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I've been a journalist for 32 years,
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and I'm going to tell you about the saddest story that I've ever heard.
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Inside Camp 14, 13-year-old inmate named Shin Dong-hyuk
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betrayed his family.
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It was late at night, he was supposed to be asleep
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but he heard his mother and brother
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talking about a plan to escape from the camp.
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The rules of Camp 14 are clear.
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If you try to escape, you'll be shot.
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If you hear someone talking about escape
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and you fail to report it, you'll be shot.
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Shin got out of bed, told his mother he had to pee
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walked outside and found a guard.
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While he was snitching, he asked for more food
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and easier work.
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About seven months later --
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about seven months later,
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he was taken to the execution grounds in the camp.
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A place that he'd gone to twice a year
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ever since he was five years old.
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There, the entire camp was assembled.
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There were about 20,000 people in Camp 14 at the time.
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He was taken to the front, and he witnessed
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the shooting death of his brother, and the hanging of his mother.
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Before his mother died, she tried to catch his eye.
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He refused to look at her.
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For the next 10 years, he felt no guilt
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for his role in the death of his brother and mother.
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In concentration camps survivor stories,
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there is a conventional narrative arc.
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The protagonist is taken away by security forces
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from a comfortable home and a loving family.
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The most famous of these stories, I'm sure most of you've read
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is by Elie Wiesel, it's called "Night."
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In the book, he writes that, after his entire family perished
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in the Nazi death camps, he was alone.
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Terribly alone. In a world without man,
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without God, without love, without mercy.
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Shin's story is even darker.
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Words like love, mercy, family --
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for him had no meaning at all.
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God did not disappear or die. Shin had never heard of him.
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In "Night," Wiesel writes
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that an adolescent's knowledge of evil should come from reading books.
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In Camp 14,
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Shin saw only one book, a Korean grammar
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in the hands of his teacher. A man who wore a uniform,
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had a gun on his hip, and who beat one of Shin's classmates
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to death with a chalkboard pointer.
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Shin did not abandon
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civilization and descend into hell.
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Uniquely among all the concentration camp survivors
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we know, he was born there. He accepted its rules.
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He regarded it as home.
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In a very real way, Shin was a creation
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of the guards in Camp 14. They were quite literally his breeders.
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They chose his parents, who were young adults in the camp
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and they ordered them to have sex.
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He was raised mostly by the guards. He had a very bad relationship with his mother.
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But he was raised by the guards,
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to snitch on his parents, and to snitch on his friends.
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It was a long playing behavioral experiment
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run by the security apparatus of North Korea.
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And, it continues to this day. The rules are very simple.
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The more you snitched, the more you ate.
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Let me ask you, how many of you knew
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before I started talking, that there are concentration camps in North Korea?
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That's good.
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Well, there are about six of them. Between four and six.
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135,000 to 200,000 people are in them right now.
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Half of them are the relatives
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of perceived political enemies of the state.
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The relatives.
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The way justice works in North Korea, there's collective punishment.
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If I were to say that the leaders were stupid and corrupt
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my kids and my parents would go with me to a camp
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like Camp 14, and eating a diet of corn, cabbage and salt, we would all be worked to death.
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These camps have existed for half a century.
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They're clearly visible on Google Earth, you can see them on your Smartphone.
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North Korea continues to deny,
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officially deny that they exist.
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North Korea didn't invent these camps.
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They were invented in this form by Stalin.
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But, when Stalin died in the former Soviet Union,
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the camps died out too.
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In North Korea however, the camps have survived the death of founding dictator,
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they've survived the death of his son,
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and they're thriving now with the third generation
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of totalitarian leadership, Kim Jong Un.
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Who's about 28, 29 years old. Coincidentally, he happens to be
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about the same age as Shin.
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But you can see from this slide the camps have existed
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twice as long as the camps in the Soviet Union,
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about 12 times as long as the camps in Hitler's Germany.
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And the reason North Korea seems to have lost none of its appetite
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for being cruel to its own people.
