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Sean Dampte UK based singer, drops new track,‘Energy’

Friday 23 February 2018

J.Cole: US rapper is coming to Lagos, to perform with Wizkid, Davido

The Grammy-nominated rapper is set to headline a concert in Lagos alongside two of Africa’s biggest stars, Davido and Wizkid, this April.

Acclaimed US rapper, J.Cole is coming to Nigeria.

The Grammy-nominated rapper is set to headline a concert in Lagos alongside two of Africa’s biggest stars, Davido and Wizkid, this April.

With four successful studio albums under his belt, J. Cole is one of the most prominent rappers of this generation. His previous two projects – “2014 Forest Hill Drive” and “4 Your Eyez Only” –pulled off the impressive feat of going platinum without any collaborations.

 

The concert tagged “Castle Lite Unlocks” is put together by Castle Lite Nigeria, and will be the first time J.Cole is visiting the country. It will hold on April 27, 2018, at the Eko Hotels & Suites, Lagos.

J.Cole: US rapper is coming to Lagos, to perform with Wizkid, Davido



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BCA Boosts Nigeria’s Badminton Tokyo 2020 Drive

The Badminton Confederation of Africa (BCA), is supporting Nigeria’s charge for medals in badminton at Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games by sponsoring top Nigerian female ranked badminton player, Dorcas Adesokan for one month training tour in Europe. President of Badminton Federation of Nigeria (BFN), Francis Orbit, said the training tour will expose the athlete to the […]

The post BCA Boosts Nigeria’s Badminton Tokyo 2020 Drive appeared first on Leadership Nigeria Newspapers.

BCA Boosts Nigeria’s Badminton Tokyo 2020 Drive



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Barcelona Team News: Injuries, suspensions and line-up vs Girona

Everything you need to know about the league leaders’ all-Catalan clash at home to the promoted side this weekend…

Barcelona Team News: Injuries, suspensions and line-up vs Girona



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Playing Chelsea means less and less every year, says Mourinho

Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho and Chelsea counterpart Antonio Conte

The Blues visit Old Trafford on Sunday in an eagerly anticipated Premier League clash, but the Portuguese is over facing his old club

Playing Chelsea means less and less every year, says Mourinho



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Open Grazing: 3 herders jailed in Benue

The Anti-Open Grazing Law in Benue has recorded a huge success as a Makurdi Magistrates’ Court on Friday sentenced three herders, Iliya Garba, Hassan Abdullahi, and Lanshak Lonfalk, to one year imprison each, for violating the law enacted in 2017.

The convicts were charged with criminal conspiracy and open nomadic livestock rearing and grazing.

The offences are punishable under Sections 97 of the Penal Code and 19 (2) of the Open Grazing Prohibition Ranches Establishment Law of Benue, 2017.

The prosecutor, Insp. Michael Iorundu, told the court that the joint patrol team of `Operation Zenda,’ led by Sgt. Edward Shinyi, arrested the herders on Feb. 18.

He said that they were brought to the State Criminal and Investigation Department, Makurdi.

“The team reported that the three herders, and others now at large, were openly grazing their cattle along Yeluwata Road in Guma Local Government Area of Benue.

“When the case came up for mention, the herders pleaded guilty to the charge against them, saying that they were not aware that open grazing had been prohibited in Benue,’’ he said.

The Magistrate, Mrs Lillian Tsumba said that the herders were first offenders who were also illiterates and not even aware that open grazing has been prohibited in Benue.

Tsumba said that a law such as open grazing prohibition required massive exposure and education of persons at the grassroots.

She, however, said law is law and must be obeyed in spite ignorance.

The magistrate sentenced the herders to a year imprison each, with N500,000 option of fine each.

The post Open Grazing: 3 herders jailed in Benue appeared first on Vanguard News.

Open Grazing: 3 herders jailed in Benue



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Permanent Secretary defends N15bn State House budget

By Johnbosco Agbakwuru
ABUJA – The Permanent Secretary, State House, Mr. Jalal Arabi, has said that the over N15 billion 2018 budget proposals of the State House will focus on the completion of all on-going projects.

Arabi, who stated this when he appeared before the House of Representatives Committee on Special Duties to defend the 2018 budget proposals and the utilisation of the 2017 budget releases, said several ongoing projects have been stalled or delayed due to funding constraints.

A statement signed by Mr Attah Esa, a Deputy Director of Information and made available to State House correspondents on Friday, quoted the Permanent Secretary as saying that the budget proposals were anchored to deliver on Nigeria’s Economic Growth and Recovery Plan (EGRP) 2018-2020.

According to him, the budget ‘‘will maximise scarce resources in a manner that we function optimally and ensure that security of the State House is not compromised.”

He urged the Committee to note that the State House administration caters for the offices of the President, the Vice President, the Chief of Staff, the Chief Security Officer to the President, the State House Medical Centre and the State House Liaison office in Lagos.

The State House budget proposal for 2018 is N15,479,178,778 for capital and recurrent expenditure.

The Chairman, House Committee on Special Duties, Nasir Sani Zangon-Daura, described the State House as the nerve-centre of the nation, adding that there was need to be fair in the allocation of resources so that it can effectively service the strategic offices located therein.

He assured that the committee will be open-minded in its recommendations without compromising quality.

The post Permanent Secretary defends N15bn State House budget appeared first on Vanguard News.

Permanent Secretary defends N15bn State House budget



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Conte Targets Chelsea Win At Old Trafford, Prays United Play Without Pogba ‎

Chelsea boss, Antonio Conte, has said that they will do everything possible to take all three points in Sunday’s Premier League clash against Manchester United at Old Trafford.

Chelsea are currently fourth on 53 points, three points adrift of United who are second in the league table.

In their first meeting earlier in the season, Chelsea won 1-0, thanks to Alvaro Morata’s goal.

