Eight Plead Guilty To Involvement With Armenian Crime Ring

EIGHT PLEAD GUILTY TO INVOLVEMENT WITH ARMENIAN CRIME RING

Glendale News Press, CA
Sept 11 2013

September 11, 2013 | 5:54 p.m.

Eight people, including four who live in Burbank, Glendale and
Montrose, pleaded guilty Monday to various charges, including
racketeering conspiracy, bank fraud and identity theft, centered around
the activities of an Armenian organized crime ring, authorities said.

The eight are among the 70 people charged two years ago during a
massive regional crackdown against the gang called Armenian Power.

Fifty-one other defendants have pleaded guilty, according to a U.S.

attorney’s office news release.

Two of the defendants who pleaded guilty Monday – identified by
authorities as Khachatur “Khecho” Arakelyan, 39, and Adam Davoodian,
32 – lived in Glendale, while two others lived in Burbank and Montrose,
respectively, the document states.

Arakelyan pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft for his
involvement in secretly planting credit card skimming devices at 99
Cents Only stores across Southern California.

The scheme caused hundreds of victims to lose more than $2 million.

Arakelyan faces up to two years in prison.

Davoodian pleaded guilty to possession of marijuana for distribution
and faces up to 20 years in prison.

Montrose resident Raymond “Rye” Tarverdyan, 35, who was also reportedly
involved in the skimming scheme, pleaded guilty to racketeering
conspiracy and bank fraud and faces up to 50 years in prison.

Burbank resident Artur “Cham” Pembejian, 36, pleaded guilty to
racketeering conspiracy after abetting the illegal possession of a
firearm by a gang leader, according to the document. Pembejian faces
up to 20 years in prison.

The defendants are scheduled to be sentenced in November.

Armenian Power, which formed in East Hollywood in the 1980s, is
believed to have more than 250 documented members and hundreds of
associates, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

— Alene Tchekmedyian

,0,4547509.story

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/news/tn-gnp-me-eight-plead-guilty-to-involvement-with-armenian-crime-ring-20130911

In Armenia, Like Father, Like Son

IN ARMENIA, LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON

EurasiaNet.org
Sept 11 2013

September 11, 2013 – 10:58am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

The many benefits of being a high-profile public official or his scion
in Armenia apparently include getting away with violence and murder.

At least that is how human rights defenders have reacted to the
September 8 decision to drop all murder charges against the son of
former strongman governor, Suren Khachatrian.

In a Quentin-Tarantino-esque shootout near the ex-governor’s mansion
in the southeastern town of Goris, Khachatrian fils this June shot
dead local businessman Avetik Budaghian. Budaghian’s brother Artak,
a military officer, was wounded in the clash with Kachatrian’s son,
Tigran, and his bodyguards.

Tigran Khachatrian and one of the bodyguards were arrested on murder
and illegal weapons possession charges, but were released after the
military police, which are handling the case, decided that all the
shots fired by Khachatrian were made in self-defense. Human rights
activists, the victims’ family and the family’s lawyer all have
condemned the ruling. A local representative of Human Rights Watch
alleged in a conversation with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty that
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, a former defense minister, may
personally have pushed for the ex-gubernatorial son.

Suren Khachatrian, who used to run the province as his personal
fiefdom, is believed to have been a vote hoarder for President Sargsyan
and the ruling Republican Party of Armenia.Voter support for the duo
reportedly ran stronger in Syunik than anywhere else in Armenia.

It has been widely suggested that this quid-pro-quo relationship
kept Kachatrian in office despite his long alleged record of
violent behavior. Allegations like assaulting a journalist and
a businesswoman had been piling up against Kachatrian, but never
resulted in indictments or dismissal.

Khachatrian père tendered his resignation after the shooting incident,
but, critics say, he can still call in favors with the establishment.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67492

Linkevicius And Nalbandian Discussed Armenia’s Intention To Join The

LINKEVICIUS AND NALBANDIAN DISCUSSED ARMENIA’S INTENTION TO JOIN THE CUSTOMS UNION

The Baltic Course
Sept 11 2013

Petras Vaida, BC, Vilnius, 11.09.2013.Print version

On 7 September, the Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs Linas
Linkevicius met with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia
Edward Nalbandian, who is paying a visit to Vilnius, and discussed
the announcement of 3 September that Armenia had decided to seek the
Customs Union membership, informed BC Lithuania’s MFA.

