Coronavirus: 38 days when Britain
sleepwalked into disaster
Boris Johnson skipped five Cobra meetings on the virus,
calls to order protective gear were ignored and
scientists’ warnings fell on deaf ears. Failings in
February may have cost thousands of lives
By Jonathan Calvert, George
Arbuthnott and Jonathan Leake
April 19, 2020
"Information
Clearing House"
-
The Times
On the third
Friday of January a silent and stealthy killer was
creeping across the world. Passing from person to
person and borne on ships and planes, the
coronavirus was already leaving a trail of bodies.
The virus had
spread from China to six countries and was almost
certainly in many others. Sensing the coming danger, the
British government briefly went into wartime mode that
day, holding a meeting of Cobra, its national crisis
committee.
But it took just
an hour that January 24 lunchtime to brush aside the
coronavirus threat. Matt Hancock, the health secretary,
bounced out of Whitehall after chairing the meeting and
breezily told reporters the risk to the UK public was
“low”.
This was despite
the publication that day of an alarming study by Chinese
doctors in the medical journal, The Lancet. It assessed
the lethal potential of the virus, for the first time
suggesting it was comparable to the 1918 Spanish flu
pandemic, which killed up to 50 million people.
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Unusually,
Boris Johnson had been absent from Cobra. The
committee — which includes ministers,
intelligence chiefs and military generals —
gathers at moments of great peril such as
terrorist attacks, natural disasters and other
threats to the nation and is normally chaired by
the prime minister.
Johnson had found
time that day, however, to join in a lunar new year
dragon eyes ritual as part of Downing Street’s reception
for the Chinese community, led by the country’s
ambassador.
It was a big day
for Johnson and there was a triumphal mood in Downing
Street because the withdrawal treaty from the European
Union was being signed in the late afternoon. It could
have been the defining moment of his premiership - but
that was before the world changed.
That afternoon his
spokesman played down the looming threat from the east
and reassured the nation that we were “well prepared for
any new diseases”. The confident, almost nonchalant,
attitude displayed that day in January would continue
for more than a month.
Johnson went on to
miss four further Cobra meetings on the virus. As
Britain was hit by unprecedented flooding, he completed
the EU withdrawal, reshuffled his cabinet and then went
away to the grace-and-favour country retreat at
Chevening where he spent most of the two weeks over
half-term with his pregnant fiancee, Carrie Symonds.
It would not be
until March 2 — another five weeks — that Johnson would
attend a Cobra meeting about the coronavirus. But by
then it was almost certainly too late. The virus had
sneaked into our airports, our trains, our workplaces
and our homes. Britain was on course for one of the
worst infections of the most deadly virus to have hit
the world in more than a century.
Last week, a
senior adviser to Downing Street broke ranks and blamed
the weeks of complacency on a failure of leadership in
cabinet. In particular, the prime minister was singled
out.
“There’s no way
you’re at war if your PM isn’t there,” the adviser said.
“And what you learn about Boris was he didn’t chair any
meetings. He liked his country breaks. He didn’t work
weekends. It was like working for an old-fashioned chief
executive in a local authority 20 years ago. There was a
real sense that he didn’t do urgent crisis planning. It
was exactly like people feared he would be.”
Inquiry
‘inevitable’
One day there will
inevitably be an inquiry into the lack of preparations
during those “lost” five weeks from January 24. There
will be questions about when politicians understood the
severity of the threat, what the scientists told them
and why so little was done to equip the National Health
Service for the coming crisis. It will be the
politicians who will face the most intense scrutiny.
Among the key
points likely to be explored will be why it took so long
to recognise an urgent need for a massive boost in
supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) for
health workers; ventilators to treat acute respiratory
symptoms; and tests to detect the infection.
Any inquiry may
also ask whether the government’s failure to get to
grips with the scale of the crisis in those early days
had the knock-on effect of the national lockdown being
introduced days or even weeks too late, causing many
thousands more unnecessary deaths.
A Sunday Times
Insight investigation has talked to scientists,
academics, doctors, emergency planners, public officials
and politicians about the root of the crisis and whether
the government should have known sooner and acted more
swiftly to kick-start the government machine and put the
National Health Service onto a war footing.
