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Archives: News

  • Health Sector – UHC, National Health Policy, Family Planning, Health Insurance, etc.

    Bio Safety Level 4 Containment Facility in Gandhinagar

    Why in the News?

    Union Home Minister Amit Shah laid the foundation stone of a Bio Safety Level 4 Containment Facility in Gandhinagar, describing it as a national health shield and a major step towards advanced health security and biotechnology.

    What is a BSL-4 Facility?

    • Bio Safety Level 4 is the highest level of biological containment
    • Designed to handle extremely dangerous and lethal pathogens
    • Pathogens are often
      • Highly infectious
      • Transmitted via air or contact
      • Without proven vaccines or treatments
    • Work conducted under strict international biosafety protocols
    • Scientists wear positive pressure suits and work in sealed environments

    Pathogens to be Studied at Gandhinagar Facility

    • Ebola virus, Marburg virus, Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever virus, Kyasanur Forest Disease virus, and Nipah virus

    BSL Facilities in India

    • Only civilian BSL 4 lab currently operational at National Institute of Virology
    • Defence BSL 4 lab established by DRDO in Gwalior in 2024
    • High security animal disease labs
      • National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases with ABSL 3 plus
      • International Centre for Foot and Mouth Disease with ABSL 3Ag

    Prelims Pointers

    • BSL 4 is the highest biosafety level
    • Handles lethal and exotic pathogens
    • Gandhinagar lab is
      • Second civilian BSL 4 in India
      • First fully state funded BSL 4 facility
    • Supports One Health approach linking human and animal health
    • Enhances India’s pandemic readiness and biotech capacity
    [2021] Consider the following: 

    1. Bacteria 

    2. Fungi 

    3. Virus

    Which of the above can be cultured in artificial/synthetic medium? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • Land Reforms

    Karnataka Land Revenue Amendment and Jamma Bane System in Coorg

    Why in the News?

    The Karnataka government has amended its land revenue law to modernise the Jamma Bane land record system in Coorg. The Karnataka Land Revenue (Second Amendment) Act, 2025 received assent from Governor Thawarchand Gehlot on January 7, 2025.

    About Jamma Bane Lands

    • A distinct land tenure system prevalent only in Kodagu district
    • The word Jamma means hereditary
    • Lands were granted between 1600 and 1800
      • By erstwhile Coorg kings
      • Later by British administration
    • Granted in return for military service
    • Associated closely with the Kodava community

    Nature of Jamma Bane Holdings

    • Consist of two land types
      • Wetlands used for paddy cultivation
      • Forested highlands converted into coffee plantations
    • Ownership recorded in the name of the original pattedar
    • Names of successors added but primary ownership never changed
    • Resulted in
      • No clear title for current owners
      • Difficulty in sale or purchase of land
      • Problems in securing bank loans
      • Frequent inheritance disputes
    [2024] With reference to the Digital India Land Records Modernisation Programme, consider the following statements: 

    1. To implement the scheme, the Central Government provides 100% funding

    2. Under the Scheme, Cadastral Maps are digitised

    3. An initiative has been undertaken to transliterate the Records of Rights from local language to any of the languages recognized by the Constitution of India

    Which of the statements given above are correct? 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3

  • Trade Sector Updates – Falling Exports, TIES, MEIS, Foreign Trade Policy, etc.

    Export Preparedness Index (EPI) 2024

    Why in the News?

    NITI Aayog released the Export Preparedness Index (EPI) 2024, assessing export readiness of Indian States and Union Territories. This is the 4th edition of the Index, first launched in August 2020.

    The Index aligns with India’s targets of USD 1 trillion merchandise exports by 2030

    About Export Preparedness Index

    • Evidence based framework to assess strength, resilience and inclusiveness of subnational export ecosystems
    • Recognises the critical role of States and districts in India’s global trade performance
    • Identifies
      • Structural challenges
      • Growth levers
      • Policy opportunities
    • Focus on districts as core units of export competitiveness

    Top Performing States and Union Territories

    A. Large States

    1. Maharashtra
    2. Tamil Nadu
    3. Gujarat
    4. Uttar Pradesh
    5. Andhra Pradesh

    B. Small States, North Eastern States & Union Territories

    1. Uttarakhand
    2. Jammu and Kashmir
    3. Nagaland
    4. Dadra and Nagar Haveli & Daman and Diu
    5. Goa
    [2020] With reference to the international trade of India at present, which of the following statements is/are correct? 

