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Israel“s Netanyahu secures parliament majority, closer to forming government

2022-12-08T06:07:46Z

Israeli designate Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the swearing-in ceremony for the new Israeli parliament the 25th Knesset in Jerusalem, November 15, 2022 Abir Sultan/Pool via REUTERS

Israel’s incoming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu secured a parliamentary majority on Thursday after his Likud party said it had reached an agreement with the Jewish ultra-Orthodox Shas party.

Netanyahu’s right-wing alliance won a comfortable victory in a Nov. 1 election, Israel’s fifth in less than four years. His partnership with far-right parties has stirred concern at home and abroad.

“We have completed another step towards the formation of a right-wing government that will act to serve all of Israel’s citizens,” Netanyahu said in the statement.

The agreement with Shas gives Netanyahu control over 64 of the Knesset’s 120 seats, though a final coalition deal has yet to be signed.

According to the agreement, Shas leader Aryeh Deri will head the interior and health ministries during the first half of the government’s term, then take up the finance ministry in the second half. Deri will also serve as deputy prime minister throughout Netanyahu’s tenure.

Deri, a veteran politician, was convicted of tax fraud last year but spared jail under a plea deal. The Knesset will have to pass legislation that would enable his return to the cabinet.

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Ukrainian forces repel enemy attacks near 15 settlements

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Models of the Ukrainian protection forces on Wednesday repelled attacks by Russian troops around 15 settlements.

The Normal Workers of the Armed Forces of Ukraine stated this in a write-up on Facebook, Ukrinform reports.

“In excess of the past 24 hrs, units of the protection forces have repelled assaults by Russian invaders outside the house the settlements of Ternova, Kharkiv Area Stelmakhivka, Ploshchanka, Chervonopopivka and Bilohorivka, Luhansk area, and Bilohorivka, Berestove, Yakovlivka, Bakhmutske, Bakhmut, Opytne, Kurdiumivka, Maiorsk, Marinka, and Novomykhailivka, Donetsk area,” the report claimed.

In excess of the earlier working day, the enemy released 7 missile strikes and 16 air strikes, as very well as a lot more thann40 attacks employing a number of launch rocket techniques.

The menace of Russian missile assaults on Ukraine’s energy method and crucial infrastructure stays.

According to offered details, in the quickly occupied city of Yasynuvata in the Donetsk area, in the course of the transportation of a unit of the occupying forces to overcome positions, about 20 people today with weapons from among former convicts escaped. A few of them have been killed as part of the lookup procedure.

In the temporarily occupied territory of the Zaporizhzhia location, the Russian occupiers plan to mobilize nearby residents in order to replenish current losses. In unique, in the city of Melitopol, Zaporizhzhia area, summonses were issued to adult men of conscription age with the need to occur to the navy enlistment business.

In the previous day, the Ukrainian Air Power launched 17 strikes on spots of focus of enemy staff, weapons and armed forces equipment, as perfectly as two strikes on the positions of anti-aircraft missile units.

Ukrainian troopers shot down a Shahed-136 attack UAV and an Orlan reconnaissance drone.

About the earlier 24 hours, missile and artillery units of the Ukrainian protection forces have hit six command centers, 5 staff concentration parts, an artillery place, and two ammunition depots of the enemy.

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Warnock win makes it official: Georgia is a ’24 battleground

ATLANTA (AP) — Fresh off Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock’s runoff victory, Georgia Democrats are embracing — and Republicans are reluctantly accepting — the state’s transition from GOP stronghold to a premier battleground as the political calendar turns to the 2024 presidential cycle.

Democrats and Republicans alike are parsing their victories and defeats after an extended midterm campaign season that ended with Tuesday’s runoff election. Warnock’s win came a month after Gov. Brian Kemp led the GOP’s general election sweep of Georgia’s statewide constitutional offices.

“You win some and you lose some, and then the odds for the next round are basically a coin flip,” said Democrat Charlie Bailey, who celebrated Warnock’s defeat of Republican challenger Herschel Walker after losing his own bid for lieutenant governor in November.

“That’s what it looks like to be a battleground,” Bailey said.

Looking ahead to 2024, Democrats want to leverage their recent success in the state, which includes President Joe Biden’s win in 2020 and twin Senate runoff victories in 2021 that gave the party control of the Senate. The Democrats are eyeing a move up into the party’s presidential nominating process in 2024, as Biden has recommended, and Atlanta already is a finalist for the 2024 Democratic National Convention.

“We’re just getting started,” said U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams, chair of the state Democratic Party. “We are not a blue state or a red state. We are reflective of the country, and we are not leaving the spotlight anytime soon.”

