The 11.8-kilometre Third Mainland Bridge, otherwise known as
Ibrahim Babangida Boulevard, is an architectural masterpiece, one of the
national monuments that define the metropolitan Lagos landscape.
The longest of the three bridges, including Eko and Carter
bridges, the facility links Lagos Island with a good proportion of mainland
Lagos.
Starting from Oworonshoki, the Third Mainland Bridge
connects the Oworonshoki-Oshodi-Apapa and the Lagos-Ibadan expressways, running
all the way down to Adeniji Adele Interchange on Lagos Island. Midway, the
edifice has a link bridge that connects the Herbert Macaulay Way in Yaba.
From the Oworonshoki end, the facility sleekly slits through
the still but deep-flowing Lagos Lagoon, seemingly cutting it into two unequal
halves. It then snakes its way, thrusting through the expansive, murky lagoon
waters, appearing in the distance like a major vein in the arm. It imposes
itself as one of those must-see features that define Lagos as an emerging mega
city.
With great speed, vehicles of all types roar past in both
directions along the bridge’s four-lane dual carriageway whose two innermost,
alternate lanes are now dedicated to the Bus Rapid Transport (BRT). Once on the
bridge, there is no waiting and no stopping.
Up on the bridge, an unusual aquatic settlement builds up on
the expanse of water on the right a few hundreds of metres away. The area’s
group of uncommon houses are an array of wooden contraptions standing on planks
and stilts driven deep into the water floor and raised few metres above the
water level. They are the Makoko shanties, home to the Ilaje, a thriving
community whose livelihood revolves around the water. The contraptions, spread
out on the waters, form hamlets that crouch around the glittering edifices of
the University of Lagos (UNILAG). Both contrasting communities share the lagoon
front and belong to the larger Bariga community.
Further on the bridge, the popular Ebute Metta sawmills and
plank market reveal themselves. Down on the water, there are columns of timber
loosely fastened together to prevent tidal waves from washing them away. The
logs take turns to be rolled into the mills overlooking the waterfront where
they are sawn into planks.
Then, to the east side, the lagoon stretches out far into
the distance, where settlements like Ikorodu, Lekki and Victoria Island loom large,
veiled by grey mist to form a the beautiful skyline mosaic that adds to the
splendour of Lagos.
History of the bridge
It is believed that the plan to build a third bridge to ease
the traffic congestion in Lagos and to support the Eko and Carter bridges began
in 1975. That means that various administrations might have given some cursory
look at the idea, but it was the government of the then military president,
Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, that started, completed and inaugurated the Third
Mainland Bridge. The inauguration took place in 1990 following the completion
of work by Julius Berger Plc.
And, naturally, the first set of official vehicles to go on
the bridge was the motorcade of Babangida on the day it was launched. He named
the facility Ibrahim Babangida Boulevard, a nomenclature that lost its worth
soon after.
The Third Mainland Bridge, it was believed, was the longest
in Africa. It provided motorists and commuters coming from Ikorodu, Ketu,
Ikeja, Gbagada as well as residents of parts of Ogun State going to the Island
easy access. However, it lost its number one status in 1996 after the launch of
the 6th October Bridge in Cairo, Egypt. But till this moment, it retains its
pride of place in West Africa.
Misfortunes set in
Over the past few years, the Third Mainland Bridge has been
suffered some setbacks as there has been no let up to the wave of stressors
buffeting it. Consequently, the edifice has had cause to be in the news for the
wrong reasons, with terrible things happening on it and around it.
Closed for repairs
In 2006, the Third Mainland Bridge was rumoured to be
vibrating. Some motorists were said to have reported cracks on the bridge, too,
fuelling fears of imminent disaster. Consequently, carrying out various repairs
became imperative. This led to major and partial closures of the bridge at some
point for work to be done on some portions. The last of such works was
completed in January 2013.
According to an expert, such repairs came sooner than
expected and signified that something was wrong.
“When a bridge starts having problems, when you are having
railings and construction joints dropping or cracks emerging and the lanes are
no longer comfortable for riding, when you see users complaining, when the
faults start becoming too noticeable, then it means that the bridge is having
problems,” said Dr. Olusegun Afolabi, a civil and structure engineer who
teaches in the Department of Civil and Structural Engineering, UNILAG.
