‘Tough Road Ahead’ For Post-Brexit Horse Transport

While Britain, Ireland and France are competing nations in the racing and breeding world, in recent years the Tripartite Agreement (TPA) has significantly eased the regular interaction between the three, particularly in regard to transporting broodmares and racehorses. The TPA recognised the high health status of Thoroughbreds and allowed for free equine movement between the countries. 

All that changed, however, when Britain’s departure from the European Union was finalised with the end of the transition period on Dec. 31. Now that the UK is no longer an EU member it has been granted ‘Third Country’ status for future dealings with the EU bloc, and transporting horses to and from its European neighbours has become decidedly less straightforward.

A section dedicated to Brexit on the British Horseracing Authority website warns, “It remains the case that relative to arrangements prior to 31 December 2020, the process to move horses is considerably more complex administratively and time consuming.”

In addition, breeders moving mares, or owners moving racehorses, will also find it significantly more expensive for them to travel to Ireland, France and beyond. And that’s when they are actually able to travel. With the Free Trade Agreement between the UK and EU only finally being ratified on Christmas Eve, the new documentation required by transporters, both for vehicles and drivers, means that for the time being they are effectively grounded. 

Rupert Erskine Crum, who owns Weyhill Transport in England, said, “On 1 January the EU ceased to recognise GB transporter authorisations. So effectively it became illegal for a GB truck to go into the EU and an EU truck to come into GB carrying horses—and that’s GB rather than the UK as Northern Ireland is dealt with separately.”

He continued, “The irony of this is that for the last 13 years, the certificates, requirements, vehicle inspections and driver training for transporters in Britain, Ireland or France have been exactly the same. It’s pan-European.”

Authorisation can now be applied for within any one of the EU member states but Erskine Crum says that he and his fellow transporters are still awaiting details on how this can be done.

“All our drivers have GB horse-handling certificates so now they have to go to rebadge, say in Ireland,” he added. “The vehicles now have to travel to an EU country to be inspected to receive new certificates, despite the fact that all my vehicles have recent certificates under exactly the same regime that they will be tested in Ireland, which of course brings considerable expense.”

Increased costs

In addition to the extra expense which will be incurred by the transport companies, and any trainer or stud farm owner transporting horses for commercial reasons in their own horseboxes, the bills will also increase through the extra blood tests and certification required for each horse. Furthermore, at present it appears that VAT will be payable, or security posted, in relation to the value of the animal being exported, even if it is only a temporary export while a mare is being covered or a horse is being sent to race overseas. The VAT can subsequently be reclaimed. 

Willie Mullins was the first to test the system when sending Grangee (Fr) from Ireland to run at Market Rasen on Saturday. The trainer has indicated that the mare’s owners have avoided the VAT charges as she was transported under the ‘temporary admission procedure’. However, the TBA’s tax expert Peter Mendham still advises caution in this regard until further clarification is forthcoming from the British and Irish authorities. 

He said, “At the moment, as we understand it, the horse’s owner has to put up security for the VAT, which is 13.5% in Ireland and 20% in Britain. The temporary admission procedure is absolutely fine and can be used but the issue is whether or not you have to lodge the security with the authorities when you take the horse in. Certainly the rules at the moment, in both the UK and Ireland, are that you have to put up security pending the return of the horse.”

Mendham added, “I would be very wary of assuming that you don’t have to put up security until we get a formal ruling from both sides of the Irish Sea.”

Horses being transported from the EU for sales in Britain can be imported under the Docket System, which is being reinstated by Goffs UK and Tattersalls and means that the sales company acts as the importer and is responsible for paying the VAT.

Extra checks will be carried out for horses travelling into EU countries, who will be required to enter via a Border Control Post (BCP). These currently exist at the ferry ports of Dublin and Rosslare in Ireland as well as Belfast in Northern Ireland, and at Dublin and Shannon airports. On the French coast they can be found at Caen, Calais, Cherbourg, Dieppe, and St Malo. There is also a BCP at the Eurotunnel terminal at Calais (Coquelles), though the cost for horses crossing the Channel by train has increased significantly to £350 per animal on top of regular transport costs.