Republicans insist they maintain the overall upper hand in Georgia, if only they could smooth out internal party rifts and nominate candidates without the kind of personal baggage that weighed on Walker.

Looming above it all is a potential rematch between Biden and former President Donald Trump in 2024. Biden won the state by just 11,779 votes in 2020, becoming the first Democratic presidential candidate in three decades to carry Georgia.

The dynamics put Georgia alongside Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania as the most likely determining states in the 2024 general election — with the added possibility that Georgia could become a pivotal presidential nominating ground for one or both parties, as well. Among those closely divided states, Georgia stands out with its racial and ethnic diversity spread across urban, rural and suburban populations, including a massive metro area in Atlanta that is a fundraising font for both parties.

If the recent run of close elections offers a mutual lesson, it’s one rooted in basic political math: Kemp and Warnock — and Biden in 2020 — turned out their parties’ base voters while connecting with enough of those in the middle. Walker and Trump, meanwhile, struggled mightily with independents and even moderate Republicans.

Yet there’s still no agreement on how best to reach the middle, especially when Trump is involved.

Kemp took a swipe at Trump, who endorsed a primary challenger to the governor, in his Nov. 8 victory speech, lumping in “a former president” with a litany of his critics. “This election proves that when Republicans stay focused on real-world solutions that put hardworking people first, we can win now, but also in the future, y’all,” Kemp said.

Dan McLagan, a veteran Republican campaign leader, argues Georgia isn’t truly a tossup state — or, at least, it shouldn’t be.

“We only lose when we nominate the worst possible candidate,” McLagan said, alluding to Walker, a former University of Georgia football star who later played in the NFL.

Walker’s shortcomings included repeated lies about his biography, allegations of violence against his ex-wife and at least one son, and accusations that he paid for the abortions of two ex-girlfriends.

Walker denied he paid for abortions, but tea party organizer Debbie Dooley said she heard from “too many Republicans worried about whether it was true.” She noted that Warnock outraised Walker by about 3-to-1 and used that money to produce ads that “made him more likable than Herschel.”

Dooley insisted that Trump-aligned candidates, and Trump himself, can win at the top of the ticket in Georgia. She pointed to runoff turnout in overwhelmingly Republican north Georgia, where Walker’s margins improved from the general election. Trump won the state in 2016.

Republican officials largely acknowledge they’ve been helping Democrats in the Trump era by nominating candidates whom moderate voters see as extreme.

“Republicans, we’ve been hit in the head with a two-by-four four times over the last two years,” said Cody Hall, a top Kemp adviser. “We’ve lost three Senate races and a presidential, and at some point, we have to wonder why we keep hitting ourselves in the head with a two-by-four.”

Warnock was more than happy to accept the circumstances by framing his contest as a binary choice between candidates, rather than part of the national struggle to control Washington.

“Sen. Warnock ran a base-plus-plus strategy,” said Democratic strategist Tharon Johnson, noting that Warnock distanced himself from Biden and tagged Walker as unfit for office.

But even independent of Walker’s troubles, Warnock campaign manager Quentin Fulks said the senator deserved credit for emphasizing his work in the Senate and his personal qualities as pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church. Winning twice in two years, against two different candidates, means Warnock did more than just get lucky in drawing Walker, Fulks said.

In the closing weeks, Fulks said, “We kept the race focused on ’the reverend versus the running back,” but that was possible only because Warnock established himself as a senator who’d worked with Republicans and was willing to communicate directly to Republican-leaning voters.

Johnson and Fulks both avoided directly criticizing Democrat Stacey Abrams, who lost to Kemp in November by almost 8 points, much worse than her 1.5 point loss to him in 2018. But Johnson said the results show Abrams wasn’t as effective in reaching the middle.

Some campaigns facing a candidate like Walker in a state like Georgia, Fulks said, would try to “run as far left as we can,” but “we did not do that.”

With their victories, Kemp and Warnock remain the highest-ranking, highest-profile members of their respective parties in their state, and that means Republicans and Democrats in Georgia will have power centers who embrace the state’s battleground status and what it requires to win.

Kemp already has opened a federal political action committee account to leverage his higher profile and help the GOP compete with the voter turnout network that Abrams helped build for Democrats over the past decade.

“Our donors have to realize that if we would like to stay in charge, we’re going to have to start investing year-round, consistently and generously, like the Democrats do,” Hall said. “We cannot continue to take a knife to a gun fight.”

Fulks said Warnock, after spending two-plus years running for office, now has the space not just to be a full-term senator but also to take on a different political role: “He’s now the leader of the Democratic Party in Georgia.”