They told us that,
contrary to the official line, Britain was in a poor
state of readiness for a pandemic. Emergency stockpiles
of PPE had severely dwindled and gone out of date after
becoming a low priority in the years of austerity cuts.
The training to prepare key workers for a pandemic had
been put on hold for two years while contingency
planning was diverted to deal with a possible no-deal
Brexit.
This made it
doubly important that the government hit the ground
running in late January and early February. Scientists
said the threat from the coming storm was clear. Indeed,
one of the government’s key advisory committees was
given a dire warning a month earlier than has previously
been admitted about the prospect of having to deal with
mass casualties.
It was a message
repeated throughout February but the warnings appear to
have fallen on deaf ears. The need, for example, to
boost emergency supplies of protective masks and gowns
for health workers was pressing, but little progress was
made in obtaining the items from the manufacturers,
mainly in China.
Instead, the
government sent supplies the other way - shipping
279,000 items of its depleted stockpile of protective
equipment to China during this period, following a
request for help from the authorities there.
Impending danger
The British prime
minister had been sunning himself with his girlfriend in
the millionaires’ Caribbean resort of Mustique when
China first alerted the World Health Organisation (WHO)
on December 31 that several cases of an unusual
pneumonia had been recorded in Wuhan, a city of 11
million people in Hubei province.
In the days that
followed China initially claimed the virus could not be
transmitted from human to human, which should have been
reassuring. But this did not ring true to Britain’s
public health academics and epidemiologists who were
texting each other, eager for more information, in early
January.
Devi Sridhar,
professor of global public health at Edinburgh
University, had predicted in a talk two years earlier
that a virus might jump species from an animal in China
and spread quickly to become a human pandemic. So the
news from Wuhan set her on high alert.
“In early January
a lot of my global health colleagues and I were kind of
discussing ‘What’s going on?’” she recalled. “China
still hadn’t confirmed the virus was human-to-human. A
lot of us were suspecting it was because it was a
respiratory pathogen and you wouldn’t see the numbers of
cases that we were seeing out of China if it was not
human-to-human. So that was disturbing.”
By as early as
January 16 the professor was on Twitter calling for
swift action to prepare for the virus. “Been asked by
journalists how serious #WuhanPneumonia outbreak is,”
she wrote. “My answer: take it seriously because of
cross-border spread (planes means bugs travel far &
fast), likely human-to-human transmission and previous
outbreaks have taught overresponding is better than
delaying action.”
Events were now
moving fast. Four hundred miles away in London, from its
campus next to the Royal Albert Hall, a team at Imperial
College’s School of Public Health led by Professor Neil
Ferguson produced its first modelling assessment of the
likely impact of the virus. On Friday, January 17, its
report noted the “worrying” news that three cases of the
virus had been discovered outside China — two in
Thailand and one in Japan. While acknowledging many
unknowns, researchers calculated that there could
already be as many as 4,000 cases. The report warned:
“The magnitude of these numbers suggests substantial
human-to-human transmission cannot be ruled out.
Heightened surveillance, prompt information-sharing and
enhanced preparedness are recommended.”
By now the mystery
bug had been identified as a type of coronavirus — a
large family of viruses that can cause infections
ranging from the common cold to severe acute respiratory
syndrome (SARS). There had been two reported deaths from
the virus and 41 patients had been taken ill.
The following
Wednesday, January 22, the government convened its first
meeting of its scientific advisory group for emergencies
(SAGE) to discuss the virus. Its membership is secret
but it is usually chaired by the government’s chief
scientific adviser, Sir Patrick Vallance, and chief
medical adviser, Professor Chris Whitty. Downing Street
advisers are also present.
There were new
findings that day with Chinese scientists warning that
the virus had an unusually high infectivity rate of up
to 3.0, which meant each person with the virus would
typically infect up to three more people.
One of those
present was Imperial’s Ferguson, who was already working
on his own estimate — putting infectivity at 2.6 and
possibly as high as 3.5 — which he sent to ministers and
officials in a report on the day of the Cobra meeting on
January 24. The Spanish flu had an estimated infectivity
rate of between 2.0 and 3.0, so Ferguson’s finding was
shocking.