There are currently no BCPs at British ferry ports, though they will come into force on 1 July, meaning that horses arriving in Britain from the EU will not be subject to checks until that date unless they arrive by air to Heathrow, Stansted or Prestwick.

Talks ongoing

The Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association (TBA) sent several missives to breeders in the countdown to the end of the transition period advising them not to attempt to transport horses in the first few weeks of January. Some made the decision to move mares prior to the deadline, while others have adopted a ‘wait and see’ approach, hoping that the situation will become less fraught as the covering season progresses. 

Julian Richmond-Watson, chairman of the TBA and the Thoroughbred Industries Brexit Steering Group, said, “Kevin Needham [of BBA Shipping] is hopeful that by the end of the month the transport companies will have the certification required to start moving horses. 

“From Britain’s point of view, instead of having to put up the VAT when bringing horses back into the country we just have to value them and the VAT goes to your quarterly return. We can’t answer for Ireland and France, but I understand Ireland is looking at ways for mares to be classified as grazing horses.”

Richmond-Watson added that he remains hopeful that an agreement can be reached with Ireland, if not France, whereby similar arrangements to the now-defunct TPA could be reinstated. 

He said, “There is a common travel agreement between us anyway. Maybe we will be able to come to some sort of [equine] arrangement with Ireland.”

At present, Britain can be used as a ‘land bridge’ between Ireland and France, and horses travelling between those countries will not have to go through check points at the border but will require an Intra Trade Animal Health Certificate. Horses travelling between the UK and the EU will require an Export Health Certificate for each journey.

Richmond-Watson added, “Border Control Posts are going to be a big issue because they are only open for regular office working hours and a lot of the ferries don’t arrive on those timings so horses could be held for far too long. If they arrive after 5pm you can’t leave them sitting on a box all night.”

Clarification sought for foals

New EU legislation means that foals will require a separate Export Health Certificate and will not be able to travel until they are at least 30 days old.

“We are currently seeking clarification on whether foals can travel on the same passport as their dam as before or whether they are regarded as a separate epidemiological unit. They have to do 30 days’ quarantine to be able to travel, which means to travel a mare after she has foaled you miss the 28-day covering,” Richmond-Watson explained. 

“The EU task force has lobbied very hard to Brussels on this subject but has got nowhere yet. It’s a big issue as people like to foal their mares at home and then travel them, but they are going to miss that covering.”

He added that talks are ongoing between the relevant departments in the British, Irish and French Thoroughbred industries.

“We’re trying to talk to them all the time and I’d hope that in the next few months common sense will prevail and we’ll get the transport side sorted,” he said. “But it is going to cost more. There will be more veterinary checks, more checks at the border posts, all of which add to the cost. I think everyone has to be aware of that and make their judgements accordingly.”

The TBA is advising that breeders contact their vet at least six weeks before a horse is due to travel in order for the appropriate blood tests to be carried out by the Animal and Plant Health (APHA) laboratory. It also advises engaging a professional transporter and customs agent. A Breeding Clearance Notification (BCN) must be lodged with Weatherbys for any temporary exports. 

Extra complications or changes to the current situation could arise with the implementation of the new EU Animal Health Law on April 21

Breeders weigh up options

Henri Bozo, whose French-based Ecurie des Monceaux regularly sends mares to stallions in Britain and Ireland, is not deterred by the new rules, though he admits they present extra challenges at a time when Covid is also a major concern. 

“Our mares that were due to foal early have already gone to England,” he said. “Otherwise they will go as usual and I have taken the decision to think we will be alright working with professional transporters who will make things, if not easier, then at least possible. I think it is important to try to do the best you can for the mating you have chosen.”

He added, “The feedback from our transporter is quite positive. We tend to bring the mares back to France when they are around 50 days in foal but this all creates a lot more trouble-there’s more paperwork and it is time-consuming. There is already a difficult situation in the world but Brexit makes it even more difficult. It’s very unfortunate but I want to try everything possible to keep our mating plans as they are.”

In contrast, Doug Procter of The Glanvilles Stud in England, who is also a regular cross-Channel traveller, is keeping his options open for his band of largely National Hunt broodmares. 

