Tuesday, January 27, 2015

[MFP] New book published: "The Business of Doing Good"

 

New book for organisations in the business of doing good (and doing it better)

Why do so many social enterprises and charities, seeking to improve lives, fall short – and even end up harming those they try to help? This is the central question tackled in The Business of Doing Good, which outlines six practical steps for a new approach for microfinance and other social purpose organisations.

The costs of getting it wrong have never been higher, and the book details examples of unintended harm where microfinance clients have reportedly committed suicide as the result of over-indebtedness, the poorest 'untouchables' have inadvertently been overlooked by development projects in India, and poor families used their insecticide-treated bed nets to dry fish in the sun.

With public concern about poverty and inequality combining with increasing distrust of charity or government to make a difference, The Business of Doing Good reveals six insights for charities and social enterprises to improve and not just prove their impact. Just a few small changes to the way that organisations engage with their clients, manage their staff, and structure their business model can make a dramatic difference to their impact on the lives of the people they serve. This book is essential reading for anyone who has ever given to charity, or believes that business can do good in the world.

"Charities, social enterprises and businesses of every shape, size and orientation are in the business of going good – working with poor and vulnerable communities around the world, to try and deliver potentially life-changing services to address a range of pressing social needs. Many fail to perform and deliver to their potential. This book offers insights into what it is that successful organisations do to make a difference." says Anton Simanowitz, co-author of the book.

The Business of Doing Good charts the course of the remarkable and profitable Cambodian microfinance organisation, AMK, that has, with single-minded purpose, made radical choices and reached deep into rural villages, touching the lives of almost two million people living in poverty.

The book also draws the authors' 20 years of experience working to build successful organisations around the world. Having worked in international development around the world, Simanowitz and his co-author, Katherine Knotts, had become increasingly frustrated at the way in which so many organisations were failing, and wanted to pull together their experiences of which organisations worked – and why. What they discovered were simple solutions that can applied to all businesses with a social mission, captured in six simple steps.

The six steps outlined in the book cover:
- How to get to grips with the realities of clients' lives, and deliver products that address their real needs.
 - How to stop good products getting 'lost in translation' through the people that deliver them, so that the reality on the ground matches aspirations.
 - Building a business that works, being clear about what needs to be achieved, and innovating to build the business model to make things happen rather than accepting conventional wisdom that it can't be done.
 - How all organisations can deliver social as well as economic value, and how local organisations can become self-sustaining, dynamic contributors to overcoming poverty.

"When organisations enter into the lives of poor and vulnerable people, there is a moral and ethical imperative to make good on good intentions, and not to make people's lives worse as a result. This book shows how it is possible," said Katherine Knotts.

Learn more about the book:
- Visit the website: http://www.thebusinessofdoinggood.co.uk
- Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TBODGood

Praise for the book:
"This is an uplifting, hugely insightful read with key lessons for all of us. How to deliver societal as well as economic value is a challenge faced by big business, social enterprise and voluntary sector organisations like Concern and Oxfam alike. The blurring of our organisational boundaries has led to exciting innovation in this space that we all need to analyse more. Through the open telling of one Cambodian organisation's story, it's successes, failures and the lives it's touched. It's a story of learning, innovation, resilience and the simplicity and importance we often forget of people connecting with people. Organisations like Concern and Oxfam support and learn from many local partner organisations like AMK. We all share the ambition that local organisations will become self sustaining, dynamic contributors to overcoming poverty at national scale in poorer countries, but there are very few success stories of social enterprise at scale. Here is one."
Penny Lawrence, Deputy Chief Executive, Oxfam GB

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[MFP] Save the Date: Credit Impact Event in Washington DC on 27th February

 

Hello,

Innovation for Poverty Action is co-hosting an event - 'Financial Services for the Poor: Lessons and Implications of the Latest Research on Credit' - with CGAP, J-PAL and the World Bank in Washington D.C. on the 27th of February. All details about the event are available here: Financial Services for the Poor: | Innovations for Poverty Action 


We would really appreciate your help in circulating the save the date to individuals and institutions within your network who you think would be interested in attending the event.  