Afolabi is worried that the Third Mainland Bridge has
undergone repairs sooner than expected.
According to him: “In engineering design, we don’t go to
infinity lifespan. We don’t expect that a structure will last forever. So we
usually start with 50 years. We believe that, with maintenance, a structure can
last up to 100 years before a total re-evaluation and rehabilitation work would
be carried out on it.
“But, unfortunately, the Third Mainland Bridge, at 20, has
gone through a major rehabilitation. Structures differ, depending on their
locations. In the case of bridges, we have a major deteriorating factor that
affects them, which is water. Some water bodies can be salty and acidic. These
have a lot of influence on the ability of a bridge to last. That is why we
usually put the initial lifespan of the bridge at 50. But at 20 they had done
major repair on the Third Mainland Bridge. The lagoon water could be a critical
factor in this situation. Also recall that there was a time the bridge was
closed for three months.”
Afolabi believes that the bridge is stressed, considering
the volume of traffic it carries daily, probably because that was not factored
in during its construction.
“If you ask me whether the bridge is stressed, my response
is yes. When we are designing a bridge, every point is being taken care of to
be a load bearer.
“Now, the effect of the environment can constitute a problem
to the bridge. Every design is made based on some criteria of safety, that
every part should be able to support some significant amount of load. For
instance, during use, there is routine traffic. Every vehicle should be able to
maintain some specific distance (that is a minimum of two metres) with the car
ahead of it, provided there is motion. We call this headway.
“But if you have cars stationary on the bridge due to a
gridlock, there is no way that can be controlled. Therefore, the continuous
gridlock on the Third Mainland Bridge means lots of loads for the bridge. The
authorities should know that piling up of vehicles is bad for the bridge,” he
said.
Describing the Third Mainland Bridge as a monument that must
be preserved and protected as much as possible, he regretted that the
authorities had not done enough to ensure that it would last for long: “At
every engineering conference we attend, we have been shouting that the bridge
be properly taken care of. We talk about maintenance of national
infrastructure.
“But our government is always nonchalant. The authorities
always wait until there is damage so that they would be able to spend big sums
of money on it.
“We have various ministries of works, FERMA, but what are they
doing? In all, there is a department that is lacking, Department of Research,
Planning and Statistics. This should supply data and statistics. If we have
this department and it is effective, its operators should be able to go to the
field, collect data and give advice. But if the advice is not leaving their
tables, they have not done anything.”
Accidents on the bridge
The Third Mainland Bridge has earned the unenviable moniker
as a theatre of accidents, with scores of fatal crashes recorded on it. Only
recently, several people sustained various degrees of injury in an auto crash
involving two vehicles heading to the mainland.
Vehicles had at some point, plunged from the bridge into the
waters beneath, sometimes with some of the passengers on board. Some had
somersaulted but were prevented from falling into the lagoon by the bridge’s
concrete edge.
Secretary, National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW),
Obalende Unit, Kazeen Adekunle, aka Puncher, admitted that accidents involving
commercial buses occur from time. He attributed this to the failure of the
braking system of such vehicles and the drink-driving of somedrivers.
He said, “What I know that causes accidents on the Third
Mainland Bridge is that some of our drivers usually drink and use some form of
substance before they drive.
“Look at those Volkswagen LT buses you see around, they
usually experience brake failures. Imagine a driver being under one form of
influence or the other. Imagine him applying his brakes and there is failure?
What will happen if not accident?”
But a commercial bus driver who identified himself as
Olalekan said not all drivers plying the bridge drink or smoke.
“There are a lot of us who are level-headed, who neither
drink nor smoke anything,” he argued, contending that an accident would occur
when it would. He, however, cautioned against over-speeding, which he blamed
for accidents that occasionally occurred on the bridge.
To forestall incidences of over-speeding, Afolabi
recommended that every driver plying the bridge needed to observe a maximum
speed of 60km per hour.
The engineer observed that, “A bridge such as the Third
Mainland Bridge is not a place one should be on and say one is an expert. We
have to be really cautious. That is why 60km per hour is the recommended maximum
speed. Everyone has to be cautious because it is an elevated height. At such
height, one doesn’t need to drive at one’s convenience but at the dictates of
the bridge. And what does the bridge demand? Safety! If one is driving at 60km
per hour, one can manage the wheels, but not at 100km per hour. That is why
sometimes vehicles summersault on the bridge and plunge into the waters.”