Speaking ahead of the big clash, Conte stated that The Blues will be facing a very physical United side.

“Manchester United are a really strong team with great physical power,” Conte said during his press conference on Saturday. “It’s a massive game for us and we have to try to get the three points.”

Conte warned that Chelsea must be aware of United’s dangerous counter-attacks.

“It is important we keep our balance this weekend and play with great intelligence if we are to win the game. We must be wary of Manchester United’s counter-attacks.”

Conte stated that his players can draw inspiration from their performance against Barcelona in Tuesday’s Champions League which ended 1-1.

He said:”Our performance against Barcelona can give great confidence to our players, and at the same time it shows that if we work hard as a team, it is very difficult to play against us.”

The former Juventus boss expressed his hope that Paul Pogba will not be available for United in the game.

“We are talking about a top player, a fantastic player. My expectation is to see him on the pitch. If he stays out it will be better.

“When you play against Manchester United you have to know that anything can happen.

“They have a great physicality and there is the risk to lose the game, they are a really strong team. It is a massive game for us, we have to do the best to try and get three points.”

And when asked about his recent clash with Jose Mourinho and whether he will shake the Portuguese’s hand, he said: “I think in the past we have both said the things, OK, for me it is OK, I am not interested to speak about this topic, no, I am not interested in this.”

Conte Targets Chelsea Win At Old Trafford, Prays United Play Without Pogba ‎



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Dapchi attack: Buhari plotting to arrest parents of missing schoolgirls – Fani-Kayode

Femi Fani-Kayode, former Aviation Minister, on Friday alleged that the President Muhammadu Buhari-led government was plotting to arrest parents of missing students of Government Girls Science and Technical School in Dapchi, Yobe state. The former Minister anchored his claim on the fact that parents of the missing girls cried out to the world about the […]

Dapchi attack: Buhari plotting to arrest parents of missing schoolgirls – Fani-Kayode

Dapchi attack: Buhari plotting to arrest parents of missing schoolgirls – Fani-Kayode



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Opinion: Glenda Jackson on quitting parliament, playing lear and returning to broadway

Glenda Jackson during a break from rehearsals for Edward Albee’s “Three Tall Women,” which will mark her return to Broadway after 30 years, at the New 42nd Street Studios, in New York, Feb. 15, 2018. The 81-year-old Oscar winner and former politician in Britain's Labour party will be back on a Broadway stage for the first time after 23 years as member of parliament.

“No,” said Glenda Jackson, the great British actress and former member of Parliament, her voice like a tolling bronze bell. “Oh no. No.”

When Jackson — who is returning to Broadway for the first time in three decades, in a starry new production of Edward Albee’s “Three Tall Women” — says “no,” it often has a conclusive tone that effectively shuts the door on a subject.

 Three “no’s” suggests that the door has been triple locked.

In this instance, the topic was pretty much guaranteed to elicit denial, diversion or evasion from Jackson, who spent 23 uninterrupted years away from the stage and screen while working in government. That would be the embarrassing fact (or, as she would have it, nonexistence) of her celebrity.

It was a January morning at the cafe of the National Gallery, and I had made the mistake of asserting that Jackson was one of the reigning movie goddesses of the early 1970s, given her status as a two-time Oscar winner for Best Actress and, more surprisingly, something of a box-office draw.

“No, oh no.”

I persisted, foolishly. Hadn’t someone in those days described her as “the thinking man’s Brigitte Bardot”?

She stared witheringly at the tablecloth. “Well,” she said evenly, “we’ll let that one lie where it is. Whoever came up with that was an idiot.”

Door slammed, subject closed. But it seemed unlikely to remain so once she arrived in the United States a week later to begin rehearsals for “Three Tall Women,” the 1994 Pulitzer Prize winning drama only now making its Broadway debut, at the Golden Theater, with Laurie Metcalf (a current Oscar nominee) and Alison Pill her co-stars.

A month earlier, when the 81-year-old Jackson accepted the Evening Standard Award for “King Lear” at the Old Vic, the crowd roared its approval. This had been, after all, her first theater gig after 23 years in Parliament for the Labor Party, and it had been nothing less than the title role of the most daunting play in the canon.

Jackson — with a helmet of cropped coppery hair, no visible makeup and a black and white dress from Marks & Spencer — roared right back at her audience. “Oh, c’mon,” she said, in the manner of a popular but stern school head on games day. “We don’t do standing ovations in England.”

For once, though, a standing ovation seemed warranted. Although Jackson holds a special place in the hearts of film and theater cognoscenti, she hadn’t exercised her acting muscles — or even attended the theater — during her years in Parliament. Yet critics had waxed ecstatic over her portrait of a despot suddenly betrayed by age — a man, as Jackson described him, to whom “no one had said ‘no’ in his entire life.”

“She appeared naked in a sense from her first entrance,” said Matthew Warchus, the Old Vic’s artistic director, who had facilitated Jackson’s return to her former profession. “We hadn’t seen her in so long, so it was an incredible thing to hear her voice again. That’s a neat trick, to make your first entrance after 20 years of silence.”

The ‘Anti-Social Socialist’

In person, Jackson is formidable but hardly as forbidding as her reputation would have it. She answers questions with a conscientious courtesy, only slightly underscored by impatience. Her face remains the face she was born with, scored with the lines you would expect a lifelong smoker to accumulate but untouched by the masklike distortions of plastic surgery.

On the morning I met her in London, she arrived at the cafe, straight from “bloody public transport,” in a sharp and purposeful blur, like a blade flung by a circus thrower seeking its target. She was again sans makeup and wearing drop pearl earrings (a gift from her son) and a wardrobe — red coat, black pants, buffalo check flannel shirt, running shoes — largely acquired from her trusty Marks & Spencer. (“A good thing about Marks & Spencer, they don’t hound you when you’re going round.”)