The professor’s
other bombshell in the same report was that there needed
to be a 60 per cent cut in the transmission rate - which
meant stopping contact between people. In layman’s terms
it meant a lockdown, a move that would paralyse an
economy already facing a battering from Brexit. At the
time such a suggestion was unthinkable in the government
and belonged to the world of post-apocalypse movies.
The growing alarm
among scientists appears not to have been heard or
heeded by policy-makers. After the January 25 Cobra
meeting, the chorus of reassurance was not just from
Hancock and the prime minister’s spokesman: Whitty was
confident too.
“Cobra met today
(Sunday) to discuss the situation in Wuhan, China,” said
Whitty. “We have global experts monitoring the situation
around the clock and have a strong track record of
managing new forms of infectious disease . . . there are
no confirmed cases in the UK to date.”
However, by then
there had been 1,000 cases worldwide and 41 deaths,
mostly in Wuhan. A Lancet report that day presented a
study of 41 coronavirus patients admitted to hospital in
Wuhan which found that more than half had severe
breathing problems, a third required intensive care and
six had died.
And there was now
little doubt that the UK would be hit by the virus. A
study by Southampton University has shown that 190,000
people flew into the UK from Wuhan and other high-risk
Chinese cities between January and March. The
researchers estimated that up to 1,900 of these
passengers would have been infected with the coronavirus
- almost guaranteeing the UK would become a centre of
the subsequent pandemic.
Sure enough, five
days later on Wednesday, January 29, the first
coronavirus cases on British soil were found when two
Chinese nationals from the same family fell ill at a
hotel in York. The next day, the government raised the
threat level from low to moderate.
The pandemic plan
On January 31 - or
Brexit day as it had become known — there was a rousing
11pm speech by the prime minister promising that the
withdrawal from the European Union would be the dawn of
a new era unleashing the British people who would who
would “grow in confidence” month by month.
By this time,
there was good reason for the government’s top
scientific advisers to feel creeping unease about the
virus. The WHO had declared the coronavirus a global
emergency just the day before and scientists at the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine had
confirmed to Whitty in a private meeting of the Nervtag
advisory committee on respiratory illness that the
virus’s infectivity could be as bad as Ferguson’s worst
estimate several days earlier.
The official
scientific advisers were willing to concede in public
that there might be several cases of the coronavirus in
the UK. But they had faith that the country’s plans for
a pandemic would prove robust.
This was probably
a big mistake. An adviser to Downing Street with
extensive knowledge of Britain’s emergency preparations
- speaking off the record - says their confidence in
“the plan” was misplaced. While a possible pandemic had
been listed as the No 1 threat to the nation for many
years, the source says that in reality it had long since
stopped being treated as such.
Several emergency
planners and scientists said that the plans to protect
the UK in a pandemic had once been a top priority and
had been well-funded for a decade following the 9/11
terrorist attacks in 2001. But then austerity cuts
struck. “We were the envy of the world,” the source
said, “but pandemic planning became a casualty of the
austerity years when there were more pressing needs.”
The last rehearsal
for a pandemic was a 2016 exercise codenamed Cygnus
which predicted the health service would collapse and
highlighted a long list of shortcomings - including,
presciently, a lack of PPE and intensive care
ventilators.
But an equally
lengthy list of recommendations to address the
deficiencies was never implemented. The source said
preparations for a no-deal Brexit “sucked all the blood
out of pandemic planning” in the following years.
In the year
leading up to the coronavirus outbreak key government
committee meetings on pandemic planning were repeatedly
“bumped” off the diary to make way for discussions about
more pressing issues such as the beds crisis in the NHS.
Training for NHS staff with protective equipment and
respirators was also neglected, the source alleges.
Members of the
government advisory group on pandemics are said to have
felt powerless. “They would joke between themselves,
‘Haha let’s hope we don’t get a pandemic,’ because there
wasn’t a single area of practice that was being nurtured
in order for us to meet basic requirements for pandemic,
never mind do it well,” said the source.
“If you were with
senior NHS managers at all during the last two years,
you were aware that their biggest fear, their sweatiest
nightmare, was a pandemic because they weren’t prepared
for it.”
It meant that the
government had much catching up to do when it was
becoming clear that this “nightmare” was becoming a
distinct possibility in February. But the source says
there was little urgency. “Almost every plan we had was
not activated in February. Almost every government
department has failed to properly implement their own
pandemic plans,” the source said.