The Armenian Foreign Minister assured L.LinkeviÄ~Mius that Armenia
wished to continue to participate actively in the Eastern Partnership
programme.

The Lithuanian Foreign Minister stressed that there was a need to
continue consultations and to assess the situation; however, the
Minister saw an incompatibility between Armenia’s membership of the
Customs Union and participation in a deep and comprehensive free
trade area with the EU.

“We respect Armenia’s will, but we must emphasise that the decision to
join the Customs Union diminishes Armenia’s ambitions of integration
in and cooperation with the EU,” L.LinkeviÄ~Mius said.

The Minister L.LinkeviÄ~Mius noted that in this context it was
important to look towards the future and not to waste what Armenia
had achieved during the 5 years of its participation in the Eastern
Partnership programme, as well as during the negotiations on the
Association Agreement.

According to L.LinkeviÄ~Miaus, the visit of the Armenian Foreign
Minister shows that the country wishes to cooperate with the EU and
to participate in the Eastern Partnership programme.

http://www.baltic-course.com/eng/baltic_states_cis/?doc=80358

On Accountability: The ARF And Its ‘Ties That Bind’

ON ACCOUNTABILITY: THE ARF AND ITS ‘TIES THAT BIND’

Wednesday, September 11th, 2013

BY SUZANNE KHARDALIAN

I am happy to say that my previous article titled “A Frank Discussion
about the ARF” has elicited reactions, both positive and very angry.

Well, I would not be exposing a big secret if I said that was exactly
my intention. I did not intend to upset people, but instead to initiate
dialogue and put forward arguments about issues on which discussion
is needed and about which formation of a consensus for future action
cannot be delayed.

I am very aware that there is a silent majority that has no idea
about what to do with the issues I have raised-or with the article
for that matter. These are sensitive issues. This is about our future,
and we do need a frank discussion.

Among those who had taken time to respond were some who were of
the opinion that the concerns I had raised in my column should not
have been given space in the ARF-affiliated newspapers. So much for
openness! Others were offended that I was unnecessarily defaming the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation and its members- that I was stabbing
the party and its organizational structure in the back.

However, people were mostly angered by my final statement, which read,
“a political organization that accepts its gradual degeneration to
become a mere campaign machine is beyond doubt doomed in the long run.”

Today I would like to talk about one important aspect concerning the
ARF-especially its activities in Armenia; one that has to do with the
scope of the organization’s activities as it relates to what I will
describe as the political party’s “footprint,”-its relative “reach”
or on-the-ground “presence”-and its ability to connect with voters
across a country’s geographic expanse.

Political parties with broad footprint have a local presence in
all or most of a country’s electoral districts, while those with a
lesser reach are characterized by the absence of a local presence in
non-negligible portions of the country. The idea of reach and presence
is directly linked to the issue of accountability.

But before talking about accountability, let me further distinguish
between three aspects of the footprint. Each of these represents a
distinct “transmission belt,” through which political parties, and
in this case the ARF, may reach voters and establish relations for
democratic accountability: the formal, informal, and civil society
footprints.

When I speak about the formal footprint, I have in mind what most
closely resembles an organization operating in an entire territory and
therefore requires maintaining local branch offices or chapters and
affiliated organizations. The ARF excels in this. We have organizations
that are affiliated with the ARF ideology and political course,
such as youth groups-the AYFs; athletic organizations-the Homenetmen;
women’s groups-the ARS, etc. These are organizations that are staffed
or volunteer-operated by supporters or partisan cadres some with
formalized and official ties to the national-level party organization.

On the other hand the informal footprint is in some sense the mirror
image of the “official” local presence, in which developing connections
with voters is delegated to non-partisan “stakeholders”-influential
individuals, neighborhood leaders, sometimes even religious leaders-who
secure voter support and electoral-campaign participation without
maintaining formalized and symbolic ties to the ARF as an organization,
but who nonetheless maintain a relationship with the party leadership,
even on the local level. The ARF has had a long experience in working
with these “stakeholders.”