He said, “I tend to drop the mares off to a stud we use between Deauville and Lisieux and generally they are covered the next day and we bring them home when they are scanned in foal with a heartbeat, so my business needs to be authorised as a horse transporter.

“Of the mares that are going to France, the earliest is foaling in early February, so I am giving myself to early March to see how things are looking. It needs a bit of time. For example, we don’t yet know what veterinary fees we will have to pay at Border Control Posts, and we are waiting to see whether there will be reciprocation for vehicles or driver qualifications and whether, as a British-based company, I will be able to be authorised to transport horses in the EU without actually having to create an EU subsidiary.”

Procter continued, “At some point I will have to take my horsebox over to Ireland to be inspected. I am keeping abreast of things but my policy is that I will let them sort things out during January and then decide what to do. If it’s not feasible, or if it’s looking too expensive, then this year I will have to change plans and cover all the mares in Britain.”

Waiting for answers

It seems certain that breeders who previously ‘walked in’ mares on a day trip to England or Ireland will no longer be able to do so given the time it will take once in the relevant country to receive an Export Health Certificate for the return journey. This is currently estimated to take five days.

Patrick Keane of major Irish horse transport firm Ballinroe has already seen a huge increase in paperwork for his office staff and also warns that the sales could form a pressure point for transporters. 

“The cost of transporting horses has doubled in the space of two weeks, with all the red tape and paperwork. For something that two weeks ago you were ringing the owner in Ireland and giving them a collection time and then you were ringing the stud in England to give them a delivery time, and that was all you had to do. Now you have to deal with four or five different people just to get your horse shipped,” he said. 

“I would hope it changes as the time it takes to move a horse could be a problem, especially when the sales are on. Tattersalls wouldn’t have enough stables around Newmarket to keep them all once they are off the sales complex but while they are waiting for authorisation to travel. We try to move horses every night from the sales back to Ireland but the way it would work at the moment, if there was a sale in Newmarket today, we wouldn’t be able to move them tonight.”

He continued, “There are animals here to be looked after—they are not cargo but they are being viewed at the moment as cargo. The health status of the English horses hasn’t changed overnight but they are being bracketed as a third country.”

At present, Ballinroe has not sent a lorry to the UK since Jan. 1 as Keane and his colleagues await the correct authorisation.

“We have to have vehicle certification in the UK and it’s looking like that won’t happen until the end of January. We had a lorry come in to Ireland on the morning of 1 January and that was the last trip we made. We’re just waiting for answers,” said Keane. “We have a tough road ahead at the moment.”

For any queries relating to this issue, an industry email helpline is available via brexit@weatherbys.co.uk.

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Without Parole Bolsters Gunthers’ Stallion Record

John and Tanya Gunther’s Glennwood Farm produces stallions at a rate which must be the envy of some of the larger operations in the business. On its roll of honour the names of ten sires are inscribed, led of course by the Triple Crown winner Justify (Scat Daddy), now ensconced on Coolmore’s American roster. In 2021, the international wing of the Gunthers’ operation can add a British-based stallion to its list with the return of Without Parole (GB) to his birthplace of Newsells Park Stud.

The son of Frankel (GB) provided his breeders with a treasured Royal Ascot victory in their own colours in the G1 St James’s Palace S. just ten days after the unbeaten Justify became the 13th winner of America’s Triple Crown, leading to John Gunther being recognised with the Eclipse Award for outstanding breeder. While the majority of the family’s mares reside at their Glennwood Farm in Kentucky, the Canadian breeders also board a select band at Newsells Park Stud. It is primarily a commercial concern, but the horses retained to race are campaigned in Britain and France, as well as America.

During a midwinter Covid lockdown there can be few things more cheering than reflecting on that golden summer of 2018 while finalising this year’s matings plans in support of a new stallion.

“It was such a crazy period,” says Tanya Gunther. “Justify had just won the Triple Crown and the odds of having the Triple Crown winner and then Without Parole winning at Ascot seemed too much. I just thought to myself ‘It can’t happen’, and it really wasn’t until he made his move in the stretch and got to the lead that I believed he might just do this.”