    1. India’s merchandise exports are less than its merchandise imports

    2. India’s imports of iron and steel, chemicals, fertilisers and machinery have decreased in recent years

    3. India’s exports of services are more than its imports of services

    4. India suffers from an overall trade/current account deficit

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 4 only (c) 3 only (d) 1, 3 and 4 only

  • Wildlife Conservation Efforts

    Vulture Safe Zones in Tamil Nadu

    Why in the News?

    The Tamil Nadu Forest Department informed the Madras High Court that the process of establishing Vulture Safe Zones (VSZs) has begun in the State to protect critically endangered vulture species from toxic veterinary drugs.

    Background of the Case

    • Submission made before a Division Bench headed by Chief Justice Manindra Mohan Shrivastava
    • Status report filed in response to a Public Interest Litigation
    • PIL filed by K Surya Kumar
    • Aim is to prevent mass mortality and near extinction of vultures

    What are Vulture Safe Zones (VSZs)?

    • Geographically defined areas
    • Use of toxic veterinary NSAIDs strictly prohibited
    • Ensure availability of safe carcasses for vultures
    • Promote recovery of vulture populations
    • Part of India’s vulture conservation strategy

    Major Threat Addressed

    • Diclofenac and other NSAIDs
      • Used to treat cattle
      • Residues remain in carcasses
      • Cause kidney failure in vultures
    • Primary reason for over 95 percent decline in vulture population in India since the 1990s

    Prelims Pointers

    • Vulture Safe Zones target NSAID free landscapes
    • Diclofenac is the most lethal drug for vultures
    • First VSZ in Tamil Nadu proposed in Moyar River Valley
    • Monitoring radius is 100 km
    • Based on Vision Document for Vulture Conservation 2025 to 2030
    • Vultures are protected under Wildlife Protection Act 1972
    [2012] Vultures which used to be very common in Indian countryside some years ago are rarely seen nowadays. This is attributed to: 

    (a) the destruction of their nesting sites by new invasive species 

    (b) a drug used by cattle owners for treating their diseased cattle 

    (c) scarcity of food available to them 

    (d) a widespread, persistent and fatal disease among them

  • Wildlife Conservation Efforts

    Rise in Mugger Crocodile Population in Similipal National Park

    Why in the News?

    Similipal National Park in Odisha recorded an increase in its mugger crocodile population to 84 during a three day census in 2026, reversing a declining trend observed in recent years.

    About Similipal National Park

    • A National Park, Tiger Reserve, and Biosphere Reserve
    • Forms part of the Mayurbhanj Elephant Reserve
    • Included in the UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves since 2009
    • Among India’s most biodiverse protected landscapes

    Location

    • Situated in Mayurbhanj district, northern Odisha
    • Lies within the Eastern Ghats
    • Area of about 2,750 sq km
    • One of the largest tiger reserves in India

    Mugger Crocodile Census and Conservation

    Census Findings

    • 2026 census recorded 84 mugger crocodiles
    • Increase from 81 individuals in 2025
    • West Deo River alone hosts about 60 crocodiles
    • Indicates stabilisation and early recovery of the species

    Conservation Efforts

    • Mugger Crocodile (Crocodylus palustris) is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List
    • Recovery attributed to the Ramtirtha Mugger Crocodile Breeding Centre
    • Centre releases hatchlings annually into Similipal rivers
    • Focus on
      • Habitat protection
      • Scientific monitoring
      • Assisted population reinforcement
    [2011] Two important rivers — one with its source in Jharkhand (and known by a different name in Odisha), and another, with its source in Odisha — merge at a place only a short distance from the coast of Bay of Bengal before flowing into the sea. This is an important site of wildlife and biodiversity and a protected area. Which one of the following could be this? 