She was conscious of the time, since she was on “grandson patrol” that day and would be needing to pick up her son’s 11-year-old from school. At a certain point, she realized it might be a good idea if she had something to eat. We both ordered the soup, which came with bread.

“How big is the bread?” she asked the server. “It’s half a loaf isn’t it? One of those should do. One to share. Save money and save food. Two-thirds of the world go to bed hungry every night, and we stuff ourselves.”

Jackson did not check her cellphone. She doesn’t have one. “No, I have no piece of information technology equipment at all,” she said, and she is thankful to have no access to social media.

But as a star of long standing, surely she must have to deal with certain incursions into her privacy. Does she read what is written about her?

“Well, no, because nobody writes about me,” she says. “There’s nothing to write about. I lead a very dull, ordinary life which is the kind of life that I wish to lead.” As for what she does when she’s not working, “Well, you have to keep your place clean, you have to pay your bills, you have to do the shopping.”

Such comments seem a matter less of false modesty than of existential necessity, and jibe with her definition of herself: “I’m a pretty anti-social Socialist.”

The Force Set Loose

Glenda Jackson was born in 1936 in the Cheshire region of Northern England, the daughter of working-class parents. (Her father was a bricklayer; her mother cleaned houses and worked in shops.) Being the oldest of four girls, she has said, instilled in her “an overdeveloped sense of responsibility.” She started appearing in amateur theater productions in the area when she was working behind the counter in a Boots pharmacy.

“Someone said to me that you should do this professionally,” she recalls matter-of-factly. “So I wrote to the only drama school I had ever heard of.” It was a big one, the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London; she was accepted, with scholarships.

When she began to audition professionally, she was told she could expect only character parts. She found work, usually in supporting roles, in repertory companies, which was how she met Roy Hodges, a fellow actor and stage manager, to whom she was married from 1958 to 1976. (Their son, Dan, would grow up to become a political columnist; Jackson now lives in the basement flat of the house he shares with his wife and son.)

In 1963, she was invited to audition for a Royal Shakespeare Company season devoted to the Theater of Cruelty. Helming the project was the fabled Peter Brook. “Oh my God, it was an oasis in the desert,” she said of her experience with Brook, describing challenges that included morphing from Christine Keeler into Jackie Kennedy, while naked in a bathtub. “Those kinds of requests had never been made, not of me. It was just calling on so many things that I hadn’t realized were possible in acting.”

Brook cast her as one of the inmates in Peter Weiss’ “The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade.” Her character, a narcoleptic who would suddenly erupt into violent life, had the role of Charlotte Corday in the play-within-the-play.

Everyone I talked to who saw that performance remembered it as if it had just happened, especially the scene in which Corday whipped the bare back of De Sade (Patrick Magee) with her hair. The show became the succès d’estime and de scandale of the London season, and in 1965 moved from the West End to Broadway.

Not long after, iconoclastic film director Ken Russell invited her to portray the conflicted, temperamental young artist Gudrun Brangwen in his film of D.H. Lawrence’s “Women in Love,” in which she stared down and danced with a herd of highland cattle. And thus the singularly focused force that is Glenda Jackson on screen was set loose upon the world.

It is hard now to convey how startling — and how thrilling — Jackson’s ascension was to many of us who came of age in the 1970s. It was, in its way, as unexpected as that of Barbra Streisand. For starters, she looked like no movie star who had come before, her face a collision of sharp angles that, on camera, read harshly and hypnotically beautiful.

Then there was the uncompromising, defiant strength she exuded in every role, whether it was the Virgin Queen of “Elizabeth R,” a hugely popular BBC series (for which she won two Emmys), or the nymphomaniacal Nina, wife to Richard Chamberlain’s Tchaikovsky in Russell’s notorious fever dream of a biopic “The Music Lovers.” She radiated a power that seemed to level her leading men.

Hollywood acknowledged this arresting newcomer with two Oscars in four years, for “Women in Love” and the romantic comedy “A Touch of Class,” which established her as an artful wielder of one-liners who could glam up with the best of them. She did not show up to accept either and remains disdainful of all prizes. (Check out the YouTube video of her priceless Evening Standard Award acceptance speech, which concludes, “I’m left wondering what I did wrong, so thank you very much indeed.”)

She became a bankable star, who worked in both offbeat masterpieces (“Sunday Bloody Sunday”) and bloated costume duds (“The Incredible Sarah,” as Sarah Bernhardt). She appeared on stage, in London and New York, in productions that included a “Macbeth” (1988), opposite Christopher Plummer, with which she made her last previous appearance on Broadway.

It was not a success. “There were great difficulties over the kind of production it was going to be,” Jackson remembered. “Very ruthless, Broadway. People do devour people. I think we had about three or four directors.”

Jackson perceived a different kind of ruthlessness at work in her native Britain, then under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher. “What she’d done to my country, I didn’t believe it,” she said. She recalled reading a Thatcher quote that said “there’s no such thing as a society,” and “I was so incensed by that, I walked into my closed French windows and almost broke my nose.”

She had been asked before if she’d be willing to stand for a Labor Party seat. And then, “suddenly out of the blue, Hampstead and Highgate came up. And I thought, ‘Oh, go for it, just do it.'” When she won, she didn’t think twice about saying goodbye to acting. “There’s no way you could do both,” she said.

She held minor ministry posts under Tony Blair, with whom she publicly broke over the war in Iraq. She made some memorable, resonant speeches — remember that voice — on the floor of Parliament, including a scathing counter-tribute to Margaret Thatcher after the former prime minister’s death.