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Indiana sues TikTok, citing safety and security concerns

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana’s attorney general on Wednesday sued Chinese-owned social media app TikTok, claiming the video-sharing platform misleads its users, particularly children, about the level of inappropriate content and security of consumer information.

Republican Attorney General Todd Rokita claimed in a complaint filed Wednesday that while the social video app says it is safe for users 13 years and older, the app contains “salacious and inappropriate content” available to young users “for unlimited periods of time, day and night, in an effort to line TikTok’s pockets with billions of dollars from U.S. consumers.”

A separate complaint from Rokita argues the app has users’ sensitive and personal information but deceives consumers into believing that information is secure.

“At the very least, the company owes consumers the truth about the age-appropriateness of its content and the insecurity of the data it collects on users,” Rokita said in a press release Wednesday.

TikTok is owned by ByteDance, a Chinese company that moved its headquarters to Singapore in 2020. The app has been targeted by Republicans who say the Chinese government could access its user data like browsing history and location. U.S. armed forces also have prohibited the app on military devices.

In a company statement, TikTok said its “top priority” is “the safety, privacy and security of our community.”

“We build youth well-being into our policies, limit features by age, empower parents with tools and resources, and continue to invest in new ways to enjoy content based on age-appropriateness or family comfort,” the statement said. “We are also confident that we’re on a path in our negotiations with the U.S. Government to fully satisfy all reasonable U.S. national security concerns, and we have already made significant strides toward implementing those solutions.”

The app exploded in popularity with a nearly addictive scroll of videos, but it has also struggled to detect ads that contain blatant misinformation about U.S. elections, according to an October 2020 report from nonprofit Global Witness and the Cybersecurity for Democracy team at New York University.

Most recently, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan on Tuesday banned the use of TikTok and certain China and Russia-based platforms in the state’s executive branch of government, a measure to address cybersecurity risks presented by the platforms.

That directive followed Republican South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem banning state employees and contractors on Nov. 29 from accessing TikTok on state-owned devices, citing the app’s ties to China. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, also a Republican, on Monday asked the state’s Department of Administration to ban TikTok from all state government devices it manages. In August 2020, Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts blocked TikTok on state electronic devices.

___

Arleigh Rodgers is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Arleigh Rodgers on Twitter at https://twitter.com/arleighrodgers

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Biden admin tells Supreme Court law protecting social media companies has limits

2022-12-08T05:23:48Z

Facebook, Google and Twitter logos are seen in this combination photo from Reuters files.

The Biden administration argued to the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday that social media giants like Google could in some instances have responsibility for user content, adopting a stance that could potentially undermine a federal law shielding companies from liability.

Lawyers for the U.S. Department of Justice made their argument in the high profile lawsuit filed by the family of Nohemi Gonzalez, a 23-year-old American citizen killed in 2015 when Islamist militants opened fire on the Paris bistro where she was eating. read more

The family argued that Google was in part liable for Gonzalez’ death because YouTube, which is owned by the tech giant, essentially recommended videos by the Islamic State group to some users through its algorithms. Google and YouTube are part of Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O).

The case reached the Supreme Court after the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Google, saying they were protected from such claims because of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996.

Section 230 holds that social media companies cannot be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by other users.

The law has been sharply criticised across the political spectrum. Democrats claim it gives social media companies a pass for spreading hate speech and misinformation.

Republicans say it allows censorship of voices on the right and other politically unpopular opinions, pointing to decisions by Facebook and Twitter to ban dissemination of a New York Post article about the son of then-Democratic candidate Joe Biden’s adult son, Hunter, in October 2020.

The Biden administration, in its filing to the Supreme Court, did not argue that Google should be held liable in the Gonzalez case and voiced strong support for most of Section 230’s protections of social media companies.

But the DOJ lawyers said that algorithms used by YouTube and other providers should be subject to a different kind of scrutiny. They called for the Supreme Court to return the case to the 9th Circuit for further review.

Attorneys for Google could not be reached for comment on Wednesday night.


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Europe“s free-travel zone set to welcome Croatia but bar Romania and Bulgaria

2022-12-08T05:03:03Z

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Opposition led by Austria is set to prevent Bulgaria and Romania from winning approval on Thursday to join Europe’s control-free travel zone, though its 26 member countries are expected to admit Croatia.

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FILE PHOTO: Cars queue at the Slovenia-Croatia border in Dragonja, Slovenia May 15, 2020 REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

The so-called Schengen zone – a pact between countries to abolish border checks for those travelling between their territories – is among the top achievements of European integration.

But it has increasingly fallen under pressure over the last decade as limiting its member states’ ability to keep a close lid on migration and track down security threats effectively.

Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said earlier this week that Vienna opposed allowing Romania and Bulgaria into Schengen, a club made up of 22 European Union countries, as well as Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.

“We need more time. At the moment, we have 75,000 unregistered illegal migrants in Austria – meaning they have crossed an external EU border and made it to Austria. This needs to be solved first,” he said.

That is despite the EU’s executive European Commission repeatedly stating all three countries met the necessary technical requirements that have to do with border controls, data protection and visa policies, among others.

A Romanian government source said Bucharest was committed to securing a decision from the meeting of interior affairs ministers in Brussels on Thursday in favour of enlargement.

“Austria is completely isolated on a European level. We will not stop until we have exhausted all the possible ways of action on this topic,” said the source.

The Netherlands sides with Austria in opposing the granting of access to Bulgaria, with the Hague citing concerns over governance and migration.

Since all member countries must agree for a candidate country to be able to join Schengen, Romania and Bulgaria were in for a disappointment on Thursday.

“Croatia can expect a positive decision but Romania, and especially Buglaria will not be able to join Schengen yet,” said an EU diplomat. “They will be left out for at least another half-a-year to a year before we can revisit the issue.”

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Pentagon splits $9 billion cloud contract among Google, Amazon, Oracle and Microsoft

2022-12-08T05:23:30Z

U.S. flag hangs during a ceremony to honor victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks at the Pentagon in Washington, U.S., September 11, 2022. REUTERS/Cheriss May

The Pentagon awarded $9 billion worth of cloud computing contracts to Alphabet Inc’s Google (GOOGL.O), Amazon Web Services Inc (AMZN.O), Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and Oracle Corp <ORCL.N> on Wednesday.

The Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability (JWCC) is the multi-cloud successor to the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI), which was an IT modernization project to build a large, common commercial cloud for the Department of Defense.

The separate contracts, which carry a notional top line of $9 billion, run until 2028 and will provide the Department of Defense with enterprise-wide, globally available cloud services across all security domains and classification levels, the contract announcement said.

The move comes months after the Pentagon had delayed its decision to award an enterprise-wide JWCC contract.

The Pentagon attempted to move to the cloud several years ago using the JEDI concept, but the proposal died after litigation stopped the procurement process.

This deal could put the military more in line with private-sector companies, many of whom split up their cloud computing work among multiple vendors.

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Putin warns nuclear risk is increasing and war in Ukraine is going to ‘take a while’





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Approximately 10 months right after his invasion of Ukraine began, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday acknowledged that the conflict is “going to just take a when,” as he also warned of the “increasing” risk of nuclear war.

Speaking at a meeting of Russia’s Human Rights Council at the Kremlin, Putin mentioned Moscow will struggle by “all available means at our disposal,” in what he insists on contacting a “special military procedure,” but also said he noticed no instant have to have to mobilize a lot more troops.

“With regard to the protracted mother nature of the distinctive armed service procedure and its benefits, of study course, it is going to acquire a although, probably,” he mentioned.

And with no categorically ruling out the initial use of nuclear weapons, Putin reported he viewed the Russian nuclear arsenal as a deterrent somewhat than a provocation.

“As for the plan that Russia would not use such weapons initially beneath any conditions, then it indicates we would not be capable to be the next to use them possibly – because the likelihood to do so in scenario of an attack on our territory would be really minimal,” he said.

“Nevertheless, we have a strategy… particularly, as a defense, we take into consideration weapons of mass destruction, nuclear weapons – it is all primarily based all around the so-called retaliatory strike,” he stated. “That is, when we are struck, we strike in reaction.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks at an award ceremony in Moscow on December 5, 2022.

The Russian leader explained that the United States’ nuclear weapons were situated in massive figures on European soil, whilst Russia experienced not transferred its nuclear weapons to other territories and is not preparing to do so, but “will guard its allies with all the indicates at its disposal, if important.”

“We have not long gone crazy. We are informed of what nuclear weapons are. We have these signifies, they are in a much more advanced and modern kind than those people of any other nuclear place, this is apparent,” he explained. “But we are not likely to brandish these weapons like a razor, functioning close to the globe.”

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Ukrainian forces fire an artillery piece at Russian positions at the frontline near Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine.

Intercepted cellphone phone reveals dwindling circumstances for Russian forces

Putin also explained there is no have to have for extra mobilization of Russian troops at this point, saying suggestions for extra deployments “simply do not make sense.”

Out of the 300,000 gentlemen known as up for Russia’s partial mobilization, 50 percent are now in Ukraine – and of those people, only 77,000 are in fight units even though the relaxation are in protection forces or education, he mentioned.