Just a week after Without Parole was born, his half-brother Tamarkuz (Speightstown), the eldest of Without You Babe’s offspring, had won the G2 Godolphin Mile on Dubai World Cup night for Sheikh Hamdan, and his subsequent switch to America led to his GI Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile victory the following year. Their family has been further enhanced by the dual winner and Grade 3-placed She’s Got You (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and though Without You Babe was herself unraced, she is a half-sister to the dual Grade 1 winner and former Coolmore stallion Stay Thirsty (Bernardini).

Their Darley-bred dam Marozia (Storm Bird) was bought by John Gunther at Keeneland in 2003 and had been trained in Britain by John Gosden, who also oversaw the first half of Without Parole’s racing career before he switched to Chad Brown in America. Remembered by Gosden as “a very sound and tough colt, and incredibly good natured”, Without Parole didn’t add another win to his four British successes but he accrued plenty more black type with placed finishes in the GI Breeders’ Cup Mile and G1 Shoemaker Mile in California, as well as the G1 Shadwell Turf Mile at Keeneland.

“Tamarkuz we bred in the U.S. and he was bought by Shadwell and he went around the world,” says Gunther. “Without Parole has also travelled all over the world and I’d like to think breeders give that some credit as we all know how difficult it is when they don’t have the right mind. Frankel himself didn’t travel but Without Parole went everywhere, more than what it would appear on paper because he flew back and forth across the U.S. several times and the U.S. is huge.”

She continues, “My dad had always envisioned him starting at stud in England. For European breeding, England, Ireland and France are all big but our operation is based in England so it was always in the back of our mind to have him back there. I do think that in America turf racing is becoming better regarded but for some bizarre reason they don’t value turf stock as highly as dirt at the sales. While that bias is diminishing, it’s still very much there past the top level.

“We tried to price him competitively hoping that he would appeal to breeders so he can get sufficient mares to be able to prove himself. Obviously for me it’s hard to look at him objectively but it seems to me to be a pretty good deal for a Group 1-winning son of Frankel with his pedigree—it’s a pretty choc-a-block female line.”

The return of Without Parole has been understandably well received by the team at Newsells Park Stud. General manager Julian Dollar says, “To say that we’ve been following this horse since the day he was born is, obviously, literally true. We very much kept an eye on him and have been talking to John and Tanya about the idea of him retiring to Newsells Park Stud for some years. We foaled and reared him and I think that’s been really important to the guys here. You know, a lot of the people on the staff remember him as a foal. He was always a standout out foal and standout yearling. To have him back after a successful racing career is very special.”

He continues, “We always like to support our stallions and we are sending seven or eight of our nice mares to him. And the Gunthers are getting right behind him with the majority of their European mares. John and Tanya are about as passionate owner/breeders as it’s possible to be. When Tanya comes to see her horses, which unfortunately in the last year has been difficult for her with COVID restrictions, the one thing I take away is just how much she loves the horses. And John is absolutely passionate about Frankel, always has been, and this horse Without Parole especially. So they have really got behind him with with some of their very best European-based mares and there’s some very shrewd breeders who are coming in behind him, buying the breeding rights that are available, which is great. He’s filling up well.”

Among the mares which the Gunthers plan to send to Without Parole are Beyond The Sea (Sea The Stars {Ire}), a winning half-sister to GI American Oaks winner Competitionofideas (Speightstown), who has a Kingman (GB) yearling and is back in foal to the Juddmonte stallion. Mama Tembu (Street Cry {Ire}), a half-sister to Justify’s dam Stage Magic (Ghostzapper), is also on the list, while listed South Beach S. winner Atomic Blonde (Scat Daddy) will be shipped from Glennwood Farm to be covered.

“We have two mares leaving this week from America and there’s another we’re looking at at the January Sale,” Gunther says. “We don’t go crazy buying a bunch of expensive mares but we think we have some good mares within our own stock and we’re going to utilise them. We have eight pencilled in so far. For us that’s a huge number as our broodmare band is not that big so the vast majority of our European mares will go to him. But we’re not just throwing everything at him, we want to breed the right horse.”

Without Parole’s first book will also have rarity value in the inclusion of Newsells Park Stud’s Date With Destiny (Ire), the sole offspring of George Washington (Ire) who was listed-placed herself and is the dam of Group 3 winner Beautiful Morning (GB), who is by Without Parole’s grandsire Galileo (Ire).

