African Land and Natural Resource Grabs Destroy Lives and Futures of Africans
Mr. Obang Metho, from the SMNE, gives warning of the impacts on the people at the U.S. Congressional Briefing on Land Grabs in Africa
I would like to thanks Congressman Christopher Smith, Chairman of the
U.S. House Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights
and International Organizations and members of the subcommittees for
making this briefing on land grabs in Africa possible.
I am honored to be among those invited to talk about the impact of these land and resource grabs on the people of Africa. It
is a vitally important issue that needs to be confronted. To me, this
is not just about land grabs, but it is inherently about life grabs. In
Africa, as well as in many other places, when you take someone’s land,
you take away the means to an entire family’s livelihood, wellbeing and
future. I am thrilled that the World Bank is also addressing this issue
and hope it will soon lead to concrete action that saves lives.
Mr. Obang Metho (center) at the U.S. Congressional Briefing |
To me and the organization I lead, the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia (SMNE), the problem of land grabs is not new.
We have been actively working to expose and find solutions to
these land grabs since they began in 2008 and partnered with the Oakland
Institute in 2011 in a comprehensive in-country study on: Understanding Land Investment Deals in Africa: Ethiopia.[i]
What is going on today is an immoral and predatory practice by African
strongmen and their powerful partners that is targeting the most
vulnerable people on the continent.
When I speak today, my testimony will not be as an outsider, but as a witness. When
I talk about the people being displaced from the land grabs, in many
cases I am speaking about people whose names I know. They include my
uncle, my cousins, my nephews, my extended family, my community and my
people—the people of Gambella, the people of Ethiopia, the people of
Africa and the people of the world. We the people of Africa must be able
to feed ourselves, but when the powerful take the food
and land we have to sustain ourselves, leaving little behind for the
indigenous, it is unconscionable and should be challenged. I welcome the
opportunity we have to talk about this today. I request that my statement be submitted into the record in its entirety.
Introduction:
When the global food crisis of 2008 struck, with its food shortages,
sky-rocketing food prices and widespread riots, it sounded an alarm that
began the global race for fertile agricultural land, particularly land
with access to water. Asian countries in the global south, like India,
China, and South Korea, simply did not have enough unused, suitable land
to meet
the increasing need for food for their people. Some European countries
were in the same position. Arid countries in the Middle East, like Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Kuwait, may have wealth from oil,
but they were large importers of food and have little or diminishing
arable land. Underground water aquifers were already being depleted in
efforts to irrigate existing food crops.
Soaring populations, decreasing available land, environmental
degradation and lessening confidence in access to adequate imports
caused many governments to search beyond their borders for new ways to
ensure a supply of food for the future. At the same time, speculators,
investors and multinational agri-businesses began to see food as a
high-profit commodity which could be profitable like oil, minerals and
other natural resources.
So began the second scramble for African land that has led to
massive land grabs of land already occupied by the people of Africa. For
most of those affected, it has led to widespread displacement and to
greater, rather than less, food insecurity. This abuse of land rights
has happened most easily in nations where authoritarian regimes maintain
their control over the people through suppression of basic freedoms,
human rights abuses, fraudulent elections, corruption and military
power. Unfortunately, many of these foreign investors become complicit
as they partner with Africa’s strongmen.
World Bank President Dr. Jim Yong Kim said at their annual meeting last week, “Usable
land is in short supply, and there are too many instances of
speculators and unscrupulous investors exploiting smallholder farmers,
herders, and others who lack the power to stand up for their rights.
This is particularly true in countries with weak land governance
systems.”[ii]
In many countries in Africa freedom does not exist. Freedom
House in their Freedom in the World Study for 2012 ranked Sub-Saharan
Africa as 82% un-free or only partially free. People who
dare to demand their rights or who expose the dark side of those in
power, do so at risk to their lives and futures. Those in power do not
represent the best interests of their people, but instead represent
their own interests. With the search for agricultural land,
authoritarian governments with weak adherence to laws and few
protections for the people are making secretive deals to lease both
small and large swathes of some of the prime agricultural land to
foreign and crony investors for negligible amounts (e.g. $1.19 per
hectare in parts of Ethiopia) for up to 99 years. Equivalent
land reportedly brings $350 per hectare in places like Indonesia and
Malaysia and thousands in the farm belt of the US.