One deviation from
the plan, for example, was a failure to give an early
warning to firms that there might be a lockdown so they
could start contingency planning. “There was a duty to
get them to start thinking about their cashflow and
their business continuity arrangements,” the source
said.
Superspreader
A central part of
any pandemic plan is to identify anyone who becomes ill,
vigorously pursue all their recent contacts and put them
into quarantine. That involves testing and the UK
initially seemed to be ahead of the game. In early
February Hancock proudly told the Commons the UK was one
of the first countries to develop a new test for the
coronavirus. “Testing worldwide is being done on
equipment designed in Oxford,” he said.
So when Steve
Walsh, a 53-year-old businessman from Hove, East Sussex,
was identified as the source of the second UK outbreak
on February 6 all his contacts were followed up with
tests. Walsh’s case was a warning of the rampant
infectivity of the virus as he is believed to have
passed it to five people in the UK after returning from
a conference in Singapore as well as six overseas.
But Public Health
England failed to take advantage of our early
breakthroughs with tests and lost early opportunities to
step up production to the levels that would later be
needed.
This was in part
because the government was planning for the virus using
its blueprint for fighting the flu. Once a flu pandemic
has found its way into the population and there is no
vaccine, then the virus is allowed to take its course
until “herd immunity” is acquired. Such a plan does not
require mass testing.
A senior
politician told this newspaper: “I had conversations
with Chris Whitty at the end of January and they were
absolutely focused on herd immunity. The reason is that
with flu, herd immunity is the right response if you
haven’t got a vaccine.
“All of our
planning was for pandemic flu. There has basically been
a divide between scientists in Asia who saw this as a
horrible, deadly disease on the lines of Sars, which
requires immediate lockdown, and those in the West,
particularly in the US and UK, who saw this as flu.”
The prime
minister’s special adviser Dominic Cummings is said to
have had initial enthusiasm for the herd immunity
concept, which may have played a part in the
government’s early approach to managing the virus. The
Department of Health firmly denies that “herd immunity”
was ever its aim and rejects suggestions that Whitty
supported it. Cummings also denies backing the concept.
The failure to
obtain large amounts of testing equipment was another
big error of judgment, according to the Downing Street
source. It would later be one of the big scandals of the
coronavirus crisis that the considerable capacity of
Britain’s private laboratories to mass-produce tests was
not harnessed during those crucial weeks of February.
“We should have
communicated with every commercial testing laboratory
that might volunteer to become part of the government’s
testing regime but that didn’t happen,” said the source.
The lack of action
was confirmed by Doris-Ann Williams, chief executive of
the British In Vitro Diagnostics Association, which
represents 110 companies that make up most of the UK’s
testing sector. Amazingly, she says her organisation did
not receive a meaningful approach from the government
asking for help until April 1 - the night before Hancock
bowed to pressure and announced a belated and ambitious
target of 100,000 tests a day by the end of this month.
There was also a
failure to replenish supplies of gowns and masks for
health and care workers in the early weeks of February -
despite NHS England declaring the virus its first “level
four critical incident” at the end of January.
It was a key part
of the pandemic plan - the NHS’s Operating Framework for
Managing the Response to Pandemic Influenza dated
December 2017 - that the NHS would be able to draw on
“just in case” stockpiles of PPE.
But many of the
“just in case” stockpiles had dwindled, and equipment
was out of date. As not enough money was being spent on
replenishing stockpiles, this shortfall was supposed to
be filled by activating “just in time” contracts which
had been arranged with equipment suppliers in recent
years to deal with an emergency. The first order for
equipment under the “just in time” protocol was made on
January 30.
However, the
source said that attempts to call in these “just in
time” contracts immediately ran into difficulties in
February because they were mostly with Chinese
manufacturers who were facing unprecedented demand from
the country’s own health service and elsewhere.
This was another
nail in the coffin for the pandemic plan. “It was a
massive spider’s web of failing, every domino has
fallen,” said the source.
The NHS could have
contacted UK-based suppliers. The British Healthcare
Trades Association (BHTA) was ready to help supply PPE
in February - and throughout March - but it was only on
April 1 that its offer of help was accepted. Dr Simon
Festing, the organisation’s chief executive, said:
“Orders undoubtedly went overseas instead of to the NHS
because of the missed opportunities in the procurement
process.”