His arrival augments the Galileo blood already on offer at Newsells Park Stud via its proven stallion Nathaniel (Ire). To refer to the latter merely as the sire of Enable (GB) is to do Frankel’s old sparring partner a disservice as he also has the Group 1 winners God Given (GB) and Channel (Ire) to his credit, as well as a growing number of group winners in Australia as well as a burgeoning reputation of classy National Hunt stock.

“He’s been so genuine and consistent. I’ve got a big soft spot for him,” says Dollar of the 13-year-old. “Nathaniel was a mile and a quarter, mile and a half horse, and he’s definitely throwing that stamina influence, whereas, I think Without Parole really did have a turn of foot. He was electric as a 3-year-old coming into St. James’s Palace Stakes. I mean, he had a Timeform rating of 117 on his second run, which was almost unheard of. He won the Heron Stakes, and then went on to win the St. James’s Palace. He’s a proper miler and he comes from a great American speed family as well. So I think he’s got much more of an influence for speed than maybe some other sons of Frankel.” 

Within the 1,200 acres of the Royston-based Newsells Park Stud, Without You Babe remains a permanent boarder, and her yearling this year is a full-brother to Without Parole. 

“She’s a lovely producer, a very consistent producer,” says Dollar. “She had Tamarkuz with her first foal and she just seems to be one of those that hits a home run with with every one of her babies. She’s got a super temperament and she seems to have passed on to Without Parole.”

For the Gunthers, Without Parole is the latest name on the list of stallions from their boutique breeding operation which, along with the aforementioned Justify, Tamarkuz and Stay Thirsty, includes GI Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Vino Rosso (Curlin)—another from that extraordinary crop of 2015—as well as Mo Town (Uncle Mo) and First Samurai (Giant’s Causeway).

Tanya Gunther says, “We had our first Justify foals last year and we’ll have our first Vino Rosso foals this year, then Without Parole next year. It’s really a very exciting time.”

 

A selection of mares being sent to Without Parole by Glennwood Farm and Newsells Park Stud:

Dawn To Dance (Ire) (Selkirk): dam of Group 3 winner and 2021 Classic contender Policy Of Truth (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}).

Mama Tembu (Street Cry {Ire}): half-sister to the dam of Justify, currently in foal to Kingman.

Beyond The Sea (Sea The Stars {Ire}): half-sister to G1W Competitionofideas (Speightstown), currently in foal to Kingman.

Atomic Blonde (Scat Daddy): stakes winner, maiden mare travelling from America.

Church On Time (Honor Code): half-sister to G1W Competitionofideas, maiden mare travelling from America.

Cubit (GB) (Bated Breath {GB}): recent December Sale purchase from Juddmonte, a half-sister to G3W Monarchs Glen (GB) (Frankel {GB}) from the family of G1 Prix de Diane winner Nebraska Tornado (Storm Cat).

Don’t Cry For Me (Street Cry {Ire}): dual winner and black-type producer.

Pretty Paper (Medaglia d’Oro): half-sister to G1-placed Bookrunner (Tiznow) from family of dual GIW Good Magic (Curlin).

As Good As Gold (Ire) (Oasis Dream {GB}): half-sister to Eminent (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) from the family of Quarter Moon (Ire) and Yesterday (Ire), she has a Frankel yearling and is in foal to Zoustar (Aus).

Date With Destiny (Ire) (GeorgeWashington {Ire}): stakes-placed dam of G3W Beautiful Morning (GB).

Dynaforce (Dynaformer): dual GIW and dam of listed winner Aljezeera (GB) (Frankel {GB}).

Lady Eclair (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}): listed winner and dam of listed winner Al Malhouf (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}).

My Special J’s (Harlan’s Holiday): G2W and dam of stakes-placed Main Street (GB) (Street Cry {Ire}) and 94-rated My Frankel (GB) (Frankel {GB}).

Skrei (Ire) (Approve {Ire}): listed winner from the family of G1W Lumiere (GB) (Shamardal).

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Dalakhani Dies At 21

The Aga Khan’s Dalakhani (Ire) (Darshaan {GB}), the Champion Three-Year-Old and Horse of the Year in 2003, died on Friday in retirement at Haras d’Ouilly at the age of 21. 