Much of the food is destined for export or wherever it can bring the highest price. Most
Africans are small farmers; though poor, they have been able to sustain
themselves because of their land; however, the displaced will no longer
be able to be self-reliant and may easily end up hungry or in need of
food aid. Although some of the food produced will end up locally, food
prices may well be beyond their ability to pay. The displaced are mostly
in the rural regions where education and training have been lacking,
leaving most ill-equipped to find other jobs. Institutions, meant to
strengthen civil society, often do not exist or are under government
control. Because there is little accountability or transparency, it has
opened the doors to high-level corruption, crony favoritism and illicit
transactions as secretive deals, with vague contracts, are negotiated by
regime power-holders.
A Focus on the Gambella region of Ethiopia, my birthplace and the epicenter of land grabs in Africa:
Ethiopia is one of the leading examples on the continent where large scale land grabs are going on. Gambella
region, considered to have the potential for becoming the breadbasket
of Ethiopia or the Horn of Africa, may now fail to feed its own. The
region has some of the richest, most fertile land and abundant water in
the country. My own ethnic group, the Anuak—as well as other
indigenous groups like the Nuer, the Mazengir, the Komo and the
Opo—consider Gambella their ancestral home, but little investment has
been directed towards this marginalized and undeveloped region. Now, Gambella is the region most significantly targeted for land grabs.
In 2003, related to natural resources, the current government of
Ethiopia massacred 424 Anuak leaders within three days and went on to
commit many more crimes against humanity directed towards this one
ethnic group in the following three years. It was related to natural
resources at the time and now, their land is being grabbed.
It is happening in other regions as well. Already, an estimated
200,000 small farmers and pastoralists in the rural areas have been
displaced from their land in order to free it up for investors.
Recently, thousands of people of Amhara ethnicity were forcibly evicted
from the region of Benishangul. A year ago, 70,000 other Amhara were
evicted from land in the Southern Nation’s region. In 2011-2012, 70,000
small farmers from the Gambella region were forced off their land. Many
more will be moved to resettlement areas in the next year. In Gambella, a
region with a total population of about 300,000, this means nearly
three-quarters of the people will be affected.
In the vague contracts, previously made available on the government’s
website, investors are promised land “free of impediments.”
Impediments, a description which refers to the people now living on the
land, are citizens of Ethiopia, but instead of their own government
protecting their rights, they are seen as obstacles to be “cleared from
their land” as if they were squatters or intruders in their own homes.
Even though the government claims the local people are choosing to leave
voluntarily in order to access better services, resistance is met with
human rights abuses.
This is most often occurring in rural areas among indigenous
people who have no established land rights even though they and their
families or communities have lived on the land for generations. Neither
do they have the power to resist the regime’s security forces as many
are forcibly evicted from their land and moved to resettlement areas
where they are promised improved access to services; however, most
often, those services do not exist and the land is inferior with less
access to water sources. Some end up homeless, in refugee camps in
neighboring countries or working for slave wages on land they used to
own. In most cases those affected have neither been consulted nor
compensated for their losses, in contradiction to national and
international laws.
The government claims there is no relationship between the
resettlements and land leases; however, as soon as they are pushed off
their land, the investors or agricultural companies move in to clear the
land. For example, land grabs from small farmers have opened up
100,000 hectares—nearly 250,000 acres—for large agricultural farms like
Karuturi Global Limited of India. Karuturi has been promised a total of
300,000 hectares—nearly 750,000 acres, which will require the
expropriation of the vast majority of the best agricultural land in
Gambella. Water for irrigation from this Upper Nile region is
not being regulated and could greatly impact water availability
elsewhere, including down river in other parts of Gambella, as well as
in South Sudan, Sudan and Egypt.
Another agricultural company, Saudi Star, owned by the second
richest man in Africa, multi-billionaire Sheikh Mohammed Al Amoudi has
been given 10,000 hectares to lease in Gambella. As part of his Derba
Group, he plans to lease another 290,000 hectares in the same region. He
also allegedly has intentions to lease 300,000 hectares in Benishangul,
another marginalized region, north of Gambella, and recently purchased
three other farms in the country. There has been violent conflict
related to Saudi Star. Within Gambella, smaller sized sections
of land have been leased to regime cronies. In fact, it is estimated
that nearly 70% of the domestic lessees of land in Gambella are either
regime supporters or members of the ruling party’s own ethnic group.