Meanwhile, in reaction to a query, he described Moscow’s territorial gains as a “significant final result for Russia.”

In September, Putin introduced the annexation of 4 Ukrainian locations – Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia – in a approach that violated worldwide regulation.

On the other hand, Russia now controls only 60% of the southern Kherson area. It was compelled to withdraw from the regional funds of Kherson city final thirty day period in a humiliating setback, though it continue to controls the coastline together the Sea of Azov.

“Let’s be truthful, the Sea of Azov has grow to be an interior sea of the Russian Federation. All of this is a significant deal,” Putin mentioned.

In Zaporizhzhia, in the meantime, the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog has frequently warned of the hazard of a nuclear incident at Ukraine’s biggest nuclear plant, which has been occupied by Russian forces because March.

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear electricity plant been rocked by explosions in new months amid fighting nearby, with Kyiv and Moscow blaming every other for the assaults.

Previously this 7 days, a Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson appeared to rule out proposals by the Global Atomic Vitality Company to produce a demilitarized zone close to the plant, declaring it was on “Russian territory and is totally managed by Russia.”

Putin’s reviews arrive as the war enters winter, with Russia continuing to shell japanese and southern pieces of Ukraine – and struggling with assaults on its have soil.

Before this week, Russia unleashed a wave of drone and missile assaults throughout Ukraine, focusing on the country’s power infrastructure. Ukraine has been experiencing a wide assault on significant infrastructure and electric power resources considering the fact that early Oct.

The current strikes brought about in depth power outages in many areas, including Kyiv and Odesa, leaving many homes devoid of electrical energy. Ukrainian restore teams have labored frantically to restore electrical power throughout the nation, but their initiatives are currently being slowed by sub-zero temperatures and inadequate temperature.

Meanwhile, Russia has accused Kyiv of utilizing drones to strike armed service airfields significantly inside of its territory on Monday and Tuesday – an incredible breach of Moscow’s assumptions that it can safeguard its deep inside.

Ukraine has neither verified nor denied accountability for the blasts, in keeping with Kyiv’s plan of official silence all-around attacks inside Russia or in Russian-occupied Crimea.

However, in an evident reference to the strikes, an aide to President Volodymyr Zelensky tweeted cryptically that “if a thing is launched into other countries’ airspace, quicker or later on not known traveling objects will return to departure point.”

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UN publishes report on summary executions of civilians in Ukraine by Russian troops

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In the original weeks of the invasion of Ukraine, Russian armed forces summarily executed or carried out assaults on individuals leading to the deaths of hundreds of civilians, the Head of the UN Human Legal rights Checking Mission in Ukraine, Matilda Bogner, mentioned on Wednesday.

That’s according to a statement posted on the site of the Workplace of the United Nations Superior Commissioner for Human Rights, Ukrinform experiences.

A UN Human Legal rights report based mostly on the operate of the Mission aspects how Russian troops killed civilians in Ukrainian cities and villages across Kyiv, Chernihiv, and Sumy locations of Ukraine from February 24 till April 6, 2022.

According to Bogner, the summary executions examined in the report may possibly constitute a war criminal offense.

In the city of Bucha in close proximity to Kyiv, which was underneath the management of Russian troops from March 5 to 30, the Mission documented the killing of 73 civilians (54 adult males, 16 women of all ages, 2 boys, and 1 female) and is in the method of corroborating an further 105 alleged killings.

“A mere textual content concept, a piece of camouflage clothing, or a file of preceding armed forces provider could have deadly penalties,” Bogner mentioned.

The report states that the UN has, so significantly, documented the violent fatalities of 441 civilians (341 adult men, 72 females, 20 boys and 8 ladies) in the three regions in the first six months of the Russian invasion on your own. At the exact time, the authors of the doc say that cautions that the precise figures are probably to be substantially increased as get the job done is continue to ongoing to corroborate an more 198 killings that transpired in the Kyiv, Chernihiv, and Sumy regions of Ukraine occupied by Russia in the original levels of the ongoing armed attack versus Ukraine.

“Civilians ended up targeted on streets while transferring inside or amongst settlements, which includes although trying to flee the hostilities,” Bogner said.

“Russian troopers brought civilians to makeshift areas of detention and then executed them in captivity. Numerous of the victims’ bodies had been located with their palms tied guiding their backs and gunshot wounds to their heads,” she added.

The report identified that adult men and boys comprised 88 for every cent of all victims of summary executions.

The report states that though numerous months have handed considering that the initial killings grew to become recognised, a great deal requires to be finished to keep individuals liable to account. The UN Human Legal rights Business office has uncovered no facts that the Russian authorities have been actively investigating or prosecuting any of such cases.

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