Finally, and this is a very recent development, like other political
parties, the ARF and its political figures have tried to contract
out their capacity to reach the public more openly, through the
mechanism of civil society organizations. However, the approach to
this particular footprint has been tenuous at best. The party could
have drawn on the support of a number of interest groups, including
NGOs, that serve specific interests in the economic and socio-cultural
sphere of the Armenian state, but has failed to do so.

The aforementioned forms of outreach that seem so familiar to all of
us are not mutually exclusive. But the importance of maintaining these
distinctions lies in the fact that they are crucial in explaining our
“relationship-building” strategies and our organizational structure.

The motivating question becomes, how does the ARF’s organizational
outreach affect its leaders’ ability to engage in strategies for
connecting with citizens (clients)? Furthermore, does the ARF’s
model and democratic accountability in Armenia allow us to analyze
the relationship between its organizational structure and voters?

Why does a party that devotes so much effort to appeal to the
electorate exhibit only moderate, not to say poor, success? Why do
our efforts not turn into actual voter turnout and support?

What we are seeing today in Armenia is that the ARF’s organizational
reach does not function at all. Meanwhile, a notion I will call
“clientelism” is gaining ground on the country’s political landscape.

Clientelism is the exchange of goods and services for political
support. It is a political system at the heart of which is an
asymmetric relationship between groups of political actors, the
patrons/oligarchs and clients and political parties. A key to
understanding “clientelism” might lie in stressing asymmetries in
power or standing.

So “Clientelism” is the effort by politicians to offer citizens
“client-like” incentives in order to mobilize them as voters, e.g.

paving their neighborhood streets right before elections. A look at
how the last three elections were formulated around these services
illustrates my point.

While we can talk at length about the causes of this phenomenon,
the organizational structure of the ARF, and other political parties
for that matter, has never been investigated as the root cause of
the situation we find ourselves in today.

So, does the organizational structure of a political party matter
for viable accountability in the democracy we want to build? Or, is
organizational structure of secondary importance, with the success
of a party’s outreach strategies entirely dependent on economic and
political realities that cannot be manipulated by politicians? One
obvious factor here is a country’s level of economic development. It
has been invariably proven to constitute a powerful predictor of
“clientelism.”

A second factor is democratic experience. It takes time and practice
in party competition to make our politicians, partisan labels, and
policy standpoints familiar and credible to the public. In a young
democracy such as Armenia, the voters face exceptional uncertainty
about the programmatic claims of competing political groups.

When voters demand concrete results, politicians often oblige with
a vague “accounting” of the accomplishments-services they have
provided-to their constituents. They cite selective and targeted
efforts that can easily be observed instead of good public service and
policies with long-term benefits that accrue to improve the well-being
of the entire population. Of course, pre-independence infrastructures
that still persist have been hindering our progress, too.

How do the ARF’s political leaders in Armenia decide which
relationship-building approaches will be the best, given their
limited resources?

How will expansion of the party’s informal footprint alter its optimal
allocation of resources to counter the “clientelist” approach to
politics? This modality refers to the ability for a political party,
in this case the ARF in Armenia, to delegate responsibilities
to non-affiliated entities and leveraging their pre-established
relationships within the social and/or geographic constituencies.

For a variety of reasons, the activists and staff who populate the
formal organizational structures of the ARF in Armenia often lack
this direct connection. Thus, the opportunity to rely on informal
social structures to deter “clientelistic” politics is missed.

Another distinct mechanism, which may burden the formal organization
vis-a-vis the informal organization, has to do with the views held
by party members. Formal party members, who have not stumbled on the
party but have made an explicit choice to join might feel a sense of
entitlement that manifests itself in a variety of ways, among them
a desire to control the fate of the organization.

For one thing, at least some party members may demand transparency
and say over the party’s resource flow. For another, in addition
to selective material and social incentives, at least some party
members will advocate “useful” incentives that involve programmatic,
if not ideological aspirations, and altruistic objectives, such
as promoting a genuine commitment to social progress and community
service by providing collective goods. And here I come to the question
of accountability.

