By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain the causes and consequences of the 1969 Congress split, including the role of the Presidential election
  • 2Analyse the 'Garibi Hatao' slogan and explain why it was politically effective in the 1971 elections
  • 3Describe the causes, India's role, and outcome of the 1971 Bangladesh War
  • 4Explain the JP Movement — its demands, methods, and why it emerged as a challenge to Indira Gandhi's authority
  • 5Trace the events leading to the Emergency: JP Movement, Railway Strike (1974), and the Allahabad High Court judgment (June 1975)
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Why this chapter matters
This chapter covers one of the most dramatic periods in Indian political history: Indira Gandhi's split of the Congress (1969), 'Garibi Hatao' (1971), the Bangladesh War, and the slide toward Emergency. CBSE examiners use this chapter for 4–6 mark questions testing: the 1969 split (Congress R vs O), the 'Garibi Hatao' election strategy, the Bangladesh War's significance, and the JP Movement/Allahabad High Court judgment as triggers for the Emergency. The chapter is also essential context for the next chapter on the Emergency itself.

Challenges to and Restoration of the Congress System

Introduction

After Nehru's death (1964), the Congress Party was controlled by the 'SYNDICATE' — powerful state-level bosses. They installed Indira Gandhi as Prime Minister in 1966, expecting a PUPPET. She would defeat them, split the party, and remake the Congress in her own image — a populist, personalist party centred on HER leadership. This chapter traces the CHALLENGES to the Congress system (1967 elections) and its RESTORATION under Indira — and the slide toward authoritarianism.

1. The 1967 Elections — The First Crack

The Congress WON the 1967 elections — but with a REDUCED majority. In 8 states, NON-CONGRESS governments formed — coalitions of socialists, communists, Jana Sangh, and regional parties called Samyukta Vidhayak Dal (SVD). This was the FIRST major electoral setback for the Congress. 'The Congress system was beginning to CRACK — not at the Centre yet, but in the states.'

2. The 1969 Split — Indira vs. the Syndicate

After 1967, Indira Gandhi began ASSERTING herself against the Syndicate. The confrontation came over the Presidential election of 1969:

EventDetail
Syndicate's CandidateNeelam Sanjiva Reddy — a senior Congress leader, loyal to the Syndicate
Indira's CandidateV.V. Giri — the Vice President, who ran as an INDEPENDENT. Indira supported him.
ResultGiri WON. 'Indira had DEFEATED the Syndicate in their own party.'
The SplitCongress split into Congress (R — Requisitionists, pro-Indira) and Congress (O — Organisation, the Syndicate). 'Indira's Congress was now a DIFFERENT party — more populist, more personalist, centred on HER.'

3. The 1971 Election — 'Garibi Hatao'

Indira called an EARLY election in 1971. Her slogan: 'GARIBI HATAO' (Remove Poverty). It was a POLITICAL MASTERSTROKE:

  • It was a DIRECT APPEAL to the poor — bypassing the traditional Congress machinery of landlords and local bosses
  • 'Garibi Hatao united the poor across castes — a populist coalition that transformed Indian electoral politics'
  • The RESULT: Congress (R) won a LANDSLIDE — 352 seats (out of 518). 'Indira Gandhi was now India's MOST POPULAR leader — independent of the Syndicate, independent of the old Congress.'

4. The 1971 Bangladesh War — Indira's Finest Hour

In 1971, East Pakistan (Bengali Muslims) rebelled against West Pakistan's domination. Pakistan's army launched a BRUTAL CRACKDOWN — ~10 million refugees fled to India. Indira Gandhi:

  • Mobilised INTERNATIONAL diplomatic support (including the USSR — India signed a 20-year Treaty of Peace, Friendship and Cooperation in August 1971)
  • Ordered MILITARY INTERVENTION (December 1971)
  • Pakistan surrendered in just 13 DAYS. Bangladesh was BORN. Over 90,000 Pakistani soldiers were taken prisoner.