Downing Street
admitted on February 24 - just five days before NHS
chiefs warned a lack of PPE left the health service
facing a “nightmare” - that the UK government had
supplied 1,800 pairs of goggles and 43,000 disposable
gloves, 194,000 sanitising wipes, 37,500 medical gowns
and 2,500 face masks to China.
A senior
department of health insider described the sense of
drift witnessed during those crucial weeks in February:
“We missed the boat on testing and PPE . . . I remember
being called into some of the meetings about this in
February and thinking, ‘Well it’s a good thing this
isn’t the big one.’
“I had watched
Wuhan but I assumed we must have not been worried
because we did nothing. We just watched. A pandemic was
always at the top of our national risk register - always
- but when it came we just slowly watched. We could have
been Germany but instead we were doomed by our
incompetence, our hubris and our austerity.”
In the Far East
the threat was being treated more seriously in the early
weeks of February. Martin Hibberd, a professor of
emerging infectious diseases at the London School of
Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, was in a unique position
to compare the UK’s response with Singapore, where he
had advised in the past.
“Singapore
realised, as soon as Wuhan reported it, that cases were
going to turn up in Singapore. And so they prepared for
that. I looked at the UK and I can see a different
strategy and approach.
“The interesting
thing for me is, I’ve worked with Singapore in 2003 and
2009 and basically they copied the UK pandemic
preparedness plan. But the difference is they actually
implemented it.”
Working holiday
Towards the end of
the second week of February, the prime minister was
demob happy. After sacking five cabinet ministers and
saying everyone “should be confident and calm” about
Britain’s response to the virus, Johnson vacated Downing
Street after the half-term recess began on February 13.
He headed to the
country for a “working” holiday at Chevening with
Symonds and would be out of the public eye for 12 days.
His aides were thankful for the rest, as they had been
working flat out since the summer as the Brexit power
struggle had played out.
The Sunday
newspapers that weekend would not have made comfortable
reading. The Sunday Times reported on a briefing from a
risk specialist which said that Public Health England
would be overrun during a pandemic as it could test only
1,000 people a day.
Johnson may well
have been distracted by matters in his personal life
during his stay in the countryside. Aides were told to
keep their briefing papers short and cut the number of
memos in his red box if they wanted them to be read.
His family needed
to be prepared for the announcement that Symonds, who
turned 32 in March, was pregnant and that they had been
secretly engaged for some time. Relations with his
children had been fraught since his separation from his
estranged wife Marina Wheeler and the rift deepened when
she had been diagnosed with cancer last year.
The divorce also
had to be finalised. Midway through the break it was
announced in the High Court that the couple had reached
a settlement, leaving Wheeler free to apply for divorce.
There were
murmurings of frustration from some ministers and their
aides at the time that Johnson was not taking more of a
lead. But Johnson’s aides are understood to have felt
relaxed: he was getting updates and they claim the
scientists were saying everything was under control.
400,000 deaths
By the time
Johnson departed for the countryside, however, there was
mounting unease among scientists about the exceptional
nature of the threat. Sir Jeremy Farrar, an infectious
disease specialist who is a key government adviser, made
this clear in a recent BBC interview.
“I think from the
early days in February, if not in late January, it was
obvious this infection was going to be very serious and
it was going to affect more than just the region of Asia
,” he said. “I think it was very clear that this was
going to be an unprecedented event.”
By February 21,
the virus had already infected 76,000 people, had caused
2,300 deaths in China and was taking a foothold in
Europe with Italy recording 51 cases and two deaths the
following day. Nonetheless Nervtag, one of the key
government advisory committees, decided to keep the
threat level at “moderate”.
Its members may
well regret that decision with hindsight and it was
certainly not unanimous. John Edmunds, one of the
country’s top infectious disease modellers from the
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, was
participating in the meeting by video link but his
technology failed him at the crucial moment.
Edmunds wanted the
threat level to be increased to high but could not make
his view known as the link was glitchy. He sent an email
later making his view clear. “JE believes that the risk
to the UK population [in the PHE risk assessment] should
be high, as there is evidence of ongoing transmission in
Korea, Japan and Singapore, as well as in China,” the
meeting’s minutes state. But the decision had already
been taken.