Please let me know if you have any questions or concerns.

Any and all assistance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,                                                 
Sneha


--


Sneha Stephen

Initiative Coordinator | Financial Capability Policy and Research
Innovations for Poverty Action
101 Whitney Ave. | New Haven, CT- 06511
Email: sstephen@poverty-action.org
Phone: 857.285.8169
Skype: sneha_stephen


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Thursday, January 22, 2015

[MFP] Listening Tour for the 18th Microcredit Summit

 

Hi Everyone,

I wanted to share with you a survey from the Microcredit Summit Campaign. We have started planning for the 18th Microcredit Summit which will take place in the fourth quarter of 2015 in the Africa-Middle East Region. This Summit will look at how anti-poverty programs can link with financial inclusion and livelihood development to create clear pathways out of poverty. The Listening Tour Survey will help us define our Summit agenda. Please take a few minutes to fill it out and share with your contacts as well.

Here is the link -- http://mcs2015.org/ListeningTour-18MCSummit

 

Thanks in advance for your participation!

 

All the best,

 

Xochitl

 

Xochitl SANCHEZ| Program Associate

MICROCREDIT SUMMIT CAMPAIGN | A Project of RESULTS Educational Fund

1101 15th St NW | Suite 1200 | Washington DC, 20005

Phone: 202.637.9600 ext 144 | Fax: +1.202.466.1396 | Skype: sanchez.xochitl

Email: Sanchez@microcreditsummit.org | Website: http://www.microcreditsummit.org/

Help us shape the agenda for the 18th Microcredit Summit.

Click below to take our Listening Tour Survey today!



Follow the Campaign on

 

   

 

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Posted by: Xochitl Sanchez <sanchez@microcreditsummit.org>
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Monday, January 19, 2015

[MFP] Introducing C20 Turkey

 

Dear all,

We are very happy to announce the launch of C20 Turkey, the civil society-G20 engagement group for 2015 (www.c20turkey.org). As you may know, on 1 December 2014 the G20 Presidency rotated to Turkey. This means that, after a year of hard work from the Australian C20 Steering Committee, it is now the turn of Turkish civil society to organise the 2015 C20. 

C20 Turkey is being facilitated by a group of 14 Turkish civil society organisations, working to tackle inequalities and promote sustainable, inclusive development at national and international levels. We are excited to be taking on the responsibility of facilitating the C20 this year.

 Given the nature of the members of this group, we feel that you and the organizations you are related to would make a valuable contribution to the C20. For this reason, we would like to invite you to take part in the 2015 C20, which launches today with a multi-language online survey to help set the agenda for the next year (www.c20turkey.org/poll). This survey is open to anyone, and we really encourage you to take part. The survey will be live for approximately 6 weeks, and will form the first phase of the 2015 policy consultation process. You can read more about what will happen next here (www.c20turkey.org/page/how-we-work).

Right now, there are two ways you can get involved:

1.      -  Take part in the survey here and tell us which issues you think should be on civil society's agenda in 2015.

2.     -  Share the survey with your colleagues, networks and anyone else you think might be interested (survey short link: http://bit.ly/1xTvE4c).

If you'd like to find out more about the C20, or how to get involved, please don't hesitate to get in touch with us at c20turkey@c20turkey.org (alternatively, see the background information at the end of this email).

Best wishes,

On behalf of the C20 Turkey Steering Committee,

Didem Demircan

About the C20

The C20 is a platform for civil society organisations around the world to engage with G20 governments on the key issues that concern them. It brings civil society together to help influence the G20, by acting as an interface with G20 decision-makers. First hosted by Russian civil society, the C20 is an officially-recognised G20 engagement group. The C20 has been hosted by Russian civil society (2013), Australian civil society (2014), and will now be hosted by Turkish civil society.

 

Who we are

C20 Turkey is being facilitated by a group of 14 Turkish civil society organisations, working across a range of national and international issues.