    (a) Bhitarkanika 

    (b) Chandipur-on-sea 

    (c) Gopalpur-on-sea 

    (d) Simlipal

  • Coal and Mining Sector

    [15th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: An exploration of India’s mineral diplomacy

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] “The West is fostering India as an alternative to reduce dependence on China’s supply chain and as a strategic ally to counter China’s political and economic dominance.” Explain with examples.

    Linkage: It is relevant to GS II (International Relations) and GS III (Economic Security). The statement links to India’s role in Western strategies for supply-chain diversification, critical minerals security, and balancing China’s economic and strategic dominance.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s clean energy transition is increasingly constrained not by ambition, but by access to critical minerals and rare earths. This article examines how India’s minerals diplomacy has expanded rapidly across continents, yet remains limited by weak domestic processing capacity and fragmented strategic focus. The analysis is crucial for GS Paper III (Energy, Resources, Industrial Policy) and GS Paper II (International Relations).

    Why in the News

    India’s clean energy transition is facing serious risks due to shortages of critical minerals and rare earths, worsened by tighter global export controls. For the first time, India has adopted a multi-continent minerals diplomacy strategy, signing nearly a dozen agreements in the last five years with Australia, Japan, Africa, Latin America, and Canada. This is a clear shift from India’s earlier ad-hoc and import-based mineral sourcing. However, the article points out a major weakness: India has not been able to convert these partnerships into strong value-chain security because of poor domestic refining, processing, and midstream capacity. This structural gap affects key sectors such as electric vehicles, batteries, semiconductors, and renewable energy equipment.

    What makes minerals central to India’s clean energy transition?

    1. Clean energy dependence: Requires lithium, cobalt, nickel, copper, and rare earths for EVs, batteries, wind turbines, and solar technologies.
    2. Supply concentration: Global production and processing dominated by a few countries, increasing vulnerability.
    3. Export controls: Tightening restrictions by China and others heighten urgency for diversification.
    4. Strategic risk: Disruptions affect industrial growth, energy security, and technological sovereignty.

    How has India expanded its mineral diplomacy?

    1. Bilateral partnerships: Nearly a dozen agreements signed in five years across multiple continents.
    2. Policy integration: External engagement aligned with domestic mineral policy reforms.
    3. Market building: Focus on responsible sourcing and standards-based mineral markets.
    4. Strategic shift: Move from trade-based imports to long-term access arrangements.

    Why are Australia and Japan pivotal partners?

    1. Australia-reliability: Offers political stability, reserves, and a long-term strategic vision.
      1. Investment coordination: India-Australia Critical Minerals Partnership identified five lithium and cobalt projects (2022).
    2. Japan-resilience model:
      1. Diversification strategy: Responded to China’s rare-earth export restrictions with stockpiling, recycling, and R&D.
      2. Institutional strength: Demonstrates importance of long-term planning and industrial policy.

    What role does Africa play in India’s mineral strategy?

    1. Resource availability: Lithium (Namibia), rare earths and uranium (Namibia), copper and cobalt (Zambia).
    2. Existing trade links: Provide entry points for deeper cooperation.
    3. Structural risks:
      1. Regulatory volatility: Shifting trade rules and restrictions on raw exports.
      2. Geopolitical competition: China’s entrenched presence raises coordination costs.
    4. Strategic requirement: Needs long-term engagement, not transactional deals.

    How do geopolitics shape India’s options with the US, EU, Russia, and West Asia?

    1. United States:
      1. Volatility risk: Trade policy shifts reduce reliability.
      2. Technology leverage: Strategic Technology TRUST Initiative enables joint processing, batteries, and clean tech.
    2. European Union:
      1. Regulatory alignment: Battery Regulation and Critical Raw Materials Act support recycling and transparency.
      2. Sustainability convergence: ESG norms create compliance-driven partnerships.
    3. Russia:
      1. Resource abundance: Nickel, cobalt, and lithium.
      2. Operational limits: Sanctions, financing barriers, and logistics constrain reliability.
    4. West Asia:
      1. Institutional deficit: Lacks depth in mining frameworks despite proximity.

    Why is Latin America an emerging frontier?