Some real life stories from the ground:
Case Study #1: Mr. Okok Ojulu:
Okok is an Anuak smallholder farmer who was educated in the UK in
sustainable development. In 2002, he led the World Bank’s project in
the Gambella region. His work was very effective in utilizing the bank’s
development funds to build schools, clinics and to dig water wells for
the region. The funds were given to all other regions in Ethiopia as
well. After the World Bank assessed the outcomes, Okok was given an
award of excellence for how the funds were used and how the services
were implemented.
One of the rewards received from the bank was a car
for his work. Shortly thereafter he was imprisoned for several years in
Addis Ababa by the federal government because he had become a threat to
the government, having become so popular and influential in the
community. In 2007 he was released and returned to his family and
region.
Shortly after his release and prior to the land rush in the Gambella,
Okok, a man of considerable vision and ability, began plans to form an
agricultural cooperative that would benefit the community. He began to
grow food himself and when he had grown enough food to make a profit, he
began hiring local people. He also began negotiating for the purchase
of a tractor that could be leased out during planting and harvesting.
Those using it would help pay for the cost of the tractor with their
crops when they were successfully harvested. The cooperative would then
market the produce to the local people.
The initial success of the venture inspired the young people to see
farming as a viable opportunity for their future livelihoods. It was
also seen as a way to eradicate poverty and to become more self-reliant;
however, the TPLF/EPRDF saw it as a threat, in direct opposition to the
foreign investment model they were selling to the people. They
intimidated him and after finding out he was again going to be arrested,
he had to flee the country. He had been supporting his own children’s
school fees as well as fees of other relatives, which he could no longer
do. His vision was killed and the people he had hired no longer had
jobs. In doing this, the regime further disempowered the small holder
farmers, the backbone of solving food insecurity.
The farmland he had used in this project was instead given to Saudi
Star. When we talk about local small farmers being pushed off their land
and impoverished by it, we have names for you of many more examples.
Mr. Okok is now in Kenya as a refugee because it is no longer safe for
him to live in Ethiopia.
Case Study #2: WorOwar:
A second case example is a local business man, WorOwar, who invested
all the money he had from his business to lease agricultural land when
he noted how foreigners were coming to take the land. However, because
he was not a government supporter, a regime crony nor a TPLF/ERPDF party
member, the government authorities ended up harassing, threatening, and
torturing him. He lost the land to the government who made it so
difficult for him and his family that they were forced to flee the
country for safety in 2010. Some regime crony now has possession of his
land.
Case Study #3: Gambellans in the Diaspora:
There are Anuak, now living in the Diaspora, who took the initiative to
attempt to lease land in the Abobo District of Gambella. They had heard
that the area where they had grown up and where family members still
lived was on the list to be leased. This was an effort to ensure that
these family members would not be displaced and that the land would
continue to be theirs; however, the regime authorities refused to lease
it to them. Instead, an Indian company took over the land.
Case Study #4: Mazenger community leaders:
In 2011, community leaders of the Mazenger people took the initiative
to go to Ethiopian President Girma Woldegiorgis to seek help to stop the
clearing of their virgin forests for an Indian company to grow spices.
The president agreed with the local people and advocated on their
behalf by writing a letter to the Ethiopian Minister of Agriculture, the
former Prime Minister, and the Minister of Environment, saying it would
hurt rather than help the country in the long run; but his efforts were
ignored. Instead, those community leaders who initiated this ended up
losing their jobs and some were even put in jail. This is impact
of the land grab investment on the people even while the government
denies it all. This is why I call it not only a land grab, but a life
and future grab from these innocent people. There are too many other
examples to tell; not only in Gambella, Ethiopia or Africa but
throughout the world
What Undergirds Land Grabbing?
- 1. Lack of freedom:
Out of five countries in the world showing the greatest aggregate
declines in freedom from 2007-2011, Ethiopia was fifth according to the
previously mentioned 2012 study by Freedom House. In the case of
Ethiopia, it is well known within the country that the ethnic-based
Tigrayan Peoples’ Liberation Front (TPLF) not only controls the ruling
party, the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF),
but it also controls every sector of society and every facet of
life from the federal level to the kebele (neighborhood levels). This
includes the parliament, civil service, the judiciary, the military,
security forces, civic institutions, religious institutions, the
economic system, the educational system and the administration of
developmental aid; including the dispensation of food aid, fertilizers,
seed and other developmental aid.