C20 Turkey

Each year since it began, the C20 has run a policy consultation process to engage national and international civil society organisations in developing joint civil society policy recommendations to the G20. These recommendations are then used as the basis for joint advocacy and influencing work with G20 governments for the duration of the Presidency. You can read the recommendations from C20 Australia here. This year, C20 Turkey is seeking to make this consultation process wider and more participatory than ever before. We are using a range of on and offline consultation mechanisms to encourage as many people as possible to take part. You can read more about how we work here.

--
Didem Demircan
Kadın Emeğini Değerlendirme Vakfı / Foundation for the Support of Women's Work
Koordinatör / Coordinator
Bekar Sk. No.17 Beyoglu Istanbul Turkey
+90 212 2922672
www.kedv.org.tr
kedv@kedv.org.tr

P Please consider the environment before printing this email

http://thinkBeforePrinting.org

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Posted by: Didem Rastgeldi <drastgeldi@gmail.com>
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Wednesday, January 14, 2015

[MFP] Community-Based Microfinance for Financial Inclusion Certificate course, Ethiopia

 

Hello everyone,

Greetings for 2015!

I am pleased to share this announcement for the upcoming Community Based Microfinance for Financial Inclusion Certificate course, hosted at WISE (Women in Self Employment) Ethiopia.

Women practitioners are specially encouraged to apply.

With best wishes,

Anuj

 

Community-Based Microfinance for Financial Inclusion

March 23 - April 3, 2015
Ethiopia

 

This course charts the journey from microcredit and microfinance to financial inclusion, with the focus on community owned and based approaches. Participants will study successful models such as Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs), Self-Help-Groups (SHGs), Financial Cooperatives and Credit Unions, latest developments in these models, and learn about innovations such as bank linkages, mobile banking, and value-chain finance.

Personal benefits

  • Understand the role of financial services in inclusive economy and the role of community-based microfinance institutions in enhancing financial inclusion and linking those institutions with formal financial institutions
  • Understanding the financial behaviour of low-income population groups to learn the principles of designing more appropriate financial products, especially savings, insurance, payment services, value-chain finance, and innovative models of community-based financing
  • Obtain an in-depth understanding of different community-based microfinance models such as village savings and loan associations (or savings groups), self-help groups, SACCOs, and credit unions to learn about the ways in which different member-owned institutions apply cooperative principles to ensure the delivery of appropriate financial products
  • Learn about the regulations, structures, and practices for balancing flexibility and risk management in different community-based microfinance models
  • Explore real-world examples of establishing multi-tier institutions and networks, building linkages with private sector financial institutions, use of mobile banking, and opportunities and challenges of financial products delivered by agriculture coops
  • Learn about national regulatory policies and supervision structures for community-based microfinance models, and the importance of self-regulation
  • Gain valuable hands-on knowledge through visits to successful community-based microfinance institutions, interaction with leading sector practitioners, and intensive exchange with peers

Organizational benefits

  • Develop strategies for strengthening program design, management, and product design capacities in community-based microfinance programming in remote rural areas and underserved urban communities
  • Develop strategies for banks, formal microfinance institutions, and various value-chain actors to reach informal savings groups and serve them effectively
  • Enhance capacity to analyse macro policies and identify research priorities to enable families operating in the informal sector to participate more meaningfully in the economy
  • Develop approaches to integrate community-based microfinance models into strategies for improving food security, building sustainable livelihoods, enhancing women’s empowerment, and attaining broad development outcomes

Who should take the Program?

This program is intended for mid-to-senior-level practitioners from NGOs, financial cooperatives, rural finance institutions, MFIs and bankers interested in serving rural regions; and also for banking regulators and government officials, trainers, and donors engaged in financial inclusion agenda. Two years’ work experience in microfinance or in the field of economic development is desirable.

Scholarships

Apply to request scholarship support.

How to Apply

Applicants should apply as soon as possible. Applications are assessed as soon as they are received so apply early to ensure time for making travel and visa arrangements.