'The 1971 war was Indira Gandhi's FINEST HOUR. She had liberated a country. India was the REGIONAL POWER. She was at the PEAK of her power and popularity — compared by some to the goddess Durga.'

5. The Slide Toward Emergency (1973–75)

After 1971, Indira's power seemed unchallengeable. But:

  • The ECONOMY faltered. Prices rose. Unemployment grew. The 1973 oil crisis made things worse.
  • The JP MOVEMENT (1974) emerged — mass protests demanding her resignation.
  • The Railway Strike (1974) crippled the economy.
  • The ALLAHABAD HIGH COURT judgment (June 1975) found her GUILTY of electoral malpractices.

'The woman who had won a landslide in 1971 was now facing political extinction. Her response — the EMERGENCY (25 June 1975) — was the restoration of the Congress system turning into its greatest CRISIS.'

6. Exam Focus

Question TypeMarksLikely Topics
Short Answer4Describe the 1969 Congress split — Indira vs. the Syndicate
Short Answer4Explain the significance of the 1971 election ('Garibi Hatao')
Short Answer2What was India's role in the Bangladesh War (1971)?

Self-Test

Q1. Describe the 1969 CONGRESS SPLIT. Who was Indira Gandhi challenging? A1. After Nehru's death (1964), the Congress was controlled by the 'SYNDICATE' — powerful state-level bosses who installed Indira Gandhi as PM expecting a puppet. She defied them. The confrontation came over the 1969 Presidential election: the Syndicate nominated Neelam Sanjiva Reddy; Indira supported V.V. Giri, who ran as an independent. Giri WON — Indira had defeated the Syndicate in their own party. The Congress SPLIT: Congress (R) — Indira's faction, more populist and personalist. Congress (O) — the Syndicate's faction. 'Indira remade the Congress in her own image — a party centred on ONE leader, not an organisation.'

Q2. Explain the significance of the 1971 election and 'GARIBI HATAO.' A2. Indira called an early election with the slogan 'GARIBI HATAO' (Remove Poverty). SIGNIFICANCE: (1) It was a DIRECT APPEAL to the poor — bypassing the traditional Congress machinery of landlords and bosses. (2) It united the poor across castes — a populist coalition that transformed Indian electoral politics. (3) The RESULT was a LANDSLIDE — Congress (R) won 352 seats. 'Indira was now the most powerful Prime Minister since her father — independent of any party organisation.' However, the populist promise created expectations that were hard to fulfil — when the economy faltered after 1973, the disappointment fed into the JP Movement and ultimately the Emergency.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