While admitting the spate of accidents of the bridge, the
Police Public Relations Officer, Lagos State police command, Famous
Olarinde-Cole (Assistant Superintendent of Police) noted that: “We are working
with the Lagos State Ambulance Services (LASAMBUS). They are stationed near the
Adekunle exit to attend to victims in case of an accident. They have been there
for a while and they are doing a nice job.”
In all, Adekunle, the NURTW scribe, advocated that all
motorists using the bridge should be regularly enlightened: “The way out is
education and enlightenment. Our drivers should know now that life is
important. They need to be enlightened and told that safety is first, life is
important. We need to regularly educate them to drive safely. They need to
drink less. We have been saying that here.
“Some of our drivers have family challenges. When they are
so engrossed in their challenges, accident occurs. We need to educate them. We
have been insisting that whenever they are on the wheel they should cast their
worries aside. Everybody needs to be reminded that they should not drink while
driving.”
He also called for stiff penalties against violation of
traffic rules on the bridge.
Suicide now rampant on the bridge
Now wait for this. Suicide and attempted suicide on the
Third Mainland Bridge is on the rise. It is now a preferred place for people
eager to end their lives unnoticed. They have been using the facility as a
launching pad to the great beyond. They pick a spot and take a plunge. Pronto,
they go down beneath the waters, dead.
Last March, for instance, a medical doctor, Allwell Orji,
jumped from the bridge into the lagoon and drowned. His body was fished out
days after, far from the point from where he plunged. The incident sparked a
wave of shock and surprise across the land.
Sources say that if records were kept, the number of those
who have either committed suicide or attempted to do so on the bridge might be
frightening.
“Suicide is now rampant on the Third Mainland Bridge,” Oba
Gbolahan Akanbi Timson, the Jagunmolu III of Somolu-Bariga, said on a
regrettable note.
The traditional ruler, whose palace is a shouting distance
from the bridge, told the correspondent: “The case of Allwell Orji was
celebrated because he was a medical doctor. And the incident happened in the
daytime. But so many other people have committed suicide on the same bridge
without anybody knowing it. They simply plunged into the lagoon and died. You
know that when that happens, their bodies will only be discovered in faraway
places after a long time. That is why nobody is able to keep records. And we
don’t have closed-circuit cameras on the bridge to monitor what goes on there.
“We ought to have passed that state as a nation. It is a
shame that this country, as big as it is, cannot boast of such devices. And we
cannot have sound data of our citizenry.”
To buttress the belief that many had been dying in the
lagoon without anyone knowing it, the Lagos State emergency rescue team had
fished out the body of a young man during the search for the missing doctor.
But the family of the late doctor insisted that the body was not Orji’s.
At a recent forum focusing on depression, a housewife, Mrs.
Antonia Abiola, relived how she almost committed suicide on the Third Mainland
Bridge but was prevailed upon to drop the idea by a certain Dr. Kadiri
Maymunah, an expert in stress and depression management. She spoke at the
Pinnacle Speak Out Initiative International.
“I was sexually abused while growing up by a man living with
us. Each time I saw him, now a preacher, I always felt terrible.
“So one day, I decided to end it all, and the Third Mainland
Bridge was the preferred spot. When my husband left home for work, I took the
children to school, came home and prepared myself for the worse.
“I had informed Dr. Maymunah of my intention, so she kept
calling my line. It was she that picked me up and took me to her hospital,” she
said.
Why people commit suicide on the bridge
Lagos residents have been expressing worry that many were
committing suicide on the bridge, attributing the trend, more than anything
else, to frustration.
“We are worried by this trend,” Adekunle said. “The other
time, you recall that it was a medical doctor who plunged into the water. That
couldn’t be a family problem. I wonder what kind of challenge a doctor would
have that would make him want to plunge into the water from that height? He had the money, he had comfort, it was a
huge surprise.
“But, if you ask me, I think that people are being driven to
commit suicide because of the hardship in town; no witch or wizard is
responsible for their actions, I tell you. If it has to do with any witch, we
are the witches and wizards ourselves. This recession in the country right now
is self-made. That is the problem government should be critically looking into.