In choosing between formal and informal organizational strategy we
have to remember that there are certain consequences of informal
organization that impact democratic accountability, and particularly,
programmatic accountability. If the party chooses a primarily informal
organization strategy for reaching out, it creates a situation
where the party places few limits on the national party leaders’
perceived needs to make rapid policy shifts, as there is no formal
organizational cadre that can confront them, let alone one that might
harbor programmatic policy demands.

Without formal organizational structures, the ideologically-minded
citizens of Armenia will have no outlet for their aspirations. Let
us not forget that the ARF has been a platform, a forum, for the
expression and cultivation of such preferences. Simultaneously, by
ignoring the formal organization, or simply not maintaining formal
branch offices and auxiliary groups, the ARF has created a symbolic
void which complicates the choice of programmatic objectives, and
their association with particular party organizations.

Because of these gaps-the ideological activists and clear symbolic
presence necessary for disseminating programmatic stances at the
local level-the ARF will be unable to reinforce its messages.

Returning to my previous article’s responses, what I find sad and
what’s often missing from these conversations are the essential
foundations that make effective accountability possible. We all know
that most of us will react negatively to bad news. We will either
become defensive, protesting that we have been misunderstood and
unfairly judged, or dismissive, discounting both the credibility of
the information and the integrity of the messenger.

Yet effective accountability occurs when we really listen and react
affirmatively to tough realities. Effective accountability happens
when we take criticism of deficiencies in our performance or moral
lapses to heart, and become fully committed to the hard work and
difficult changes required to make things better.

With accountability also comes trust. Something the ARF is in great
need of.

Trust is a marvelous resource because it grows with use. But in
order to trust someone, we must have confidence in their integrity,
benevolence, and abilities. Integrity is our perception that the ARF
as a party acts consistently on a set of moral principles that we
endorse and value. To trust the party, we must see it as an entity
that strives to live with virtue and honor. Benevolence exists when
we believe that the party is deeply motivated by a desire to help us
rather than by selfish interests to benefit itself.

Why should Armenians in Los Angeles, New York, Stockholm or Beirut
be discussing the ARF’s activities in Armenia? Because the ARF is
one entity-it has been since 1890. The ARF’s performance in Armenia
directly impacts the ARF organization worldwide.

http://asbarez.com/113752/on-accountability-the-arf-and-its-%E2%80%98ties-that-bind%E2%80%99/

More Than 500 Million Watches How Ozbilis Performs Corner Kick

MORE THAN 500 MILLION WATCHES HOW OZBILIS PERFORMS CORNER KICK

19:49, 11 September, 2013

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS: The moment when Aras Ozbilis fell
when performing corner kick during Armenia-Denmark football match in
framework of World Cup 2014 qualification round has been watched more
than 500 million times.

“Armenpress” reports that Danish national football team defeated
Armenia 1:0 on September 10 in Yerevan.

In group B of World Cup 2014 qualification round leader is Italy
with 20 points after 8 matches. Denmark has 12 points (8 matches),
Bulgaria 13 points (8 matches), Czech Republic 9 points (8 matches),
Armenia 9 points (8 matches) and Malta 3 points (8 matches).

On October 11 Armenia will face Bulgaria in Yerevan.

© 2009 ARMENPRESS.am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mnxhlm3hEmc
http://armenpress.am/eng/news/732611/more-than-500-million-watches-how-ozbilis-performs-corner-kick.html

Expert: Armenia May Take Advantages Of Russia-Proposed Eurasian Corr

EXPERT: ARMENIA MAY TAKE ADVANTAGES OF RUSSIA-PROPOSED EURASIAN CORRIDOR IF ABKHAZIAN RAILWAY SECTION OPENS

YEREVAN, September 11. /ARKA/. Armenia may take advantages of the
Eurasian corridor that Russia has proposed to open if the railroad
stretching across Georgia’s breakaway Abkhazia opens, Aram Safaryan,
head of an NGO called Integration and Development, said Wednesday
in Novosti International Press Center. The Russia-proposed corridor
stretches from its Far East region to the European Union’s border.

