects
equivalent to those of the measure in
dispute.
Article - 21
Withdrawal:
1. Any Contracting State may withdraw from
this Agreement at any time after its entry
into force. Such withdrawal shall
be effective on expiry of six months from the date on which a
written notice thereof is received by the secretary-general
of the SAARC, the depositary of this
Agreement. That Contracting State shall simultaneously inform
the committee of experts of the action
it has taken.
2. The rights and obligations of a Contracting State which has
withdrawn from this Agreement shall
cease to apply as of that effective date.
3. Following the withdrawal by any Contracting State, the committee
shall meet within 30 days to consider
action subsequent to withdrawal.
Article - 22
Entry into Force:
1. This Agreement shall enter into force on
1st January 2006 upon completion of formalities,
including ratification by all Contracting States and issuance
of a notification thereof by the SAARC
secretariat.This Agreement shall supersede the Agreement on
SAARC Preferential Trading Arrangement
(SAPTA).
2. Notwithstanding the supercession of SAPTA by this Agreement,
the concessions granted under the SAPTA
Framework shall remain available to the Contracting States until
the completion of the Trade Liberalization Programme.
Article - 23
Reservations:
This Agreement shall not be signed with reservations, nor will reservations be admitted at the time of notification to the SAARC secretariat of the completion of formalities.
Article - 24
Amendments:
This Agreement may be amended by consensus in the SAFTA Ministerial Council. Any such amendment will become effective upon the deposit of instruments of acceptance with the Secretary General of SAARC by all Contracting States.
Article - 25
Depository:
This Agreement will be deposited with the secretary-general
of the SAARC, who will
promptly furnish a certified copy thereof to each Contracting
State.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the undersigned being duly authorized thereto
by their respective governments have signed this Agreement.
DONE in ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN, on this the sixth day of the year
two thousand four, in nine originals in the English language
all texts being equally authentic.
M. MORSHED KHAN Minister for Foreign AffairsPeople's
Republic of Bangladesh NADO RINCHHEN Officiating Minister for
Foreign AffairsKingdom of Bhutan
YASHWANT SINHA Minister of External AffairsRepublic of India
FATHULLA JAMEELMinister of Foreign AffairsRepublic of Maldives
DR BHEKH B. THAPA Ambassador-at-Large for Foreign AffairsMajesty's
Government of Nepal KHURSHID M. KASURI Minister of Foreign AffairsIslamic
Republic of Pakistan
TYRONNE FERNANDO Minister of Foreign AffairsDemocratic Socialist
Republic of Sri Lanka
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