Tell me who is able to eat three square meals these days? We are all crying;
let this government act now.”
Similarly, Oba Timson dismissed the presence of witches and
wizards on the bridge, describing those linking their supposed presence to the
accidents and suicide bids as illiterates.
“There are no witches and wizards operating there,” he
quipped. “That is far from the truth. Only illiterates believe in that. To
them, every little thing that happens at their door is caused by witches and
wizards. It is lame thinking. I don’t believe in it; it is not true.”
However, he admitted that, from time to time, the community
has appeased their ancestors and implored them to secure the bridge and keep
the people out of harm’s way. “It is a yearly affair, but there is hardly any
month that passes without us doing one. We do it through the Igunuko Festival,
Egungun Festival, Obatala Festival and Obaluaye Festival.
“When Ogun, the god of iron, is annoyed, things might begin
to happen on that bridge. Vehicles might veer off and plunge into the lagoon.
Some might summersault, leave the road and crash into people trading by the
roadside. At that point, it needs to be pacified.
“We do this regularly and when we don’t do it on time, you
see the signs knocking on the door. Accidents on the sea. You see uncommon
turbulence and rising tidal waves. Fishermen are declared missing.
“There are spirits living in the water. All we say to them
is, ‘please, do not come up to cause us this trouble. These are your things; we
have brought them.’ When they are due we will bring again.”
He contended that the rising suicide attempts on the Third
Mainland Bridge now were largely due to hardship: “I think the problem is that
things have gone out of hand. That is the bottom line. There is much pressure
on everyone now. The government is not in control of things. That is just it.
When the government is not in control of the economy, the citizens will suffer.
People begin to scream ‘what is this? Let me ease this tension by taking my
life.’
“Look at the case of the doctor who plunged into the lagoon.
Just look at the reason adduced for his action, family problem! It is sad.”
A clinical psychologist, Dr. Charles Umeh, said one could
not rule out a number of factors now driving people to suicide.
He contended that there could be, “Mental illness such as
hallucination, in which case people hear voices that might be telling them ‘you
are useless, just die.’ I tell you, people can act on those voices.
“Besides, some people may suffer disasters such as fraud.
Perhaps they lose their life earnings. Sometimes, something drastic may happen
to people and they feel they have lost integrity and cannot cope with it.
“Now, what they resolve to do is to escape from that
reality. They conclude that the best way out is to run away from the situation
by committing suicide.”
To Afolabi, stories of the presence of spirits in the water
and their purported appeasement by engineers before bridges could be
constructed had been around for long. But he said, while that could not be
discountenanced, it had no scientific basis.
“I have been hearing that myself,” he said. “But in all the
knowledge we have been taken through, it never happens. Maybe the white
engineers can explain that better.
“For instance, I have been hearing about a bridge in
Ikorodu, Lagos. People say that the white engineer who built it in those days
of yore vowed that he should be buried at the foot of the bridge. They say that
was the agreement he had with the water spirit before it could allow him do a
bridge across the river. We leave that in the realm of stories. Such don’t add
to our own scientific knowledge. It is knowledge that is not within the
confines of man-science. If ever it exists, it is not within the confines of
science, so it is beyond science.
“I, too, used to wonder how we make a bridge inside water
and it stands. But I don’t have facilities to go beyond that.”
Asked whether there might be forces on the Third Mainland
Bridge pulling people to do the unthinkable, he said: “The spirits, and the traditionalists
might know. I don’t know and don’t support that. Anything spiritual is beyond
man.
“Look at the man who jumped into the water the other time,
could he be having spiritual challenge even as a medical doctor? What could be
his problem? He was well-to-do and probably had no challenges. What could have
prompted him? Perhaps the spirits looked at him and said this is the person to
use. Again, this is a mystery.”
Gridlock
Vehicular traffic on the Third Mainland Bridge can be as
traumatic as it can be agonising. When vehicles break down in far away Ojota or
somewhere on the Oworonshoki-Oshodi Expressway, it can have painful, spill-over
effects on the bridge. But worst of all the pains is caused by the commercial
and private vehicle drivers’ bid to drop off their passengers at the
Oworonshoki end of the bridge. As simple as that may seem, it has indescribable
ripple effects in Obalende, Ikoyi and parts of Lagos Island.