    1. Resource centrality: Argentina, Chile, Peru, and Brazil crucial for copper, nickel, and lithium.
    2. Indian investments:
      1. KABIL signed a USD 200 million lithium exploration and development agreement with Argentina.
      2. Hindalco expanding overseas copper assets.
    3. Competitive pressure: China and Western firms are already deeply embedded.
    4. Strategic lesson: Late entry requires value-added partnerships, not extraction-only deals.

    Why are integrated partnerships more important than access alone?

    1. Processing gap: India lacks refining and midstream capacity.
    2. Value-chain weakness: Extraction without processing perpetuates dependency.
    3. Technology deficit: Advanced batteries and recycling dominate future competitiveness.
    4. Strategic failure risk: Country-to-country agreements cannot substitute domestic capability.

    Conclusion

    India’s mineral diplomacy has expanded rapidly and strategically, but access without processing capacity cannot deliver resilience. Long-term security depends on domestic refining, recycling, technology acquisition, and institutional coordination. The next phase must shift from signing agreements to building value chains.

  • ISRO Missions and Discoveries

    What is futuristic marine and space biotechnology

    Why in the News?

    India is exploring marine and space biotechnology to reduce dependence on imported bio-resources and better use extreme ecosystems. Despite having over 11,000 km of coastline and an Exclusive Economic Zone of more than 2 million sq km, domestic output remains limited, with seaweed production at around 70,000 tonnes annually. India still imports agar, carrageenan, and alginates, even though these can be produced locally. Initiatives such as the Deep Ocean Mission signal a shift from conventional coastal extraction to technology-driven biomanufacturing by linking marine biology with space research.

    What is Marine Biotechnology and Why is it Strategic?

    1. Definition: Studies marine microorganisms, algae, and animals to extract enzymes, bioactive compounds, biomaterials, and biostimulants.
    2. Industrial relevance: Supports production of food ingredients, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, chemicals, and biofuels.
    3. Adaptive advantage: Marine organisms evolve under high pressure, low light, salinity, and low oxygen, producing novel biochemical pathways.
    4. Strategic gap: India imports seaweed-based inputs despite possessing rich marine biodiversity.

    What is Space Biotechnology and How is it Distinct?

    1. Definition: Examines biological processes under microgravity and radiation conditions.
    2. Research focus: Studies microbial behaviour, plant growth, human metabolism, and cellular regeneration in space.
    3. Industrial application: Enables advances in drug discovery, human health management, life-support systems, and bio-manufacturing in extreme environments.
    4. Institutional role: ISRO conducts microgravity experiments on microbes, algae, and biological systems.

    Why Does India Need Futuristic Marine and Space Biotechnology?

    1. Resource underutilisation: Vast EEZ remains biologically rich but economically underexploited.
    2. Import dependence: Relies on foreign suppliers for marine bio-compounds used in food and pharma.
    3. Biomanufacturing ambition: Supports transition from raw biomass extraction to value-added bio-industries.
    4. Sustainability imperative: Reduces pressure on terrestrial resources and supports circular bioeconomy.

    Where Does India Stand Today?

    1. Marine biomass production: Seaweed cultivation remains limited at ~70,000 tonnes annually.
    2. Policy push: Deep Ocean Mission supports exploration and sustainable use of deep-sea bioresources.
    3. Institutional ecosystem: ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute and state initiatives (e.g., Gujarat) promote seaweed cultivation and marine bio-products.
    4. Space research: ISRO integrates biotechnology experiments into space missions.

    How Does Convergence of Marine and Space Biotechnology Create Value?

    1. Extreme biology: Enables understanding of life under pressure, radiation, and nutrient stress.
    2. Innovation pathway: Facilitates discovery of new enzymes, stress-resistant microbes, and regenerative mechanisms.
    3. Industrial scalability: Supports next-generation bioreactors, biofuels, and medical applications.
    4. Strategic positioning: Aligns India with global bioeconomy and frontier science trends.