- 2. Lack of justice and equality
Most benefits are directed to the TPLF’s own region or supporters.
For example, in their own region of Tigray, there are five hospitals and
four universities whereas in a region like Gambella, there are no
universities and only one hospital without running water. Party
membership is necessary to get into schools, to get jobs and to access
most any opportunities. If you are not part of the inner circle, you
stand no chance of moving ahead. Conversely, if you challenge the
system, you could face harassment, higher taxes, loss of property,
intimidation or rights violations. The judiciary and the land appeal
process are not independent but are controlled by the top regime
power-holders. The number one interest of the regime is the resources
but not the people whose freedom they must restrict in order to have
free reign of benefiting from the nation’s resources.
- 3. Lack of political space:
Opposition groups are threatened and undermined and opposition leaders and activists are imprisoned on charges of terrorism. There is only one opposition member in Parliament out of 547 members. He is only given 3 minutes to speak at any session.
- 4. Lack of freedom of religion:
The TPLF/ERPDF interferes in the religious affairs of both Christians
and Muslims, for example, forcing regime-selected, pro-government
religious leaders into top positions to undermine their influence on
society. It has caused church divisions among Christians and caused
thousands of Muslims to peacefully protest against religious control.
Muslim leaders have been arrested and are in prison despite committing
no crimes.
- 5. Lack of independent institutions:
Civic institutions, which are crucial in healthy societies, are under
the control of the regime. Even the laws undermine civil society by
prohibiting significant parts of their work, with criminal penalties for
infractions, if they receive more than 10% of their funding from
foreign sources. For example, human rights organizations have had to
close and instead, the government has created their own.
- 6. Lack of Communication and technology
Communication and technology, on every level, is controlled. Here are some examples:
- Telecommunication: the government is the only provider and most Ethiopians have limited access; for example, the rate of mobile phone usage in Ethiopia (5%) is one of the lowest in Africa; the rate of fixed land phones is only 1%; again, among the lowest. Ethiopia has invested in sophisticated spyware equipment to monitor users.
- Internet: the government is the only provider; they actively control opposition websites and closely monitor use[iii] through various techniques, including spyware. Access to the Internet is one of the lowest rates in the world at 0.5%, seven times behind the African average.
- There is only one government-run television station and radio station. Voice of America (VOA) and Deustche Welle (DW) have both been jammed in the past. Newspapers are self-censoring or government –controlled. Journalists and editors have been imprisoned as terrorists or have fled the country. Printing shops have been threatened not to print any material that reflects poorly on the TPLF/ERPDF.
- The government disseminates propaganda internally and internationally; for example, claiming that resettlement is voluntary, by denying human rights abuses, by denying personal gain by regime power-holders, and by using democratic, developmental and war on terror rhetoric to dupe outsiders and to gain political, financial and military support.
- 7. Lack of land tenure undergirds poverty and land grabs:
In Ethiopia, all land is owned by the state; essentially banning
private ownership. This has made it impossible for farmers, who use
their land as collateral, to buy and sell land. It also gives them
uncertain rights to that land since the government has reserved the
their own right to redistribute the land if they see fit to do so.
In regards to how this creates or mitigates food insecurity, the SMNE
worked with the Humphrey Institute at the University of Minnesota on
the completion of a study, Land Reform in Ethiopia: Recommendations for Reform,
focusing on the role of land tenure policy and poverty in Ethiopia.
That report will be released this week and will be available on our
website. http://www.solidaritymovement.org/
The team of researchers found evidence that a lack of land
tenure contributes to the vulnerability of the people; particularly in
regions where they have no certificates giving the people individual or
customary/community rights to utilize the land. Small and marginalized
tribes have the fewest rights. The TPLF/ERPDF uses the lack of
certification to redistribute land on whim.
Only four regions now have partial certification: Amhara, Oromia,
Tigray and parts of Southern Nations. No one is safe, but those with
certification are safer. Lack of mapping boundaries of properties also
exacerbates the problem.