“Specialists have calculated that if this corridor works properly,
in accordance with its technical and economic regulations, cargo
transportation from the Far East to Europe will take less time, up
to 50 days, in the future thanks to immense government investments,
and it may become cheaper,” Safaryan said.

“But only the opening of the Abkhazian section of the railway would
give this advantage to Armenia.”

Safaryan said if the Abkhazian railway starts functioning, it would
benefit Armenia’s trade with Russia and its partners.

“China is our second biggest trade partner after Russia, and the
first partner, if gas component is not taken into account. Our trade
turnover amounted to almost $500 million in 2012.”

Safaryan also said that prices for Chinese goods may be other, if
the Abkhazian section is opened.

“The status of observer at Shanghai Cooperation Organization
will become reasonable if we solve important problems within the
Commonwealth of Independent States,” he said.

In his words, specialists find prospects for the opening very high
given political processes in Georgia. —0—

16:49 11.09.2013

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/expert_armenia_may_take_advantages_of_russia_proposed_eurasian_corridor_if_abkhazian_railway_section/

Armenia May Lose Sovereignty Because Of Authorities – Styopa Safarya

ARMENIA MAY LOSE SOVEREIGNTY BECAUSE OF AUTHORITIES – STYOPA SAFARYAN

17:23 ~U 11.09.13

Tweet

Secretary of the Heritage party Styopa Safaryan regrets that Armenia’s
authorities have brought the country to the point of losing its
sovereignty and right to choose strategic partners.

“It is most dangerous. All the forces concerned over Armenia’s national
interests must stop this process,” Safaryan told a press conference on
Armenia’s choice between the Customs Union and the European Union (EU).

Joining the Customs Union will disturb Armenia’s foreign policy
balance.

“One thing is clear: we are facing a new reality. We must not contrast
an Association Agreement with the EU with the Customs Union.

By signing the Association Agreement with the EU Armenia will not
disturb its foreign policy balance, whereas it will do so by joining
the Customs Union,” Safaryan said.

Because of Armenia’s geopolitical location the country’s political
and military security has to date been guaranteed due to the balance
between external forces, with Russia being one of them and the EU
being the rest, Safaryan said.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Congressional Hellenic Caucus Co-Chairs Seek Adoption Of Armenian Ge

CONGRESSIONAL HELLENIC CAUCUS CO-CHAIRS SEEK ADOPTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TRUTH & JUSTICE RESOLUTION

16:12 11.09.2013

In yet another demonstration of the enduring and increasingly energized
Armenian-Hellenic partnership, U.S. Representatives Michael Bilirakis
(R-FL) and Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), the Co-Chairs of the Congressional
Hellenic Caucus, are backing the adoption of the Armenian Genocide
Truth and Justice Resolution (H.Res.227), reported the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA).

“We join Armenian Americans across the country and with all of
our Hellenic American coalition partners in thanking Congressman
Bilirakis and Congresswoman Maloney for their leadership in support
of a truthful and just international resolution of Turkey’s crime
of genocide against Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians and other Christian
nations,” said Aram Hamparian, ANCA Executive Director.

“Greeks, Armenians, and all our fellow U.S. citizens who seek to
advance American ideals look forward to the day when our White House
will, at long last, end its complicity in Ankara’s genocide denials
and begin the process of moving the Turkish society and state toward
the acceptance of their full moral and material responsibilities for
this crime.”

Representatives Maloney and Bilirakis join as cosponsors with a broad
range of senior Congressional leaders, including many serving on key
foreign policy and appropriations panels, who have already lent their
support to this groundbreaking human rights measure. The bipartisan
resolution seeks improved Armenian-Turkish ties based upon Turkey’s
acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide and a just international
resolution of this still unpunished crime.

Introduced and spearheaded by Congressmen David Valadao (R-CA), Adam
Schiff (D-CA), Michael Grimm (R-NY) and Frank Pallone (D-NJ) in May of
this year, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution reflects
and reinforces previous U.S. affirmation of the Armenian Genocide
as a crime of genocide, citing the U.S. Government’s May 28, 1951
written statement to the International Court of Justice regarding
the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide, President Ronald Reagan’s April 22, 1981 Proclamation and
Congressional adoption of Armenian Genocide legislation in 1975 and
1984. H.Res.227 calls on “the President to work toward equitable,
constructive, stable, and durable Armenian-Turkish relations based
upon the Republic of Turkey’s full acknowledgment of the facts and
ongoing consequences of the Armenian Genocide, and a fair, just, and
comprehensive international resolution of this crime against humanity.”