    Conclusion

    Futuristic marine and space biotechnology offers India a technology-led pathway to convert ecological abundance into economic and strategic advantage. By integrating deep-sea exploration with space-based biological research, India can reduce import dependence, strengthen biomanufacturing capacity, and emerge as a global hub for bio-based industries, while ensuring sustainability and scientific leadership.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] Why is there so much activity in the field of biotechnology in our country? How has this activity benefitted the field of biopharma?

    Linkage: India is expanding biotechnology into marine and space environments to access new biological resources. This supports biopharma growth, import substitution, and high-value biomanufacturing under GS-III.

  • Corruption Challenges – Lokpal, POCA, etc

    Graft law: Shielding honest officers vs unmasking the corrupt

    Why in the News?

    A Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court of India has delivered a split verdict on the constitutional validity of Section 17A of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, which requires prior government approval before investigating public servants for decisions taken in official capacity. The ruling highlights a clear judicial divide between protecting honest administrative decision-making and preventing misuse of legal safeguards to shield corruption. The split verdict raises serious concerns about investigative independence, executive control, and the effectiveness of India’s anti-corruption framework.

    What is the case about?

    1. Provision involved: Section 17A of the Prevention of Corruption Act requires prior government approval to investigate public servants.
    2. Reason for challenge: The provision places executive approval before investigation.
    3. Judicial outcome: A Constitution Bench delivered a split verdict.
    4. Core issue: Balance between protecting honest decisions and enabling corruption probes.
    5. Constitutional concern: Impact on investigative independence and separation of powers.
    6. Practical effect: Influences how corruption cases against public servants begin.

    What does Section 17A of the Prevention of Corruption Act provide?

    • The Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 seeks to deter abuse of public office while ensuring administrative efficiency and Section 17A was inserted in 2018
    • Statutory safeguard: Requires prior approval of the competent authority before police can investigate a public servant for offences linked to official decisions.
    • Temporal scope: Applies to decisions taken during discharge of official functions.
    • Objective stated: Prevents harassment of honest officers for bona fide policy or administrative decisions.
    • Operational impact: Delays or blocks initiation of criminal investigation at the threshold stage.

    Why was Section 17A challenged before the Supreme Court?

    1. Investigative barrier: Converts executive approval into a precondition for inquiry, not merely prosecution.
    2. Equality concern: Creates differential treatment between public servants and private individuals accused of corruption.
    3. Accountability deficit: Enables governments to shield senior officials involved in high-level decision-making.
    4. Federal implications: Central approval requirement affects investigations by State agencies.

    What did the majority opinion hold? (Viswanathan-Pardiwala)

    1. Decision-making protection: Ensures fearless and independent administration without retrospective criminalisation of policy decisions.
    2. Screening mechanism: Introduces a preliminary filter to separate mala fide allegations from genuine corruption.
    3. Proportionality: Balances anti-corruption goals with administrative efficiency.
    4. Continuity with precedent: Aligns with earlier judicial concerns about over-criminalisation of bureaucratic discretion.
    5. Outcome: Section 17A upheld as constitutionally valid.

    Why did Justice Nagarathna dissent?

    1. Object and purpose violation: Section 17A undermines the core intent of the PCA to detect and deter corruption.
    2. Executive dominance: Grants the executive a veto over criminal investigation, eroding separation of powers.
    3. Accountability erosion: Shields high-ranking officials whose decisions have the largest corruption impact.
    4. Investigative distortion: Transforms an independent inquiry into a permission-based process.
    5. Outcome: Section 17A held unconstitutional for frustrating anti-corruption enforcement.

    How does this judgment contrast with earlier anti-corruption jurisprudence?

    1. Pre-2018 framework: No approval required for investigation; sanction applied only at prosecution stage.
    2. Judicial trajectory: Earlier rulings prioritised investigative autonomy to uncover systemic corruption.
    3. Post-amendment shift: Emphasis moves toward protecting decision-makers over exposing wrongdoing.
    4. Institutional impact: Marks a doctrinal shift from deterrence-centric to discretion-protective interpretation.

    What are the implications of the split verdict?

    1. Legal uncertainty: Conflicting constitutional interpretations weaken clarity on enforcement.
    2. Future reference: Likely referral to a larger Bench for authoritative resolution.
    3. Policy dilemma: Forces reconsideration of how India balances governance efficiency with probity.
    4. Institutional trust: Public confidence hinges on whether safeguards become shields for corruption.