City dwellers also are at risk. Even though many hold certificates;
urban certificates are inviolable only as long as no one wants the land
underneath your home, condominium or business. If it is strategically
located or sought after by an investor or someone from the inner circle
of regime, the land can be expropriated. New laws are on the books that
can demand eviction from urban land sites if the lessees fail to build a
two or three story structure on the site. Many find it financially
impossible to do so and end up on the streets, homeless.
The study found that land appeals are oftentimes heard by the
same people and authorities who made the decisions on the expropriation
of the land involved. There is obviously an inherent conflict of
interest. [More information on Ethiopia’s certification program can also be found from the World Bank’s document: the Land Governance Assessment Framework: Identifying and Monitoring Good Practice in the Land Sector.][iv]
Some observations:
- High rates of rural landlessness and land poverty already exist; challenging the government’s argument that there is abundant excess land. Much of that land is less arable than what is being forcibly vacated. Forty three percent of rural Ethiopians have no access to land and fully 60% lack sufficient land to grow enough food for a family of five. (Please see Humphrey Institute’s Executive Summary).
- Land grabs can be linked to increasing corruption, but not to decreasing hunger.
- Land grabs, which are resulting in increased food insecurity and dispossessing the small farmers of their livelihoods, are exactly contrary to goals expressed by the World Bank, the IMF, USAID, development groups like the Gates foundation and others who say they want to support smallholder farmers.
- Most every voluntary guideline of the FAO is not being followed in Ethiopia.[v] [Please see: Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security for further information].
Some conclusions regarding the TPLF/EPRDF’s Control of Ethiopia:
- Government ownership of land is equivalent to TPLF ownership of land, to be used as they choose. The TPLF strategic plan for hegemony of all of Ethiopia, including exploiting its resources for its own interests, will actively war against reversing poverty and conflict in the country. [Please see the link here http://www.enufforethiopia.net/pdf/Revolutionary_Democracy_EthRev_96.pdf to: TPLF/ERFDF’s Strategies for Establishing its Hegemony & Perpetuating its Rule.[vi]]
This is a disturbing plan for one, ethnic-based party, the
TPLF, to gain permanent control of Ethiopia and its resources that few
insiders and even fewer outsiders have seen. A government
that in and of itself has a policy that views any outside its party as
enemies or people to be exploited, has egregiously failed to perform its
duty to protect the rights of the people and must be reformed.
- 2. A regime that actively promotes division, controls religious expression, criminalizes dissent and perpetrates robbery and violence against its own people has egregiously failed to perform its basic duties and should not be supported by international groups.
- 3. A regime that lacks accountability and transparency and where corruption is rampant should not be supported by the international donors, the World Bank, the IMF, USAID, development groups like the Gates foundation. Ethiopia lost US11.7 billion in illegal capital flight from 2000-2009 and in the year following the beginning of the land leasing program in Ethiopia, the Task Force for Financial Integrity and Economic Development [vii] (FTFP) reported that the amount doubled to $3.26 million (USD)—with the majority of that increase coming from corruption, kickbacks and bribery.
- International Developmental organizations, like World Bank, the IMF, USAID, development groups like the Gates foundation, report success in helping small farmers in Ethiopia, but the majority of that aid is directed by the TPLF/ERPDF to one region—the TPLF’s own region of Tigray. Financial support to institutions, economic enhancement programs and democracy-building are directed to pseudo-institutions run by the TPFL/ERPDF.
- Military support received from donor countries is believed to have been used to perpetrate human rights crimes. This autocratic regime, with a documented history of human rights crimes, should not be the recipient of such support until a full and independent investigation is conducted.
Solutions:
The solution to this burgeoning problems of land and natural resource
grabs is to have a government where the law can protect the people and
where the law is not only limited to the elite, its cronies and
partners. For positive change to come, citizens must be able to
claim their rights—human, civil, land and religious. Until there is such
a government to protect the rights of the people, which upholds
democratic principles of free speech, freedom of movement, freedom of
assembly, freedom in the media, an independent judiciary and
institutions, an independent appeal process, a non-politicalized
military and similar aspects of free and open societies, the people will
be seen as impediments to whatever the government wants for its own
interests. No one is safe in such a political climate.