 

 

Anuj K. Jain

Sr. Coady Fellow| Microfinance and Development| COADY International Institute

St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, B2G 2W5| Ph: 902-872-0521

 

New program offerings in 2015. Apply now to be considered for a scholarship. http://www.coady.stfx.ca/education/apply/

 

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Posted by: Anuj Jain <ajain@stfx.ca>
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Friday, January 9, 2015

[MFP] Re: The microcredit calamity in post-apartheid South Africa

 

Some of you might find interesting in this peer-reviewed but open-access article I have just out in the South African journal Law, Democracy and Development. It looks at the horrendous impact brought about by the microcredit movement in post-apartheid South Africa, and the fact that a far more 'developmental' local financial system has been kept off the agenda as a result of the massive financial rewards accruing to those providing microcredit. You can find the article here:

Milford Bateman

 
Milford J. B. Bateman PhD
Freelance consultant on local economic development,
Visiting Professor of Economics, Juraj Dobrila at Pula University, Croatia
and
Adjunct Professor of Development Studies, St Marys University, Halifax, Canada
_____________________________________________________
Address: Villa Nina, Nova Cesta 20B, Opatija 51410, CROATIA
Home/office: +385 (0)51 701 347
Mobile: +385 (0)98 9300 899
UK Mobile: +44 (0)778 999 8780
Email: milfordbateman@yahoo.com
Download my recent papers at:

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Posted by: milford bateman <milfordbateman@yahoo.com>
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Thursday, January 8, 2015

Re: [MFP] Tontine & Susu

 

Dear Hans,


Good questions. ROSCAS - Revolving Savings and Credit Association and ASCAS - Accumulating Savings and Credit Associations of which susus are only one variant exist throughout the developing world with immigrants bringing their traditions of disciplined savings and mutual support to the developed world including the United States where a major percentage of business startups are financed through these informal means. You are too concerned about the details - ROSCAS and ASCAS since they are run and designed by their members take on an almost infinite variety of forms. 

I suggest you spend a few days in the community talking to those you want to reach and ask them about how they organize themselves and how they use their susus and what they like or don't like. There is a vast savings group movement in Africa with about 9 million members. These are based on improvements on the ROSCA and ASCA principles. See my new book: "In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development" intheirownhands.com. Also check saving-revolution.org, an excellent site for all matters relating to savings group promotion. Check out Fixes NYT November 27th to read a piece written by  David Bornstein on Savings Groups which provides an excellent overview with numerous links. Also see Next Billion at the link below which features a piece I wrote and numerous comments which will help answer your questions. See below.

Good luck,

Jeff 

Monday, January 5, 2015

NexThought Monday - Second Chances in Global Development:  How savings and lending groups can achieve what microcredit hasn't