Overtures about acting again had been made to her while she was still in Parliament, from, among others, Warchus and “Three Tall Women” producer Scott Rudin (who as a theater-crazy kid had seen her on Broadway in “Marat/Sade” and wanted her for the part Judi Dench played in the film “Notes on a Scandal”). But it was only after she stepped down from her Parliament seat in 2015 that acting once again seemed like a possibility.

Warchus recalled his first meeting with her about “Lear”: “I met her at the stage door and she was smoking, and she seemed to be in some sort of irascible state.”

After they talked in his office, he took her onto to the Old Vic stage. “And I could see her sort of unfurl,” he said. “We stood there looking out, and her eyes became a bit watery and she was reminiscing about the different shows that she’d done. It may seem an obvious and sentimental thing to say, but it was a homecoming for her. I had seen the great rigorousness; then I also got to see the emotion.”

When I repeated Warchus’ recollection of that “homecoming” moment to Jackson, she almost snorted. “Oh no,” she said. “No, no. Oh no. It was a theater I worked in more than once. And they’d maintained it beautifully.”

‘We Torment Ourselves’

As you might suspect, Jackson’s approach to acting appears to be unclouded by mysticism or sentimentality. She sees performing as a collaborative effort, above all. (“I was taught to leave my ego outside the stage door,” she said to me several times.) In discussing “Lear,” she kept insisting that the play is not only about its title monarch. “There’s not a bad part in it.”

The fact that she was a woman playing a man turned out to be a nonissue. “What interested me,” she said, “was that as we age, those seemingly unbreakable barriers that define us, our gender, they begin to crack, to blur; they’re not absolutes anymore.”

As for how she shapes her character, “It’s all in the text,” she said. She does little if any research on a part beyond reading the script again and again and again. When she showed up for the first day of rehearsals of “Lear,” she had already memorized her lines.

Appearing before a live audience again, she says, she felt no more nervous than she had before any performance from decades earlier — which is to say, she was terrified. “You can go onto that stage every night, and it’s always the equivalent of going onto the topmost diving board, and you don’t know if there’s any water in the pool.

“Every time I say, ‘Yes, I’ll do it,’ I think, ‘My God I don’t know how to do it. I can’t do it.’ We are sadomasochists as well as being brave, actors, and we torment ourselves.”

She was reluctant to talk much about her role as a tyrannical old woman, modeled on Albee’s mother, in “Three Tall Women.” (That drama initiated a fruitful late chapter in its creator’s career when it opened in New York in 1994.) She had worked with the playwright himself, on a 1989 production he directed of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” in Los Angeles, co-starring John Lithgow.

And how was that experience? “Awful. I mean we just didn’t get on. He was a terrible director. In the copy of the play that I’ve got, he’s put kind of directorial things inside; it’s very hard to ignore, but one tries.”

In the meantime, she was thinking with horror about packing for the trip to New York, a place she hadn’t visited in so long she couldn’t recall the last time she was there. “I hate traveling,” she said, sounding almost nervous, for once. “I hate luggage.”

Not Quite a Swan Song?

The next time I saw Jackson was in a Broadway rehearsal room on West 42nd Street, where she was embodying the frail but fierce old woman identified simply as A in Albee’s script, under the soft-spoken direction of Joe Mantello. Her co-stars, Metcalf and Pill, were on hand as B and C, women of different generations tending to the demanding A in the play’s first scene.

It was kind of distressing to see Jackson looking and sounding so feeble, and a relief when she became her trenchant self again during breaks. She interrupted the proceedings to suggest that the tone of the scene should alter more palpably after A says something particularly arrogant to Pill’s character. (“I mean, it’s so rude, isn’t it? I don’t care how old you are. There’s no excuse for it.”) And then without a beat, she became Albee’s insufferably rude woman once again.

Pill said she had expected to be intimidated by Jackson, and she was right, although there’s “not an element of diva in the slightest.” The intimidation factor, she said, comes from her being “potentially the smartest person in the room.”

Later that day, in a lounge at the hotel where she is staying, Jackson’s voice was softer than during our first encounter, and she spoke more slowly. I had the impression of someone carefully husbanding her energy.

She was pleased, she said, to be working with other actresses for a change. “It has been, really, everything one could hope for. Because, as I’ve said, most plays have only one decent woman’s part in them, and if you’ve got it, there aren’t any other actresses to work with.”

She said she still hadn’t entirely found her way into her role in “Three Tall Women” and astutely elaborated on some questions of character she was trying to resolve. (Was C’s fear of theft motivated by experience or paranoia?)

And what about other roles to come, perhaps in film? “Oh, I think that’s highly unlikely. I mean, I think parts for women of my years are well and truly finished.” And theater? “That depends. Again, where are the contemporary playwrights?”

Warchus, however, said that in watching her performing Lear, “not for a second did you think that this is someone’s swan song. It was the opposite. And she said to me, ‘What’s next Matthew? Find me another play.'”

In her 30s, Jackson had said she was looking forward to old age, because it “seems the only irresponsible time of your life.” When she decided she would not stand for Parliament again three years ago, she said she thought, “'Oh, I’m going to be so irresponsible. There’ll be nothing to be responsible for.”

The reality was, perhaps inevitably, quite the opposite. “In truth, you are even more responsible,” she said, not sounding remotely regretful. “What gets you out of bed in the morning, if not you?”

For the moment, Jackson’s sense of responsibility is trained almost entirely on her current role. Her nights are spent with the script, she said, and it is all she has been reading.

And although she loves to walk in New York, she had been outside only rarely since she arrived, because it had been cold, which had forced her to cut down on smoking. (“I’m well below 10 a day. I don’t know how good or bad that is.”)

Did she find she was recognized on the streets? “No. I’m not recognized in London. What would people recognize?”

Well, she is inimitably herself, I said.