The 1969 Congress Split — Cause and Outcome
CAUSE: Presidential election of 1969 became the flashpoint. The Syndicate (the group of Congress bosses) nominated NEELAM SANJIVA REDDY as their candidate. Indira Gandhi supported V.V. GIRI as an independent candidate. She issued a 'conscience vote' appeal to Congress MPs — defying the party line. GIRI WON. 'Indira had defeated the Syndicate in their own game.' OUTCOME: Congress SPLIT into two factions: CONGRESS (R) = 'Requisitionists' — Indira's faction, the more populist wing. CONGRESS (O) = 'Organisation' — the Syndicate's faction, the old guard. Indira's Congress retained government with outside support from CPI and other parties. 'Indira's Congress became a DIFFERENT party — more dependent on her personal charisma than on party organisation.'
The 'R' stands for Requisitionists (those who had called a special session — requisitioned — to oppose the Syndicate). 'O' stands for Organisation. CBSE frequently asks: 'On what issue did the Congress split in 1969?' Answer: the Presidential election (Giri vs. Reddy).
The 1971 Elections — 'Garibi Hatao'
CONTEXT: After the 1969 split, Indira Gandhi's government was in a minority. She dissolved the Lok Sabha and called MIDTERM ELECTIONS (1971 — one year before schedule). STRATEGY: Indira's opponents in the 'Grand Alliance' (Congress O + Swatantra + Jana Sangh + BKD) countered her with the slogan 'Indira Hatao' (Remove Indira). She responded with 'GARIBI HATAO' (Remove Poverty). POLITICAL GENIUS: 'Garibi Hatao' was a direct appeal to India's poor — bypassing the local political machines (landlords, caste leaders, traders) who controlled Congress votes at the local level. It united the poor across caste and religion in a common aspiration. It made the election a PERSONAL MANDATE for Indira. RESULT: Congress (R) won 352 out of 518 seats. A MASSIVE LANDSLIDE. Indira Gandhi became the most powerful Prime Minister since Nehru — independent of the Syndicate and of party machinery. She had created a direct bond between herself and the Indian voter.
Key numbers: 352/518 seats. The opposition Grand Alliance (Congress O + Swatantra + Jana Sangh) was routed. Swatantra, which had been the second-largest party in 1967, was nearly wiped out.
The 1971 Bangladesh War
CAUSES: East Pakistan (Bengali Muslims, ~56% of Pakistan's population) resented the domination of West Pakistan (Punjabi-speaking) — politically, economically, and culturally (Urdu imposed over Bengali language). The Awami League (Sheikh Mujibur Rahman) won the 1970 Pakistan elections but was denied power. Pakistan's army launched a BRUTAL CRACKDOWN (Operation Searchlight, March 1971) against Bengali civilians. SCALE OF CRISIS: ~10 MILLION BENGALI REFUGEES fled to India (primarily West Bengal and Assam), creating a massive humanitarian and security burden. INDIA'S INTERVENTION: Indira Gandhi signed the Indo-Soviet Treaty of Peace, Friendship, and Cooperation (August 1971) — to gain Soviet support and deter US/China from intervening. India entered the war in December 1971, fighting on both the Eastern front (with the Mukti Bahini — Bengali freedom fighters) and the Western front. RESULT: Pakistan surrendered on December 16, 1971. 93,000 Pakistani soldiers surrendered — one of the largest military surrenders since WWII. BANGLADESH was born as an independent nation. 'This was Indira Gandhi's finest hour. She had midwifed the birth of a new nation and established India as the undisputed regional power.'
The war is often called 'India's finest military victory.' The 13-day timeline refers to the formal India-Pakistan war on the Western front (December 3–16, 1971). CBSE tests: causes (Bengali political exclusion), India's role (Mukti Bahini support + direct intervention), outcome (Bangladesh born, 93,000 PoWs).
The Slide to Emergency — JP Movement and Allahabad HC
CONTEXT (1973–75): After 1971, Indira's power seemed unchallengeable. But the economy faltered: 1973 oil shock, inflation, unemployment, food shortages. Corruption and misgovernance became visible. JP MOVEMENT (1974): JAYAPRAKASH NARAYAN (JP) — veteran Gandhian freedom fighter, former socialist — emerged from retirement to lead a mass movement against corruption in Bihar and Gujarat. Students joined. The movement spread. Slogan: 'Sampoorna Kranti' (Total Revolution) — JP called for root-and-branch transformation of the political system. JP called on Indira Gandhi to RESIGN and urged the army and police to disobey 'unconstitutional orders.' RAILWAY STRIKE (1974): Led by George Fernandes. 1.7 million railway workers struck. Paralysed the economy. Crushed by the government using ESMA (Essential Services Maintenance Act). The harsh suppression radicalised opposition. ALLAHABAD HIGH COURT (June 12, 1975): Justice Jagmohan Lal Sinha found Indira Gandhi GUILTY of two electoral offences in the 1971 election: (1) misuse of government machinery (using a government officer — Yashpal Kapoor — for her campaign), and (2) misuse of government resources. Her election was declared VOID. She was barred from holding elective office for 6 years. THE TRIGGER: The Supreme Court granted a CONDITIONAL STAY (she could remain PM but not vote in Parliament). Facing political extinction, Indira Gandhi chose to declare the Emergency on June 25, 1975.
CBSE frequently asks: 'What was the JP Movement?' and 'What was the Allahabad HC judgment?' For the Allahabad judgment, specify: (a) it was for the 1971 election, (b) the specific violations (Yashpal Kapoor, government resources), (c) she was disqualified from Parliament for 6 years, (d) Supreme Court gave conditional stay.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying Congress split in 1971 (confusing with the 1971 election)
The Congress SPLIT happened in 1969 — triggered by the Presidential election (Giri vs. Reddy). The 1971 election was AFTER the split — Indira Gandhi's Congress (R) ran separately and won a massive majority with 'Garibi Hatao' as her slogan. Timeline: 1969 split → 1971 midterm election won by Indira → 1971 Bangladesh War → 1972-75 political slide → 1975 Emergency.
WATCH OUT
Saying India was found guilty of anything in the Allahabad HC judgment
The Allahabad HC judgment was against INDIRA GANDHI PERSONALLY — not India. She was found guilty of two specific electoral malpractices in HER 1971 election campaign (not the Bangladesh War, not government policy). The verdict voided HER election from Rae Bareli constituency specifically.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· garibi-hatao