By Jeffrey Ashe

It might have turned out differently. In 1979 I led a team whose mandate was to learn how financial institutions lend to micro businesses. The PISCES Project, as it was called, was USAID's first foray into microfinance, and it would become the spark for greater U.S. involvement in the nascent sector. Funding and personnel from USAID pushed seminal groups like Acción and Opportunity International further into microfinance, while helping initiate its transition from non-profit to for-profit models. Soon, other funding poured in and microfinance became a global development phenomenon.
But what if our mandate instead had been to learn how micro-businesses actually financed their businesses?  Instead of assuming that institutional credit was what they needed, informal financial management tools including revolving and accumulating savings clubs[1] common in much of the developing world  – not merely financial institutions –  would have been central to our investigation. And perhaps these tools, rather than formal microcredit, would have captured the imagination of the global development community.
While microcredit was rapidly gaining momentum, in 1991, Moira Eknes, then a Norwegian CARE volunteer working in a remote corner of Niger, did what our research failed to do.  By studying, the traditional savings clubs prevalent in the villages where she worked, Eknes and her coworkers refined them into a saving and borrowing model called Village Saving and Lending Associations (VSLAs). VSLAs were more flexible and transparent, and more immediately useful for villagers than the traditional alternatives.
Eknes never expected that her VSLAs would spread much beyond the small communities where she worked. How wrong she was. Today there are 10.5 million members of savings groups (most of them women) in some 65 countries participating in over half a million groups. The vast majority of these groups are in Africa, but savings group membership is rapidly spreading in Latin America and Asia even in countries where rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs) are not common showing the vast unmet need for a safe and convenient place to save and easy access to small loans.  
Ten and a half million group members are our "proof of concept" but what if we scaled savings group membership to 100 million, or half the current outreach of microfinance? This would translate into savings groups in place in a million villages – that's equivalent to every village in 66 countries the size of Mali – and in thousands of cities and towns. These groups would collectively mobilize and largely distribute $2.5 billion each year ($1,800 per group) of which $750 million (30 percent) would represent the groups' profits from lending and fines. Group members, not financial institutions, would reap the benefits.
The total price tag spread over a decade would be less than the grant funding to microfinance in a single year ($2.56 billion according to a 2011 CGAP Focus Note).[2] And it could be much less than that. The cost of promoting savings groups is trending downward as the methodology is further simplified[3], more volunteers are training groups, and some groups are paying for their training.[4] What's more, group training along with health education is now being delivered on cell phones[5], and a simple app is being perfected to automate record keeping[6].
I believe promoting savings groups at this scale could become a global development phenomena as profound as microfinance sparked three decades earlier.  The difference is that while microfinance struggles to reach the very poor, savings and lending groups are expressly designed to meet their needs. Costs are so low because group members, not institutions, take on the tasks of lending, tracking payments and repayment – the major costs of financial institutions – and no funds external to the groups are required since the money lent is the money the members save. Savings groups prove that the poor are not too poor to save and that there is enough savings potential in a group of 20 to meet most members' needs, which are as much about insuring there is food on the table and dealing with emergencies as business development.
In contrast to a typical microfinance institution, savings groups:
●      Reach those that microfinance is not designed to reach profitably. Even the most motivated micro-lender cannot make money on $0.50 savings deposits and $30 loans. 
●      Require a fraction of the staff. Saving for Change in Mali, a joint venture of Oxfam America, Freedom from Hunger and the Stromme Foundation, reached 450,000 women organized into 19,000 groups with 209 trainers – one paid staffer for each 2,000 group members. To reach the same number a typical MFI would require a permanent staff of 1,500, one paid staff for each 300 users.[7]  Only a handful of trainers are monitoring Saving for Change groups in Mali today, with few signs that the groups are faltering. (See video below for more details.)
 
 
●      Can be promoted by local NGOs. Savings group promoters introduce a simple structure while the groups do the work of saving, lending, collecting and record-keeping.  
●      Virally self-replicate. The leaders of established groups train new ones at no additional cost. Hugh Allen, a VSLA pioneer and CEO of VSL Associates, found that after four years each group trained by staff had trained two more groups in Uganda.
●      Are profitable for very poor people. When the fund is divided at the end of each cycle, members receive on average $1.38 for each dollar saved[8]. As one woman told me, "Why pay them when we can pay ourselves?"
●      Survive independently. A panel study of 331 groups in 6 countries over 5 years indicates a 90% survival rate.[9]


 
●      Serve as a platform for other development inputs. Members launch their own projects – teaching their children to form groups, buying grain when the price is low to better survive the "lean" season and launching collective enterprises. Disciplined groups with financial clout serve as platforms for government and NGO development initiatives and linkages to financial institutions.
●      Have documented impact. A Gates Foundation-funded random control trial and anthropological study carried out in 500 villages in Mali showed a decrease in chronic hunger, increased savings, more assets – mainly as livestock that can be easily cashed in – and increased social capital. Crucially, these impacts were village-wide – not just limited to group members. The researchers also found that savings groups sprung up in the control villages in substantial numbers with no staff promotion or training.
●      Can promote political change. In Guatemala, savings groups banded together to elect women mayors. In El Salvador, ex-trainers are assuming roles in municipal governments. Eknes told me that women in Niger who were part of the first VSLA initiative are organizing a national structure to make sure they fulfill the gender quota for the coming elections.[10]
As co-author Kyla Neilan and I write in our recent book "In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development," global development efforts have largely been a failure because they focus on costly staff-intensive interventions that will never serve more than a small percentage of the truly poor – if they work at all. Savings groups can help right that wrong, as the poor undertake the revolutionary act of taking charge of their own future. The strength and transformative potential of savings groups is based on the fact that development tools are in the hands of the poor not an outside agent.
More than two billion people worldwide need a better way to save and borrow with most of these living on two dollars or less of highly irregular income per day. Savings groups are the simplest and least expensive way to serve them. Savings groups, microfinance and mobile money taken together are addressing the need for quality financial services with each fulfilling a different need - savings and small loans, larger loans and savings and remittances, transfers and bill paying. They are the most recent additions to the "portfolios of the poor."
 