This is where
donor countries like the US can become involved in pressuring these
governments to be accountable to the people; not supporting autocratic
regimes that are creating poverty by pushing people off their land.
Africans who used to feed themselves from farming their own land are
now hungry and needing food aid. Some who have been hired to work on
these agricultural farms, are often working for wages below the World
Bank’s minimum wage standards.
Overall, the donor countries, like the US, should try to side
with the people, supporting them in having the freedom to elect their
own government. If land grabs, human rights abuses and increased
resulting food insecurity continue, it could create conflict,
displacement and instability. This is not just about a land grab but is a
life-grab which will affect the lives of Africans for generations to
come. The multi-dimensional impacts are broad, long-lasting and
difficult to measure. Environmental impacts are frighteningly
inadequate.
Sometimes the environmental assessments have not been done
or when done, are voluntary or simply not enforced. Few controls are put
on users of water and few, if any, studies have been done on the impact
of water use on the lives of people in the surrounding areas or
downstream. This is about human rights and human freedom. The donors and
investors should look into this and take it seriously. The donors
should think beyond themselves and about the people to whom the land
belongs.
The following recommendations are for the US and other donor countries:
I. Put pressure on the Ethiopian government to
recognize human rights and provide social and environmental safeguards
in land investment practices. Ethiopia is dependent on international aid
and as such, donors are in a powerful position to demand that Ethiopia
lives up to its international obligations and implements the above
recommendations. Aid flows should be restricted if Ethiopia is not
living up to international human rights, good governance, and indigenous
rights standards.
II. Ensure that not aid monies are going into any project
that will be involved in land investment in its present form. Aid monies
should not be funnelled towards projects that will make it easier for
land investment in its present form to continue to take place.
III. Aid flows be considered to aid and assist Ethiopian
government in achieving the above goals. Many of the above
recommendations will more easily be implemented if the financial support
is available to support them.
In conclusion:
By 2025, nine billion people are expected to be in the world
and these people will need food. The search for this food has fueled the
land grabs in Africa. The exploration for suitable agricultural land
and water sources has gone to where the most vulnerable people live and
these are the people who are the victims. The weakest and most
vulnerable populations of the world, already deprived of their rights
and freedom are like these people in Africa. The focus has gone to the
places where there is no rule of law, where people are not valued and
where there is no participation in the decision-making by the people.
Africans lack human freedom. They live on one of the poorest
and most hungry continents, but not because they do not have arable land
or water. What they lack are governments and strong institutions that
protect the people. This is why unscrupulous investors are robbing the
weak and the vulnerable. The need for food, water and shelter is not
only critical to the more developed nations or the powerful, but the
same needs exist for the weak and the vulnerable in Africa.
You do not see it happening in the most agriculturally
productive countries in the world, like in Saskatchewan, Canada,
America’s Midwest or other free countries because there is a rule of law
that is followed, but you can see it in a place like Ethiopia and in
other parts of Africa. This is what I call robbing the innocent. It is a
daylight robbery and must stop. We are not against investment but it is
immoral and wrong to rob the most vulnerable in our global society. It
demands that free, conscience-minded people speak up. For some of the
more powerful and wealthy to unjustly take the resources from these
people will create conflict and instability in our global world.
As World Bank President Dr. Jim Yong Kim states, “Securing access
to land is critical for millions of poor people. Modern, efficient, and
transparent policies on land rights are vital to reducing poverty and
promoting growth, agriculture production, better nutrition, and
sustainable development.” But he also presents one of the most crucial challenges as he warns, “Additional
efforts must be made to build capacity and safeguards related to land
rights – and to empower civil society to hold governments accountable.”
The core principles of the SMNE are about sharing and caring about others. What this means to us is that humanity should be valued above our diverse identity factors—putting humanity before ethnicity.
The dehumanization of others precedes most every act of
injustice and evil; meaning that lasting peace and the prosperity of
others can only come to our world if we care about the freedom, justice
and well being of others for “no one is free until all are free.” Our humanity has no ethnic, national, gender, political or religious boundaries.
Until Africans are free; the world will not be free. We can
build a better, more humane, more just and more harmonious world than
this by simply recognizing the face of our Creator in every one of our
global brothers and sisters! Will you not be a bystander and help create
a better world for all of us?
Thank you!
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