What was the significance of the slogan 'Garibi Hatao' in the 1971 elections?
Show solution
'GARIBI HATAO' (Remove Poverty) was the electoral slogan used by Indira Gandhi's Congress (R) in the 1971 midterm elections. CONTEXT: Indira had dissolved the Lok Sabha a year early to seek a fresh mandate. Her opponents (Congress O, Jana Sangh, Swatantra, BKD) formed a 'Grand Alliance' with the counter-slogan 'Indira Hatao' (Remove Indira). POLITICAL SIGNIFICANCE: (1) DIRECT APPEAL TO THE POOR: 'Garibi Hatao' bypassed the traditional Congress machinery of local landlords, moneylenders, and caste leaders. It spoke directly to India's poorest voters — the rural poor, Dalits, women, and the urban working class — across caste and religious lines. (2) PERSONAL MANDATE: The slogan made the election a plebiscite on Indira Gandhi herself. A vote for Congress was a vote for Indira, for change, for hope. (3) RESULT: Congress (R) won 352 out of 518 seats. The Grand Alliance was routed. The opposition's 'Indira Hatao' counter-slogan backfired — voters responded by voting for her. 'Garibi Hatao transformed Indira Gandhi from a Congress leader into a mass leader — independent of the party organisation, dependent only on her direct bond with the people.'
Q2MEDIUM· bangladesh-war
What were the causes and consequences of the 1971 Bangladesh War?
Show solution
CAUSES OF THE 1971 WAR: (1) POLITICAL: East Pakistan (predominantly Bengali-speaking) had a population majority but was politically marginalised by West Pakistan (Punjabi-dominated military and bureaucracy). The Awami League (Sheikh Mujibur Rahman) won the 1970 Pakistani general election but was denied power. (2) MILITARY CRACKDOWN: Pakistan's army launched Operation Searchlight (March 1971) against Bengali civilians — a brutal crackdown involving mass killings, rape, and displacement. Bangla-speaking Pakistani officers defected and formed the MUKTI BAHINI (Liberation Army). (3) REFUGEE CRISIS: ~10 million Bengali refugees fled to India — creating a humanitarian emergency in West Bengal and Assam, straining India's resources. INDIA'S ROLE AND STRATEGY: India trained and supported the Mukti Bahini throughout 1971. Indira Gandhi signed the Indo-Soviet Treaty (August 1971) to deter US and Chinese intervention. India declared war on Pakistan on December 3, 1971 (after Pakistan pre-emptively attacked Indian air bases). India fought on two fronts — Eastern (Bangladesh) and Western (Punjab/Rajasthan). CONSEQUENCES: (1) MILITARY OUTCOME: Pakistan surrendered on December 16, 1971. 93,000 Pakistani soldiers became prisoners of war — one of the largest military surrenders since WWII. (2) POLITICAL OUTCOME: BANGLADESH was born as an independent nation. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman became its first Prime Minister. (3) REGIONAL: India established itself as the undisputed regional power. (4) FOR INDIRA GANDHI: The war made her enormously popular — she was called 'Durga' by some and 'Iron Lady' by the international press. Her popularity peaked. The Shimla Agreement (July 1972) with Pakistan formalised the Line of Control in Kashmir. Pakistan returned to normalcy — but the humiliation of 1971 deeply shaped Pakistani politics for decades.
Q3HARD· populism-to-authoritarianism
Trace how Indira Gandhi's political journey from 1969 to 1975 moved from democratic populism to authoritarianism.
Show solution
INDIRA GANDHI'S POLITICAL TRANSFORMATION (1969–1975): PHASE 1: POPULIST TRIUMPH (1969–1971): The 1969 Congress split saw Indira emerge from the Syndicate's shadow as a populist leader. Her 1971 election campaign with 'Garibi Hatao' directly mobilised India's poor, bypassing the traditional party machinery. Congress (R) won 352 seats — a massive mandate. PHASE 2: PEAK POWER (1971): The Bangladesh War added military glory to electoral triumph. India was the regional superpower. Indira Gandhi was called 'Durga' — the goddess of war. She commanded unrivalled authority. There was nothing — no person, no institution — that could check her. PHASE 3: ECONOMIC CRISIS AND DISCONTENT (1972–74): Post-triumph India faced serious problems: the 1973 oil shock caused inflation. Drought led to food shortages. Unemployment rose. Industrial unrest grew. The Congress government, over-confident from 1971, was slow to respond. PHASE 4: POLITICAL CHALLENGE — JP MOVEMENT (1974–75): Jayaprakash Narayan's Sampoorna Kranti movement emerged as the most serious challenge to Indira's authority. JP united opposition parties, student movements, and civil society in a call for 'Total Revolution' — root-and-branch transformation of governance. The Railway Strike (1974) showed the depth of discontent. Crucially, JP called for Indira's resignation and asked security forces to disobey 'unconstitutional orders' — directly challenging her authority over state power. PHASE 5: THE LEGAL THREAT — ALLAHABAD HC (June 1975): Justice J.L. Sinha of the Allahabad High Court found Indira Gandhi guilty of two electoral malpractices in the 1971 election: using government official Yashpal Kapoor for her campaign, and government resources for her election. Her election was declared void. She was disqualified from Parliament for 6 years. The Supreme Court granted only a conditional stay. PHASE 6: EMERGENCY (June 25, 1975): Rather than resign or fight through legal channels (an appeal to a full bench was pending), Indira Gandhi declared a National Emergency on June 25, 1975, citing 'internal disturbance.' In one night, she jailed the entire opposition leadership (JP, Morarji Desai, L.K. Advani, Vajpayee), censored the press, and suspended fundamental rights. ANALYSIS: The movement from populism to authoritarianism reflects what political scientists call 'populist authoritarianism': a leader who rises on the mandate of the poor, concentrates power, weakens institutions, and — when confronted with a legal or democratic check — responds not by accepting the check but by removing it. The Emergency was the logical terminus of a process that began with the personalisation of politics ('Garibi Hatao' = Indira, not the Congress), the weakening of internal party democracy (the 1969 split), and the culture of sycophancy that surrounded Indira. 'The woman who gave India Garibi Hatao ended up giving it its worst democratic crisis.'