Peter Openshaw,
professor of experimental medicine at Imperial College,
was in America at the time of the meeting but would also
have recommended increasing the threat to high. Three
days earlier he had given an address to a seminar in
which he estimated that 60 per cent of the world’s
population would probably become infected if no action
was taken and 400,000 people would die in the UK.
By February 26,
there were 13 known cases in the UK. That day - almost
four weeks before a full lockdown would be announced -
ministers were warned through another advisory committee
that the country was facing a catastrophic loss of life
unless drastic action was taken. Having been thwarted
from sounding the alarm, Edmunds and his team presented
their latest “worst scenario” predictions to the
scientific pandemic influenza group on modelling (SPI-M)
which directly advises the country’s scientific
decision-makers on Sage.
It warned that 27
million people could be infected and 220,000 intensive
care beds would be needed if no action were taken to
reduce infection rates. The predicted death toll was
380,000. Edmunds’s colleague Nick Davies, who led the
research, says the report emphasised the urgent need for
a lockdown almost four weeks before it was imposed.
The team modelled
the effects of a 12-week lockdown involving school and
work closures, shielding the elderly, social distancing
and self-isolation. It estimated this would delay the
impact of the pandemic but there still might be 280,000
deaths over the year.
Johnson returns
The previous night
Johnson had returned to London for the Conservatives’
big fundraising ball, the Winter Party, at which one
donor pledged pounds 60,000 for the privilege of playing
a game of tennis with him.
By this time the
prime minister had missed five Cobra meetings on the
preparations to combat the looming pandemic, which he
left to be chaired by Hancock. Johnson was an easy
target for the opposition when he returned to the
Commons the following day with the Labour leader, Jeremy
Corbyn, labelling him a “part-time” prime minister for
his failure to lead on the virus crisis or visit the
areas of the UK badly hit by floods.
By Friday,
February 28, the virus had taken root in the UK with
reported cases rising to 19 and the stock markets were
plunging. It was finally time for Johnson to act. He
summoned a TV reporter into Downing Street to say he was
on top of the coronavirus crisis.
“The issue of
coronavirus is something that is now the government’s
top priority,” he said. “I have just had a meeting with
the chief medical officer and secretary of state for
health talking about the preparations that we need to
make.”
It was finally
announced that he would be attending a meeting of Cobra
- after a weekend at Chequers with Symonds where the
couple would publicly release news of the engagement and
their baby.
On the Sunday,
there was a meeting between Sage committee members and
officials from the Department of Health and NHS which
was a game changer, according to a Whitehall source. The
meeting was shown fresh modelling based on figures from
Italy suggesting that 8 per cent of infected people
might need hospital treatment in a worst-case scenario.
The previous estimate had been 4 per cent-5 per cent.
“The risk to the
NHS had effectively doubled in an instant. It set alarm
bells ringing across government,” said the Whitehall
source. “I think that meeting focused minds. You realise
it’s time to pull the trigger on the starting gun.”
At the Cobra
meeting the next day with Johnson in the chair a full
“battle plan” was finally signed off to contain, delay
and mitigate the spread of the virus. This was on March
2 - five weeks after the first Cobra meeting on the
virus.
The new push would
have some positive benefits such as the creation of new
Nightingale hospitals, which greatly increased the
number of intensive care beds. But there was a further
delay that month of nine days in introducing the
lockdown as Johnson and his senior advisers debated what
measures were required. Later the government would be
left rudderless again after Johnson himself contracted
the virus.
As the number of
infections grew daily, some things were impossible to
retrieve. There was a worldwide shortage of PPE and the
prime minister would have to personally ring
manufacturers of ventilators and testing kits in a
desperate effort to boost supplies.
The result was
that the NHS and care home workers would be left without
proper protection and insufficient numbers of tests to
find out whether they had been infected. To date 50
doctors, nurses and NHS workers have died. More than
100,000 people have been confirmed as infected in
Britain and 15,000 have died.
A Downing Street
spokesman said: “Our response has ensured that the NHS
has been given all the support it needs to ensure
everyone requiring treatment has received it, as well as
providing protection to businesses and reassurance to
workers. The prime minister has been at the helm of the
response to this, providing leadership during this
hugely challenging period for the whole nation.”
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