Her response: “Oh no, come on, good God. No.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

BEN BRANTLEY © 2018 The New York Times

Opinion: Glenda Jackson on quitting parliament, playing lear and returning to broadway



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Eden Hazard: Belgian midfielder happy at Chelsea despite Madrid links

Eden Hazard

Eden Hazard is honoured to be linked with Real Madrid, but insists he is happy at Chelsea

Belgian midfielder Eden Hazard has admitted he is happy to be with English Premier League champions Chelsea, despite being linked with a move to Real Madrid throughout the season.

Hazard is admired by Madrid head coach Zinedine Zidane, and he is interested in bringing the Belgium international to the Spanish capital.

According to a report by Skysports,  Hazard is not bothered by rumours of his departure, as he has set his sights on doing well with Chelsea, and later at the World Cup.

He said, "For the time being I'm here, There are still some months to go and competitions to try to win, then the World Cup is coming up."

Champions League holders Madrid are keen on reinforcing their team in the transfer window , after what can be seen as a disappointing season by their standards.

 

However, Hazard admits he is enjoying his time at Chelsea, as his family also like the city and he is adored by the clubs supporters.

Despite talks of a new contract yet to be resolved, Hazard still has a two and half year contract with Chelsea.

"I'm here, I still have two-and-a-half-years on my contract. I'm very settled here and playing every game.”

"The fans like me a lot and my family likes it here. We'll see." He said

He however admitted that he is honoured to be linked with a move to the Spanish football powerhouse.

"Yes, but it's been several years now they're interested – when it's not Real, it's Paris, when it's not Paris, it's Real. I'm happy where I am." He said

Eden's younger brother Thorgan Hazard could also be on the move to Leicester City according to rumours, however Eden's reported transfer is do to his impressive performances, such as the game against Barcelona.

 

Hazard was a key component of Chelsea winning the Premier League last season, they are behind run away leaders Manchester City in the League, and Hazard believes the club should get behind manager Antonio Conte who won the League for them last season.

He said, "I don't sense there's any player who's not with the coach. Everyone is behind him. All we want is to climb the table – and give everything against Barcelona. We will see what happens after."

The 27-year-old is Chelsea’s top scorer this season with 15 goals, and will hope to add to his tally when fourth placed Chelsea travel to second Placed Manchester United on Sunday, February 25.

Eden Hazard: Belgian midfielder happy at Chelsea despite Madrid links



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Hoton tuna baya: Ko kuna iya gane ko wacece wannan?

tsohon hoton mawakiyar Nijeriya lokacin kuruciyar ta

Tana daya daga cikin mawakan nijeriya daga arewacin kasar

Shaharrariya mawakiyar nijeriya kuma daya daga cikin gwarzaye a wannan fannin da arewa ke alfahari da ita Hadiza Salma Blell wanda aka fi sani da Di'ja ta tuna baya da wanna tsohon hoton ta.

Di'ja ta wallafa hoton lokacin kuruciyar ta a shafin ta na Instagram.

 

Mawakiyar wanda yar ruwa biyi ce kasancewa mahaifin ta dan kasar Sierria Leone ne kuma mahaifiyar ta yar Zaria ce nan kasar Nijeriya tayi fice a kasar da salon wakar da take mai nishadantarwa bisa zakin muryar ta.

Tayi zama a kasar Nijeriya da Sierra leone da Amurka da Canada kuma mahaifin ta tsohon mataimakin minista ne a kasar Sierra leone dake yankin yammacin Afirka.

Di'ja ta fara harkar waka gadangadan a cikin 2008 kuma ta samu karramawa tare da amsar lambar yabo na beat music Awards a 2008.

A cikin 2012 sannane mawaki kuma shugaban kamfanin Mavin records Don jazzy ya kaddamar da ita cikin inuwar mawakan kamfanin shi.

Di'ja tayi aure a shekarun baya wanda aka yi cikin sirri ba tare da sanin jama'a kuma Allah ya albarkace auren da samun da namiji.

Hoton tuna baya: Ko kuna iya gane ko wacece wannan?



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Ex-Arsenal star Campbell: I'm one of the greatest minds in football

The former England international defender appears set to be overlooked for the Oxford United manager’s job, much to his chagrin

Ex-Arsenal star Campbell: I'm one of the greatest minds in football



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APC sets up committee to investigate disagreement in Kaduna chapter



  1. APC sets up committee to investigate disagreement in Kaduna chapter  TVC News
  2. APC investigates Kaduna State crisis  Vanguard
  3. APC constitutes c’ttee to probe Kaduna crisis  Daily Trust
  4. Sani: Reconciliation is last hope for APC  The Nation Newspaper

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APC sets up committee to investigate disagreement in Kaduna chapter



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Military denies halting operation to aid Shekau



  1. Military denies halting operation to aid Shekau  Vanguard
  2. Boko Haram: Army denies aiding Shekau’s escape  Daily Post Nigeria
  3. Army refutes report on suspension of offensive to aid Shekau’s escape  Daily Trust

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Military denies halting operation to aid Shekau



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Politics: Armed police are guarding the home of the deputy who resigned over his lack of action in the Parkland school shooting

Screen Shot 2018 02 22 at 4.21.40 PM

The resource officer was criticized by officials for his lack of action during the February 14 shooting.

  • Deputies from a local sheriff's office in Florida are reportedly guarding the home of the resource officer who was stationed at the high school where the Parkland shooting occurred.
  • The resource officer was criticized for his lack of action during the February 14 massacre.
  • He resigned from his post on Thursday.

Deputies from the Palm Beach County Sheriff's office are guarding the home of the school resource officer who was stationed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School after his family requested the protection, according to multiple news reports on Thursday.

Local Fox affiliate WSVN said it sent a reporter to the Boynton Beach, Florida, home of Broward County Sheriff's deputy Scot Peterson for an interview when the reporter was met with six deputies "standing guard outside."