The resolution specifically references that “the Republic of Turkey,
rather than acknowledging and reckoning with painful elements of the
past, has escalated its international campaign of Armenian Genocide
denial, maintained its blockade of Armenia, and increased its pressure
on the small but growing Turkish civil society movement acknowledging
the Armenian Genocide and seeking justice for this systematic campaign
of destruction of millions of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Pontians,
Syriacs, and other Christians upon their biblical-era homelands.”

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/09/11/congressional-hellenic-caucus-co-chairs-seek-adoption-of-armenian-genocide-truth-justice-resolution/

Deputy Director "HRW" Europe And Asia: "Azerbaijani Authorities Refe

DEPUTY DIRECTOR “HRW” EUROPE AND ASIA: “AZERBAIJANI AUTHORITIES REFER TO CRITICISM PRIMITIVELY AND NARROW-MINDEDLY”

13:37 11/09/2013 ” IN THE WORLD

Rachel Denber, Human Rights Watch’s Deputy Director of the Europe
and Central Asia Division, commented in an interview given to “Turan”
on critics of the official Baku which blame the organization in being
“biased and prejudiced.”

“It was strange to hear all these allegations and to realize that
the Azerbaijani authorities refer to criticism so primitively and
narrow-mindedly. Why should the call to improve the state of human
rights be regarded as support for the enemies?” she said.

Agency reminds that the Azerbaijani government has expressed its
dissatisfaction with the last report of the organization. The report
speaks about the suppression of civil society by the authorities of
Azerbaijan on the eve of the presidential election.

Representatives of official Baku accused “HRW” of cooperation with
the enemies of Azerbaijan and the Armenian lobby.

“Our report was on a crackdown on fundamental rights–freedom of
expression, association, and assembly–that’s been under way for the
past 18 months. It’s a crackdown that started well over a year ago
but intensified as the election drew nearer,” she noted.

When asked how the country should improve its human rights record
now, she answered, the first step should be for the government
to acknowledge that many of the activists whose cases were very
carefully detailed in our report were arrested on flimsy grounds and
to release them.

According to her, in this way the government of Azerbaijan “will show
that it is serious about investigating attacks and threats against
investigative journalists,” she added.

In early September, “Human Rights Watch” released another report
on Azerbaijan, which read that In the run-up to the presidential
elections, the Azerbaijani authorities deliberately carry out the
strategy of arbitrary restriction of dissent.

Source: Panorama.am

Premier: Armenia Remains Willing To Continue Integration In Europe

PREMIER: ARMENIA REMAINS WILLING TO CONTINUE INTEGRATION IN EUROPE

YEREVAN, September 11. /ARKA/. Armenia remains steadfast in its
determination to continue integrating in Europe and implementing
reforms, Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan said Wednesday as
met with his Belgian counterpart, Elio Di Rupo, in China where the
Armenian premier traveled to attend the World Economic Forum 2013.

Sargsyan expressed hope that Belgium will support Armenia in its
efforts to integrate in Europe.

According to the press office of the Armenian government, the prime
ministers described their countries’ economic things to each other
and outlined plans for the future.

Elio Di Rupo told the Armenian premier that signs of stabilization
have already emerged in Europe’s economy.

The Belgian and Armenian prime ministers also discussed bilateral
cooperation. In particular, they spoke about the accelerator created
under Belgium’s support for the oncology center that is being
constructed now in Yerevan.

On October 7, 2010, the Armenian government approved a draft
agreement to borrow ~@5,800,000 from Belgium’s KBC BANK NV
for acquiring a cyclotron radionuclide accelerator as part
of a program of the establishment of a nuclear medicine
and oncology center. The construction of the center was
estimated to cost ~@30-million. —0—- – See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/premier_armenia_remains_willing_to_continue_integration_in_europe/#sthash.zXzzWmtU.dpuf