Expertly trained by Alain de Royer Dupre, the half-brother to Daylami (Ire) (Doyoun {GB}) sailed through his three starts at two, breaking his maiden at Deauville in August before graduating swiftly to group company and wins in the G3 Prix des Chenes and G1 Criterium International. But it was his 3-year-old season which would set him apart, and in nine career starts only one horse ever got the better of him: the fellow Aga Khan homebred Alamshar (Ire), in the Irish Derby on Dalakhani’s sole start outside France.

Prior to that he had started his season in the G2 Prix Greffulhe and went on to win the now-defunct G1 Prix Lupin at Longchamp in May before his dazzling turn of foot was seen to full effect in the Prix du Jockey Club. 

Sent off favourite at the Curragh on his next start in the Irish Derby, with Alamshar sporting the old brown-and-green hooped colours of the Aga Khan, Dalakhani raced in isolation in the early stages, stranded between two Ballydoyle pacemakers setting a fierce tempo up front as the rest of the field remained adrift. As the front-runners weakened, Dalakhani cruised to the lead with Alamshar travelling ominously well at his shoulder. The two Aga Khan colts soon pulled well clear of the field to engage in an epic battle for the spoils, with Dalakhani half a length down at the post.

Freshened up through the summer with the Arc in mind, the grey colt returned triumphant, beating Doyen (GB) in the G2 Prix Niel, before becoming his breeder’s third of four winners of the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, with High Chaparral (Ire) back in third.

Following this final race of his career, the Aga Khan said of Dalakhani, “He’s outstanding on the basis of what we’ve seen as a 2-year-old, 3-year-old, over all distances and on all going. It’s very difficult to make comparisons, but this horse has a concentration of unusual talents, and that’s what gives him the ability to accelerate when he needs to accelerate, to follow a pace when he needs to follow a pace, and to handle all goings.”

Dalakhani was out of the listed-winning Miswaki mare Daltawa (Ire), whose three sons to stand at stud include Dalghar (Ire) (Anabaa) along with the aforementioned top-class campaigner Daylami. One of the few remaining conduits of the Mill Reef line during his time at Gilltown Stud, Dalakhani’s tenure there reaped 10 Group 1 winners, including his fellow Prix du Jockey Club victor Reliable Man (GB), who now stands at Germany’s Gestut Rottgen, and the Irish Oaks winner Moonstone (Ire).  His son Conduit (Ire) was a top-class performer for Ballymacoll Stud, winning the St Leger before heading to Santa Anita to win the GI Breeders’ Cup Turf, a race he claimed two years in succession. Dalakhani’s most recent Group 1 winner was Defoe (Ire), who landed the Coronation Cup for his breeder Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum.

Dalakhani was retired from covering duties in 2016 and, in recent years, he has enjoyed a decent level of success as a broodmare sire, most notably through champion 2-year-old Pinatubo (Ire) (Shamardal). His Classic-winning daughter Moonstone is the dam of G3 Chester Vase winner and Derby runner-up US Army Ranger (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), while last season’s G2 Dante S. winner Thunderous (Ire) (Night of Thunder {Ire}) and seven-time Grade 1-winning hurdler Nichols Canyon (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}) are also out of Dalakhani mares. 

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National Stud Evening Lecture Programme Unveiled

The National Stud’s Evening Lecture Programme, presented by Edmondson Hall Solicitors, will begin on Jan. 26 via video link and run through the middle of June, with lectures released twice a week on Wednesdays and Fridays. The programme consists of 40 lectures covering everything from the Reproductive Cycle of the Mare and Neonatal Foal Disease to An Introduction to Pedigrees and The Role of the Bloodstock Agent. The lectures cost £360 for the full programme or £20 per single lecture. Each lecture lasts about an hour and the video links will be available for 48 hours.

Anna Kerr, chief operating officer of the National Stud, said, “We are delighted to be able to make the Evening Lecture Programme accessible to a wider audience this year. The series includes some really interesting topics which will appeal not just to those working in Thoroughbred breeding but also the wider racing industry. We would also like to thank Edmondson Hall Solicitors and the Racing Foundation for their support for this initiative.”

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