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • 1969 Congress split: trigger = Presidential election. Indira backed V.V. Giri; Syndicate backed Neelam Sanjiva Reddy. Giri won. Congress → R (Indira) + O (Syndicate).
  • 'Garibi Hatao': 1971 midterm election slogan. Direct appeal to poor across caste/religion. Bypassed local party machinery.
  • 1971 election result: Congress (R) won 352/518 seats. Grand Alliance routed.
  • Bangladesh War: East Pakistan resented West Pakistan's domination. Army crackdown (Op Searchlight, March 1971). ~10M refugees fled to India.
  • India signed Indo-Soviet Treaty (August 1971) before war — to deter US/China. War: December 3–16, 1971. Pakistan surrendered December 16, 1971. 93,000 PoWs.
  • JP Movement (1974): Jayaprakash Narayan. 'Sampoorna Kranti.' Bihar and Gujarat. Called for Indira's resignation.
  • Railway Strike (1974): George Fernandes. 1.7 million workers. Crushed by government.
  • Allahabad HC (June 12, 1975): Justice J.L. Sinha. Indira Gandhi guilty of electoral malpractice (Yashpal Kapoor + govt resources). Election void. Disqualified 6 years.
  • SC conditional stay: she could remain PM but not vote in Parliament. The Emergency declared June 25, 1975.
  • Shimla Agreement (1972): India-Pakistan. LOC formalised. PoWs returned over time.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer3-411969 Congress split cause; Garibi Hatao significance; JP Movement demands; Allahabad HC judgment
Long Answer5-60-1Bangladesh War causes and consequences; slide from populism to authoritarianism; 1971 election strategy
Prep strategy
  • For the 1969 split: the trigger was the Presidential election — Indira supported V.V. Giri (independent); Syndicate supported Neelam Sanjiva Reddy. Giri won. Congress split into R (Indira) and O (Syndicate).
  • Bangladesh War key numbers: ~10 million refugees, December 16, 1971 Pakistan surrender, 93,000 PoWs. These appear in 1-mark questions.
  • For JP Movement, know: Jayaprakash Narayan, 'Sampoorna Kranti,' Bihar-Gujarat base, Railway Strike 1974 (George Fernandes). All four are regularly tested.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Bangladesh and India Today — 2024 Political Crisis