On a very bad day, particularly a work day, as soon as one
gets on the bridge, heading out of the Island, one is confronted with traffic
build-up. A quick peep in the distance reveals a long stretch of vehicles
occupying the entire four lanes and appearing like a thin line as it fades.
This is made possible by the streetlight that now illuminates the edifice.
Every vehicle is stretched and stressed out with their occupants sitting
marooned and at the mercy of numbness. This is one hellish experience that
sometimes takes an upward of two hours to clear.
Adekunle blamed the traffic situation on drivers’ penchant
for switching lanes.
“Some people turning to Adeniji Adele are the problem. Even
those going to Oworonskoki would divert from one lane to the other thereby
slowing others down.
“People need to be told that if they are going to Oshodi for
instance, they shouldn’t be on the fast lane. Their diversion always causes
delay and sometimes accident. When a driver is on the fast lane and he’s
attempting to divert, he could cause others big problem,” he said.
A computer analyst, David Olalekan, who works on Victoria
Island, blamed passengers disembarking at the Oworonshoki end of the bridge for
the excruciating gridlock on the facility. This, he said, usually happened
during the rush hour when everyone was leaving the Island for home: “Those disembarking
at Oworonshoki are always in large numbers. They are usually the ones that
cause the problem. That might sound simple, but imagine 50 cars pulling over
every 20 minutes for their passengers to alight at the same spot and how long
it would take each driver to do so.”
Robbery, bestiality on the bridge
In Lagos, the moment there is traffic build-up, hawkers
gather to take advantage of the ‘market’. Then as dusk gradually descends,
traffic robbers displace the hawkers. Young men, some in their teens, emerge
from the blues. They go from car to car, robbing motorists and commuters
trapped in the gridlock. They call this operation “offering.” They are always
armed with guns, real and imaginary. Usually, they operate with the guts of the
gods, sometimes killing and maiming those who dare to resist them. Once they
show up, people begin to shiver and to surrender all they have on them.
On the Third Mainland Bridge, traffic robbers hold sway.
First are the dreaded “One Chance” robbers. They pick passengers, then at some
point on the bridge, they bring out their guns and begin to dispossess the
passengers of their valuables. Those who resist them risk death by being flung
into the lagoon.
Then there are robbers who cash in on the gridlock to rob
motorists and commuters. There are even “area boys.” The latter patrol the
bridge, waiting to pounce on those whose vehicles break down. After generously
administering slaps on them, they threaten them with machetes and other
dangerous objects. The victims must part with everything they have, including
their cell phones.
Many have suffered this brutality and bestiality. Even
policemen and other security personnel have tasted the bitter pill in full
measure.
An eyewitness, John Obaze, relived his experience to Daily
Sun: “Some time ago, we were in a private vehicle headed for the Island one
fateful afternoon. There was a crash, which caused a gridlock; every vehicle
was stationary. Just like in a movie, I saw three boys going from vehicle to
vehicle robbing their occupants; the one I saw clearly was wielding a shotgun.
“But no one knew that there were plain-clothes policemen
occupying a vehicle not far from ours. One of them drew his gun and fired,
killing one of the robbers instantly.”
Even the traditional ruler of Shomolu-Bariga, Oba Timson,
has something bitter to share about the activities of the bridge robbers.
“Their activities are real,” he said, adding that they are
not hoodlums, they are robbers. “A couple of years ago, my wife was held in
traffic on that bridge. I was at home when I received her distress call. ‘We
have been surrounded by robbers at the Oworonshoki end,’ she muttered and then
switched off. When I heard the way she sounded, I clearly perceived that she
was in grave danger. So, I quickly mobilised and we headed for the place with
some policemen.
“When we got there, the robbers were operating with so much
confidence. They were robbing as if nothing was wrong. If the police did not
fire some shots in time, apparently to scare them away, we could have arrested
many of them. But we succeeded in arresting two out of the lot. They knew their
route. So, some jumped from the bridge and cross over to the other side.
“When we took the arrested robbers to Adeniji Adele Police
Station on the Island, some of the policemen there told them: ‘yes, we have got
you now.’ To my surprise, they told us that they too had been robbed in the
past while on the bridge. They recalled how they were in their private car,
going home in the evening and were robbed while in traffic.