Peterson's family is believed to have asked for the protection, according to NBC affiliate WPTV reporter Andrew Lofholm.

Peterson resigned from his post at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School following the shooting at the campus in which 17 people died. He was later criticized after an internal investigation found he never entered the building where the shooting occurred.

"I am devastated," Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel said at a news conference. "Sick to my stomach. He never went in."

Peterson, who was armed and in uniform at the time, reportedly did "nothing" and remained outside of the building for at least four minutes during the incident, according to Israel.

Peterson had been the high school's resource officer since 2009 and made a salary of $75,673.72 in 2016, according to The South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Politics: Armed police are guarding the home of the deputy who resigned over his lack of action in the Parkland school shooting



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Durotoye joins ANN, says Nigeria practises selectocracy



  1. Durotoye joins ANN, says Nigeria practises selectocracy  The Punch
  2. 2019 Election: Fela Durotoye Declares For Presidency  Surge (blog)

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Durotoye joins ANN, says Nigeria practises selectocracy



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Man allegedly throws lover into Lagos Lagoon for calling off 10-yr relationship



  1. Man allegedly throws lover into Lagos Lagoon for calling off 10-yr relationship  Vanguard
  2. Jilted Lover Allegedly Drowns Fmr. Fiancée in Lagos Lagoon  THISDAY Newspapers

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Man allegedly throws lover into Lagos Lagoon for calling off 10-yr relationship



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John Boyega: British-Nigerian actor says Wizkid's 'Daddy Yo' will feature in upcoming Hollywood movie

Wizkid's song will feature in upcoming Hollywood movie - John Boyega

Boyega also shared a video on his Twitter page, showing him dancing to Wizkid's 'Daddy Yo' hit.

British-Nigerian actor John Boyega has revealed that Wizkid's 'Daddy Yo' will be used as soundtrack in his forthcoming movie, 'Pacific Rim Uprising'.

Boyega, who was one of the casts of Star Wars, disclosed this on his Twitter page as he shared a video of him dancing to the hit song.

 

Wizkid also acknowledged the tweet by simply tweeting "My bro!".

 

Born John Adedayo B. Adegboyega to British-Nigerian parents, Abigail (née Aboderin), and Samson Adegboyega, the young actor rose to prominence in the UK for his role as Moses in the 2011 sci-fi comedy film Attack the Block.

He is known for playing Finn in the 2015 film Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the seventh film of the Star Wars series, and its 2017 sequel Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

ALSO READ: John Boyega is disappointed he hasn't found a wife in Nigeria

His other credits include historical drama film Detroit (2017), four episodes of the television series 24: Live Another Day and the drama Imperial Dreams in 2014.

John Boyega: British-Nigerian actor says Wizkid's 'Daddy Yo' will feature in upcoming Hollywood movie



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Thursday 22 February 2018

Odd Enough: This man came down with the flu — and it's going to cost him his fingers and toes

man lose fingers from flu

A Texas man is reportedly about to have some of his fingers and toes amputated as a result of complications from the flu.

How common is this scary flu complication? We asked an expert.

A Texas man is reportedly about to have some of his fingers and toes amputated as a result of complications from the flu.

According to WFAA, 33-year-old Joei Smith was a healthy, self-proclaimed “gym head” when he contracted the flu in December 2017. He said he started to feel sick and dizzy while at work, so he decided to go home. Days later, on December 29, he was feeling bad enough that he went to the doctor.

"I got there at 12 a.m., and by 3 a.m., they were telling me I only had 24 hours to live," Smith told WFAA.

READ ALSO: How to Know When a Child's Flu Turns Serious

Smith had developed an extremely dangerous complication from the flu — sepsis and pneumonia. Sepsis can cause organs to shut down in the body, and that's exactly what was happening to Smith.

Sepsis can be fatal if not treated quickly enough, regardless of gender, age or health. A 21-year-old bodybuilder recently died from sepsis that developed from the flu. Fortunately for Smith, doctors were able to save his life, but his fingers and toes are a different story.

Smith told WFAA that while he was in the hospital being treated for kidney failure, pneumonia and sepsis, doctors gave him drugs to help with his blood pressure. “As a result of the drugs from the high blood pressure that they gave me, it left me with compromised limbs,” he said.

Now most of his fingers are black and blue, his hands surrounded by bandages.

While he can’t speak to this particular case, Daniel P. Eiras, MD, MPH, assistant professor, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases & Immunology at NYU Langone Health, explained that although very rare, it’s entirely possible for the flu to cause these effects.

READ ALSO: Second Child in New York City Dies of Flu-Related Illness

“When you get the flu, your body’s immune system is fighting off a severe infection,” Eiras told Men’s Health. “Your blood pressure drops, and it makes it difficult for your body to get blood to places like certain organs and the tips of your fingers and toes.”

Eiras explained that this loss of blood can cause necrosis, which is essentially the dying of tissue. “This would cause the limbs to become gangrenous, which is why an amputation would have to happen,” he said.

Developing sepsis from flu complications is rare, especially for people outside of the vulnerable populations (the elderly and the very young). It’s even more rare for sepsis to lead to necrosing limbs.

In the event that you do get the flu, there are steps you can take to make sure it doesn't become something worse.

“Cold and flu symptoms can be very similar, especially in the beginning,” Eiras said. “If you feel something come on and you think it might be the flu, go into your doctor and get tested. If you have the flu, there are medications your doctor can give you.” These medications are more effective in earlier stages, so the sooner you go in, the better.

As far as preventing yourself from getting the flu in the first place, Erias said there’s one thing everyone must do. “Get your flu shot. If you’re over 6 months in age, you should have your flu shot,” he said. “If you haven’t gotten it yet, it’s not too late. Go get it. It could save lives.”