 
 
 
 
Jeffrey Ashe  is a fellow at the Carsey School for Public Policy at the University of New Hampshire, Research Fellow, Global Development And Environment Institute, Tufts University.
 
 

[1] There are two types of savings clubs, ROSCAS (Revolving Savings and Credit Associations) where a fixed amount is paid into a fund each meeting and each member in turn receives a payout of the entire amount collected that meeting and ASCAS (Accumulating Savings and Credit Associations) where members deposit into a common pool and take out loans from that pool as needed.
[2] "Cross Border Funding of Microfinance,"  CGAP Focus note 70 (April 2011)
[3] Jong-Hyon Shin of Fundación Capital has simplified training to a two hour simulation with two or three follow-up sessions
[4] Catholic Relief Services through its Private Sector Provider model trains promoters to train groups as a business.
[5] Freedom from Hunger has developed a curriculum for training groups and health education for cell phones.
[6] Paul Rippey is testing this record keeping app. See: Savings-Revolution.org
[7] David Roodman, "Due Dilligence: An Impertinent Inquiry into Microfinance"
[8] Hugh Allen, VSL Associates.
[9] SAVEX  panel study of 331 randomly selected groups.
10In Their Own Hands: How Savings Groups are Revolutionizing Development pp 106-107, pp 113-115
 
Jeffrey Ashe
jaashe@aol.com


-----Original Message-----
From: 'Hans Verkoijen' verkoyen@imul.com [MicrofinancePractice] <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com>
To: MicrofinancePractice <MicrofinancePractice@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thu, Jan 8, 2015 7:34 am
Subject: [MFP] Tontine & Susu

 
Dear All
 
Best wishes for 2015!
 
I am interested in the modus operandi of Tontines and Susu savings. From what I understand they work as follows (correct me if I am wrong):
 
Tontine
The Principle: savings deposits are made at a fixed amount every day of the month. The first deposit is taken as commission for the treasurer. On the last day of the month the participant gets the full balance back, less the commission. There is no interest added.
 
My Questions:
1.       Does the Tontine work in groups or can this also be handled individually? In the first case we have a (group) treasurer as the money collector, in the 2nd case we can have a financial institution?
2.       Does the cycle always start on the first day of the month? Or can this be any day?
3.       If it can start on any day of the month, what is the last day? Is it 30 days later? Is it the calendar day of the start of the cycle plus one month?
4.       What happens on non-working days? Participants have to pay in advance? Participants can pay later to make up for skipp ed days?
5.       Are there penalties for non-payments or for late payments?
6.       What happens if after 10 days the participant stops paying altogether and wants his money back?
 
Susu Savings
The Principle: group members contribute a fixed amount (the same for all members) at (mostly) weekly intervals and each week a rotating member receives the full contribution of all the members.
 
My Questions:
1.       If a group has 5 members, I suppose nobody can quit until each one has had his turn? That is 5 weeks. What happens if someone quits before the end of the cycle?
2.       Can new people join before the cycle is over? What are the conditions with regards to payments to be made/to be received?
3.       Is there a commission for the treasurer?
 
Thanks in advance for any reactions.
 
Kind regards,
Hans V erkoijen
Crystal Clear Software Ltd.
PO Box 7463 Kampala, Uganda
King Fahd Plaza, 3rd floor, 52 Kampala Road
Tel: +256-(0)414-231739 Fax +256-(0)414-233644
Email:
verkoyen@imul.com or ccs@infocom.co.ug
 

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Posted by: jaashe@aol.com
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