“One of the robbers we arrested told us he lived in far away
Mowe, Ogun State. He came all the way from there to rob on the bridge after
which he went back home. The other one said he came all the way from Ikorodu.
“An officer who was serving with the Special Anti-Robbery
Squad (SARS) told me that he too had also had the same nasty experience.
“So from then, some of the officers used that opportunity to
move to the bridge with their pistols while in plain clothes. When they
encounter them, they fire.”
Police intervention
One evening, a few months ago, the correspondent encountered
some police marksmen on the bridge. Each one of them was about a kilometre or
so apart from the other. They sat on the median, a finger on the trigger,
keeping watch over traffic flowing out of the Island. They were on the lookout
for the ‘bad boys’ who come out to harass commuters and people returning home
after many hectic hours in their offices and shops. Even in the day, a police
team is stationed close to the exit of Adekunle Bridge.
Lagos State police command spokesman, Famous-Cole, affirmed
that in the past two years a police team had been regularly deployed on the
bridge to ensure that people were safe.
“Incidences of robbery on the Third Mainland Bridge are now
a thing of the past,” he said. “Over time, we have had men of the Rapid
Response Squad (RRS) deployed there. They have been permanent on the facility.
We have some identified hot spots and stationed our men there. They are there
on 24 hours basis and I can tell you that in the past two years, we have not
had any incident.
“Besides, we now conduct aerial patrols to augment the
effort of the response team. So security on the bridge at the moment is 100 per
cent. I can testify to that. But we encourage any member of the public who has
any complaints to contact us as quickly as possible.
“We are also working with LASAMBUS. They have their
ambulances on the ready to pick up any victim in case there is any accident.
I’m sure that they too are doing well,” he said.
Lagos State goveernment intervention
Meanwhile, the Lagos State government has scaled up efforts
to reduce the pain of residents by constructing a pedestrian bridge at the
Oworonshoki end of the bridge to prevent people running across the road,
thereby causing accident or slowing down traffic.
The state government has also constructed two lay-bys on
both sides of the pedestrian bridge for drivers. The one receiving vehicles
returning from the Island is bigger and contains lanes for different categories
of vehicles. When passengers alight from the vehicles, their drivers pay a
token, depending on the type of vehicle they are driving.
The lay-by on the alternate side of the road is smaller and
understandably so. The area experiences less pressure.
Public Relations Officer, Lagos State Traffic Management
Authority (LASTMA), Mr. Hassan Mahmud, said the agency was able to do something
revolutionary to make things better because it was worried by the loss of
travel time on the bridge.
He said: “First, we had to engage professionals to carry out
a critical study of the traffic flow inward and outward the Island; we wanted
them to determine at what times of the day traffic in the area was heaviest.
Based on their findings, we drafted a special LASTMA squad, which resumes work
at the Oworonshoki end of the bridge at 5am and closes at 10pm every day. Their
job is to ensure smooth traffic flow inward and outward the Island.
“The squad is there with sophisticated tools, including
towing vans to remove broken down vehicles.
“Actually, we have been at that spot over the years but we
upgraded with the coming of the current governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode. We were
able to change our approach and throw more men into the beat.”
On the result of the effort, Mahmud declared that: “We have
been able to reduce travel time in and out of the Island to 10 minutes or less.
We want people to go to and return from the Island with less hassle. And we can
do more.”
A motorist, Adeola Oyedeji, told the correspondent that
efforts of the state government had helped in easing traffic both in the area
and on the bridge.
“Before now, the gridlock this spot used to cause was
enormous. People returning from the Island in the evening used to suffer
gravely. That situation has not been completely erased now, but it is a lot
better. We still experience terrible situations sometimes, but it is never as
bad as it used to be before,” he said.
As a way of curtailing incessant robberies on the bridge,
the Lagos State government has also constructed a strong metal mesh to fence
off random access to the bridge from the Bariga end. Now, robbers from the area
can no longer climb or jump from the bridge, unlike before. The opposite side
is part of the lagoon; robbers will find it difficult to access the bridge from
there.
“Efforts to fight the robbers informed the erection of those
metal barriers you see on the concrete railings of the bridge,” Oba Timson
disclosed.
“This is to prevent them from jumping from there. Anyone who
jumps from that height now must be on a suicide mission and that is better for
them. If they run from police bullets, let them jump to their death,” he said.
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