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They're just as cruel now as they were 50 years ago.
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The camps are operated in almost exactly the same way.
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Shin's story is the case study in that cruelty.
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He's the only person,
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the only person so far, born and raised in those camps
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to get out and tell the story.
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But, his story is more than just a tale of state-sponsored sadism.
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It is an escape adventure, and it's a story about the resilience
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of the human spirit.
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The guards in Camp 14 spent 23 years trying to turn Shin
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into a blinkard, malleable slave and they failed.
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They failed because he was very lucky when he was 23.
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A newcomer came to the camp, and this was an individual who had been raised in Pyongyang.
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A member of the elite. He'd been educated in the former Soviet Union.
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Shin's job, was to teach Park, that was the guy's name,
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how to fix sewing machines in the uniform factory.
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Shin was also supposed to snitch on Park, to find out what he thought
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about the leadership, and then report to his superior.
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For the first time in his life, though, instead of snitching
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Shin listened to what Park had to say.
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Park told him -- broke the news to him
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that the world was round, which was news to Shin.
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He told him that the United States,
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South Korea and China existed.
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But, he also said, and this is what got Shin's interest --
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He said, "If you get out of here, if you get out of this camp,
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and went to China, you could eat grilled meat".
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That's what interested Shin. (Laughter)
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He started dreaming about grilled meat.
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Within a few weeks he asked Shin --
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Shin asked Park to escape together.
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Park agreed.
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On January 2nd, 2005
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they went for the fence. The electric fence.
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The electrified fence that surrounds the camp.
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Shin was supposed to be the Mr Inside Guy in this escape attempt.
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He was supposed to get to the fence first, then Park having more knowledge
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of the outside world, would lead them to China.
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Unfortunately, as they ran towards the fence, on a snowy cold evening up in the mountains,
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Shin slipped and fell on his face
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and Park got to the fence first.
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He was electrocuted on the fence. Shin did not hesitate, though.
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He crawled over Park's smoldering body and ran off.
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The Mr. Outside Guy on that escape attempt
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unfortunately was dead on the fence.
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But Shin still, through a combination of luck,
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keeping his mouth shut, and being shrewd, he found his way out of North Corea in 30 days.
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In a year-and-a-half he'd found his way across China
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and found his way to South Korea.
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Two years later he was living in Southern California.
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Eating at In-and-Out Burger, which he still says it's the best burger in the US.
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(Laughter)
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And he was working for LiNK, 'Liberty in North Korea'
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as a Human Rights volunteer.
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But, he's not been a very happy person outside the camp.
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He's struggling to understand what it means to be free.
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He says that he's physically outside, but not psychologically outside barbed wire.
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One of the things he told me is
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that he's evolving from being an animal into trying to be a human being.
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But it's going very, very slowly.
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Very slowly. He still has dreams
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about his mother's death.
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What's terrifying though is that Shin's story is not an isolated tale of horror.
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The two other big adjustment problems that are going on, or that will soon go on.
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There are 24,000 North Koreans now living in South Korea.
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Almost all of them have come there in the past 12 years.
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Almost all of them have been examined by government psychiatrists and psychologists
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in South Korea who say that, virtually all of them are clinically paranoid,
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a useful adjustment for life in North Korea, a place that crawls with security agents
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but they have a very difficult time adapting to modern life.
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They have a hard time distinguishing between criticism and betrayal.
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And, there are 24 million people in North Korea who, if that state ever collapses
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will have to go through the same adjustment problems.
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And no one is thinking that North Korea is on the verge of collapse,
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but totalitarian systems don't last forever.
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And, someday, all of those people will have to go through a version
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of what Shin has gone through.
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Now, the reason Shin told me his awful story
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was because he wants you to know
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that these camps are still in operation.
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They're still breeding children. They're still teaching them to betray their parents.
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He doesn't believe that knowing about this is going to overthrow North Korea.
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But, he went through the humiliation of telling me his story
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and he's traveling the world talking about it,
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because he believes that knowledge is better than ignorance.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)