    Conclusion:
    The debate on Section 17A reflects a deeper governance dilemma between protecting honest public servants and ensuring effective anti-corruption enforcement. A democratic state requires safeguards that encourage fearless decision-making while preserving independent investigation and public accountability. Only a balanced institutional design can strengthen both administrative integrity and democratic trust.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] “Institutional quality is a crucial driver of economic performance”. In this context suggest reforms in the Civil Service for strengthening democracy.

    Linkage: Institutional quality depends on accountable and transparent public servants, which improves economic performance. Recent debates on safeguards for public servants highlight the need to balance decisional autonomy with strict accountability.

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-China

    China reiterates claim over Shaksgam Valley

    Why in the news?

    China has reasserted its cartographical claim over the Shaksgam Valley and defended its infrastructure activities there as legitimate. India has strongly rejected these claims, reiterating that Shaksgam Valley is Indian territory and that the 1963 China Pakistan agreement ceding the area is illegal and invalid.

    About Shaksgam Valley (Trans Karakoram Tract)

    • Location: High altitude valley north of the Karakoram range, bordering China’s Xinjiang region
    • Political status: Part of Pakistan occupied Kashmir, specifically the Hunza Gilgit region
    • Strategic proximity: Close to Siachen Glacier and Aksai Chin
    • Area involved: About 5,180 sq km illegally ceded by Pakistan to China in 1963

    Background of the dispute

    • 1963 Sino Pakistan Border Agreement: Pakistan illegally transferred Shaksgam Valley to China. India never recognised this agreement
    • Article 6 of the agreement: Clearly states the boundary settlement is temporary and subject to renegotiation after the final resolution of the Kashmir dispute
    • India’s position: Pakistan had no sovereign right to cede Indian territory
      Hence the agreement is null and void

    Prelims pointers

    • Shaksgam Valley = Trans Karakoram Tract
    • Illegally ceded by Pakistan to China in 1963
    • India has never recognised the agreement
    • CPEC passes through Indian territory under illegal occupation
    • Article 6 of 1963 agreement weakens China Pakistan legal claim
    [2020] Siachen Glacier is situated to the: 

    (a) East of Aksai Chin 

    (b) East of Leh 

    (c) North of Gilgit 

    (d) North of Nubra Valley

  • Financial Inclusion in India and Its Challenges

    PFRDA forms high-level committee for assured payouts under NPS

    Why in the news?

    The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) has constituted a high-level committee to frame guidelines and regulations for assured pension payouts under the National Pension System (NPS), aimed at strengthening retirement income security.

    About the committee

    • Chairperson: Dr. M. S. Sahoo, Former Chairperson, Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI)
    • Composition: 15 members from legal, actuarial, finance, insurance, capital markets and academia
    • Flexibility: Power to invite external experts and intermediaries as special invitees
    • Nature: Standing advisory committee on structured pension payouts

    Key objectives and terms of reference

    • Assured payout framework: Draft regulations for assured and structured pension payouts, based on PFRDA consultation paper dated 30 September 2025
    • Seamless transition: Smooth shift from accumulation phase to decumulation payout phase
    • Market based assurance: Explore novation and settlement mechanisms for legally enforceable guarantees
    • Operational design: Define lock in period, withdrawal limits, pricing mechanisms and fee structures
    • Risk and legal oversight: Specify capital and solvency norms and examine tax implications for in-system payouts
    • Consumer protection: Standardised disclosure framework to prevent mis selling and manage subscriber expectations

    Significance

    • Enhances predictability and security of retirement income
    • Strengthens trust and attractiveness of NPS
    • Supports the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047 with financial dignity in old age
    [2017] Who among the following can join the National Pension System (NPS)? 

    (a) Resident Indian citizens only 

    (b) Persons of age from 21 to 55 only 

    (c) All State Government employees joining the services after the date of notification by the respective State Governments 

    (d) All Central Governments Employees including those of Armed Forces joining the services on or after 1st April, 2004

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