India's 1971 support for Bangladesh's liberation created a special relationship that lasted decades. Sheikh Hasina (daughter of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who was assassinated in 1975) led Bangladesh from 2009 to 2024, with close ties to India. In August 2024, Hasina was forced to flee to India after a student-led uprising against her government's reservation policy. The crisis illustrates how the 1971 political legacy continues to shape India-Bangladesh relations, and how domestic political stability in smaller neighbours directly affects India's strategic interests.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. For the JP Movement, the examiner wants: (a) Jayaprakash Narayan's background (Gandhian, freedom fighter), (b) the demands (Sampoorna Kranti, anti-corruption, Indira's resignation), (c) the spread (Bihar and Gujarat, students), (d) its role as trigger for Emergency. All four parts for a 4-mark answer.
  2. For Bangladesh War, give the sequence: Bengali political exclusion → Army crackdown March 1971 → 10M refugees → India prepares + Indo-Soviet Treaty August 1971 → war December 1971 → surrender December 16. This narrative earns full marks for a 6-mark question.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study the SHIMLA AGREEMENT (July 1972) text — particularly Article 1(ii) which committed India and Pakistan to settle all issues bilaterally. India has used this to argue that the 1948 UN resolution on a Kashmir plebiscite is superseded. Pakistan disputes this interpretation. The disagreement over one sentence in a 1972 treaty continues to shape the geopolitics of South Asia.
  • Explore GARY BASS's 'The Blood Telegram' (2013) — a detailed account of the 1971 Bangladesh crisis using declassified US State Department cables. It reveals how Nixon and Kissinger, despite knowing about Pakistan's genocide in East Bengal, supported Pakistan for Cold War reasons — while India and the USSR supported Bangladesh's liberation.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 12 Board (Political Science)High
UPSC Prelims (Indian Polity, Modern History)High
CUET (Political Science)Medium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The 1971 war had profound long-term consequences for India-Pakistan relations: (1) It DISMEMBERED PAKISTAN — Pakistan lost its eastern wing (63% of population) and became a geographically truncated state. The humiliation (93,000 PoWs) left deep scars. (2) It REMOVED the 'two-nation theory' argument that all South Asian Muslims belonged in one country — Bangladesh's creation showed Bengali Muslims chose LANGUAGE AND CULTURE over religion. (3) KASHMIR: The Shimla Agreement (July 1972) committed both sides to resolve disputes bilaterally — India used this to argue that the UN resolution on a Kashmir plebiscite was superseded. (4) PAKISTAN'S NUCLEAR PROGRAMME: Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme is directly linked to the 1971 defeat. 'We will eat grass, but we will make the bomb' — Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Pakistan conducted its first nuclear test in 1998.
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Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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