Smith told WFAA that he'd gotten his flu shot, but still got the flu. However, that isn’t an excuse to not get one.

“There’s a chance you could still get the flu even if you get your flu shot,” Eiras said, “But getting the shot is still the best preventative measure you can take.”

Besides getting your flu shot, there are everyday habits you should be doing to lower your chances of getting the flu. “Make sure you do things like cough into your sleeve and wash your hands frequently,” he said. “And don’t come into work if you’re sick.”

Odd Enough: This man came down with the flu — and it's going to cost him his fingers and toes



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What Buhari told APC governors on 2019 re-election bid



  1. What Buhari told APC governors on 2019 re-election bid  Daily Post Nigeria
  2. 2019: APC governors meet Buhari tonight  Premium Times
  3. Buhari Asks APC Governors For More Time To Decide On Re-Election  CHANNELS TELEVISION

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What Buhari told APC governors on 2019 re-election bid



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Lagos Neighborhood Corps rescue 4 rape victims from cultists



  1. Lagos Neighborhood Corps rescue 4 rape victims from cultists  The Nation Newspaper

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Lagos Neighborhood Corps rescue 4 rape victims from cultists



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Transparency International has confirmed corruption by Buhari's government – Fayose



  1. Transparency International has confirmed corruption by Buhari’s government – Fayose  Daily Post Nigeria
  2. Yobe attack: Nigerian govt not sure of true situation of missing schoolgirls – Lai Mohammed  Premium Times
  3. Chibok/Yobe Girls: Let’s avoid repetition of incidence, Senate tells FG  Vanguard
  4. At least 50 Nigerian schoolgirls missing after latest Boko Haram abduction  CBC.ca

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Transparency International has confirmed corruption by Buhari's government – Fayose



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Yomi Casual And Wife, Grace Makun’s Daughter Is Just So Adorable; She’s One Month Already!

Fashion designer Yomi casual and his wife welcomed their first child together one month ago. To celebrate her, the new mom took to her Instagram page to share a photo…

The post Yomi Casual And Wife, Grace Makun’s Daughter Is Just So Adorable; She’s One Month Already! appeared first on Wedding Digest Naija.

Yomi Casual And Wife, Grace Makun’s Daughter Is Just So Adorable; She’s One Month Already!



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Sokoto introduces tractor hire scheme



  1. Sokoto introduces tractor hire scheme  New Telegraph Newspaper

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Sokoto introduces tractor hire scheme



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PDP attacks Buhari, Lai Mohammed, APC for failing Nigerians



  1. PDP attacks Buhari, Lai Mohammed, APC for failing Nigerians  Daily Post Nigeria
  2. You Cannot Censor The Media, PDP Tells FG  CHANNELS TELEVISION
  3. Dear Senator Tinubu, Buhari has thrashed us all!  The Punch
  4. Sani: Reconciliation is last hope for APC  The Nation Newspaper

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PDP attacks Buhari, Lai Mohammed, APC for failing Nigerians



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WeddingDigestMoment : How We Spent This Year’s Valentine.

Valentine’s Day is known as the day of love, and this year, team Wedding Digest decided to put smiles on children who are usually forgotten by the society. We are…

The post WeddingDigestMoment : How We Spent This Year’s Valentine. appeared first on Wedding Digest Naija.

WeddingDigestMoment : How We Spent This Year’s Valentine.



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It's sad that snake swallowed N36m in JAMB office – Sultan of Sokoto



  1. It’s sad that snake swallowed N36m in JAMB office – Sultan of Sokoto  Daily Post Nigeria
  2. There is still high-level corruption in Nigeria — Sultan of Sokoto  The Punch
  3. Sultan of Sokoto cautions against criminalising Fulani ethnic group  Guardian (blog)

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It's sad that snake swallowed N36m in JAMB office – Sultan of Sokoto



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Patrick Edet: Former Catholic priest is getting married, months after resignation

Former Catholic priest, Patrick Edet, is getting married!

The ex-priest is getting married nine months after leaving the priesthood.

Patrick Henry Edet is getting married, months after resignation.

He left the priesthood after announcing his resignation on the 31st of July, 2017 on the radio.

Eights months later, the former Akwa Ibom state-based Catholic priest has revealed his plans to get married.

 

According to NewTelegraph, Edet is tying the knot on March 17, 2018.

Reportedly, his fiancée will be revealed next week.

ALSO READ: Why people leave the Catholic priesthood

Patrick Edet leaves priesthood

The former Rev. announced his resignation on air through his weekly live radio programme called Grace and Inspiration.

In his words, “From today Henceforth, I cease to be a Catholic Priest in my spirit and in my soul.

“I forgive those who will criticize me. I live for God…I seek freedom for my soul. As I leave, I leave smiling, I AM SO HAPPY THAT I AM FREE.”

 

Edet said it took a lot of praying and fasting that lasted for seven-month to make this decision.

His announcement was met with mixed reactions.

Patrick Edet: Former Catholic priest is getting married, months after resignation



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Entertainment: A tune heard often at these Olympics gets to the heart of being korean

Yura Min and Alexander Gamelin, the U.S.-born ice dancing pair representing South Korea at the Olympics

It may not have been the most obvious choice for Yura Min and Alexander Gamelin, the U.S.-born ice dancing pair representing South Korea at the Olympics, to skate Tuesday to “Arirang,” a Korean folk song whose roots go back hundreds of years.

There was concern in their camp that the international judges at the Winter Games would not respond to a tune unfamiliar to them. But for Min — and for any Korean watching — the significance of the choice was clear.

“Even though it could be difficult to get high scores from foreign judges, I wanted to perform with ‘Arirang’ at the first Winter Olympics in Korea, and I did,” Min told Korean reporters Tuesday. “I was born in the United States, but I am proud to be Korean.”

In an 1896 essay, Homer B. Hulbert, a U.S. missionary in Korea, wrote: “To the average Korean, this one song holds the same place in music that rice does in his food — all else is mere appendage. You hear it everywhere and at all times.”

The same could perhaps be said about the song’s place at these games. It has turned up as more than background music for the skating pair’s routine. It was played twice at Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony. It has been sung in the stands at hockey games. And with all the interaction here between North and South Korea, it has served as a stand-in national anthem for the formerly unified countries.

“Arirang,” which today generally refers to the melody and lyrics of a version first recorded in 1926, has become a catchall tune, a blank canvas onto which Koreans can paint their emotions. Over the years, it has absorbed varied cultural meanings, whether at home or among the diaspora. For some Koreans, it can be overwhelmingly evocative, provoking tears or a swell of pride.

Ten years ago, the New York Philharmonic took a trip to Pyongyang to perform for a North Korean audience for the first time. Michelle Kim, a violinist, recalled that the atmosphere inside the room was cold and muted. Then the orchestra began to play “Arirang.” Members of the audience were soon in tears. Kim and several of her fellow musicians were crying, too.

“A couple of my American colleagues told me they wanted to jump off the stage and go hug somebody there,” said Kim, who moved from Seoul, South Korea, to Los Angeles when she was 10. “'Arirang’ captures the heart of Korea — not North, not South, just Korea.”

“Arirang” served as the anthem for the joint Korean women’s hockey team. At the opening ceremony, when the North and South Korean athletes emerged before the crowd, the pop music booming over the speakers paused, and “Arirang” began to play. The North Korean cheerleaders here have been singing it inside arenas.

The infinite ways that the two countries have diverged in the past 70 years are well-documented. But the song, beloved in both countries, reminds them of the ways they are the same.

“It symbolizes the unification so well,” said Jung Jae-eun, 40, a spectator at the opening game for the Korean women’s hockey team.

Arirang — as a song, as a concept, as a name — is omnipresent. When Koryolink, North Korea’s wireless telecommunications provider, revealed its first smartphone five years ago, it was named Arirang. The first South Korean-made satellite launched into space was called the Arirang-1. North Korea’s irregularly held arts and gymnastics festival — which reportedly can feature more than 100,000 performers — is known as the Arirang Mass Games. Arirang cigarettes remain a cult favorite in South Korea. And innumerable Korean restaurants around the world are named Arirang.

“It’s synonymous in many ways with what it means to be Korean — which of course is very complicated,” said Hilary Finchum-Sung, an ethnomusicologist at Seoul National University.

Asked for a comparison from another country, Finchum-Sung cited “Danny Boy,” which perhaps plays a similar role for the Irish.

The name Arirang actually refers to a category of folk songs. There are countless regional variations, with dozens of known melodies and thousands of known lyrics. The common thread among them is the use of the word “Arirang,” or other words that sound similar. Complicating matters some is the fact that those words do not have a universally accepted meaning. Some historians believe them to be simply euphonious syllables, a Korean fa-la-la.

The version most popular today — known as “Bonjo Arirang,” or “Standard Arirang” — originated from a 1926 anti-Japanese silent film called “Arirang,” which became a sensation in Korea during the colonial period.

The song’s continued emergence within that colonial context imbued it with solemnity, and today many view the tune as one of the foremost articulations of han — the bitter, unyielding melancholia that is often described as a national characteristic.

As music historian E. Taylor Atkins wrote: “'Arirangs’ have articulated the sorrow of lovers parting, the injustices of life for common people, the nostalgia for one’s hometown, the disorientation experienced during periods of dramatic change or the resolve to persevere and conquer oppression.”

On Tuesday, Min and Gamelin wore outfits inspired by traditional Korean clothing, known as hanbok. If their goal was to endear themselves to the Korean crowd, they had no other choice for the music. Min told the Detroit Free Press that at competitions leading up to the Olympics, judges from Korea were crying as the pair skated to the song.

“It just means that much to them,” she said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

ANDREW KEH © 2018 The New York Times

Entertainment: A tune heard often at these Olympics gets to the heart of being korean



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West Ham team news: Injuries, suspensions and line-up vs Liverpool

The Hammers will aim to win at Anfield this weekend and become the first team to do so under David Moyes’ management

West Ham team news: Injuries, suspensions and line-up vs Liverpool



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Scores injured as Kwara communities boil



  1. Scores injured as Kwara communities boil  Daily Post Nigeria
  2. Three police officers, one naval rating injured in Kwara communal clash  TVC News
  3. One dead, 21 injured in Kwara communal clash  Vanguard

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Scores injured as Kwara communities boil



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American Christian Evangelist Billy Graham Dead at 99



  1. American Christian Evangelist Billy Graham Dead at 99  Voice of America
  2. Billy Graham Bore Witness for 99 Years  Wall Street Journal
  3. How Billy Graham’s Movement Lost Its Way  The New Yorker
  4. Billy Graham’s Missed Opportunities  New York Times
  5. Why Billy Graham Was Determined to Globalize Evangelicalism  The Atlantic

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American Christian Evangelist Billy Graham Dead at 99



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Boko Haram school attack: two girls killed and 76 rescued, official says



  1. Boko Haram school attack: two girls killed and 76 rescued, official says  The Guardian
  2. Yobe attack: State govt says over 50 schoolgirls ‘unaccounted for’; police say 30  Premium Times
  3. BREAKING: Military rescue abducted Yobe school girls inside bush  Daily Post Nigeria
  4. More than 90 Nigerian schoolgirls missing after Boko Haram attack: sources  Reuters
  5. Boko Haram attack: 48 schoolgirls found, 46 still missing, says Yobe govt  The Punch

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Boko Haram school attack: two girls killed and 76 rescued, official says



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