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00:00if you're happy and you know it clap your hands
00:04if you're happy and you know it clap your hands
00:07if you're happy and you know it and you really want to show it
00:12if you're happy and you know it clap your hands
00:16yeah
00:24they're definitely watching Iranians.
00:27Yes they'll be filming us?
00:31Shall I offer them a piece of birthday cake?
00:34Best not. As you say, as long as they know we're here, that's all that matters.
00:39Although it was forbidden, and although I fear punishment, I need to write down what is happening to me and how I feel.
01:04Today, it was yet another interrogation last in Gawas. Same question over and over. What is your machine?
01:14They terrorize and intimidate me. They know my weakness is my family, my child, my husband.
01:22I need help.
01:24How do you do that?
01:27Why do you want me to do that?
01:29Who opens the door and puts them in?
01:32It's a rush to enter.
01:34You can go.
01:36I'm going to make a mess.
01:38It's more difficult than I have.
01:41That's your soul to me.
01:43That's the same as any mom, Babat.
02:10Hino?
02:12I'm free and I'm free.
02:15I'm free.
02:19What's going on?
02:21What's going on?
02:24I'm free now.
02:25I'll be free.
02:33Alo?
02:35Alo, mom, it's my mom.
02:36Oh, I have a little bit of a word!
02:39Where did you get it?
02:41Go on!
02:42I'll give you an example!
02:44Because I'm gonna give you an example!
02:45Now you're doing it!
02:46I'll tell you, we're getting rid of it!
02:49I'll tell you my car, I'm gonna wait for it!
02:51I'll give you an example!
02:53But, I'll give you an example and I'll give you an example.
02:55Ah, my dear.
02:57I'm so happy!
02:59I'll give you an example!
03:01I'll give you an example.
03:06Oh
03:36BABY IMPERATIONS
03:57Hello.
03:59Good.
04:00Hello.
04:01Hello.
04:06Let's go.
04:10Can you get the equipment?
04:12I'm going to buy it.
04:14I'm going to buy it.
04:16Why are you doing it?
04:20Okay.
04:23Can I get the equipment?
04:25I'm going to get it.
04:36I don't know what the hell is going on.
05:06Oh, my God.
05:36Oh, my God.
06:06Oh, my God.
06:36Oh, my God.
07:06Oh, my God.
07:36Oh, my God.
08:06Oh, my God.
08:36Oh, my God.
09:06Oh, my God.
09:36Not speak out in public.
09:39Yeah, I can't rule out not going to Iran myself.
09:42I think I need to go there.
09:45But it's not safe, Richard.
09:46And the Foreign Office would never allow it.
09:48But I think that's a decision for later.
09:50How much later?
09:55How much later?
09:59I think I need to know.
10:10I don't know how much it is.
10:17I got the information about you.
10:20It's been a good answer.
10:31The power and the power of M-I-6.
10:34The power of M-I-6.
10:35The power of M-I-6.
10:38It's a way of thinking about the power of women.
10:42It's a way of thinking about it.
10:46It's a way of thinking about it.
10:48Do you have any information about it?
10:50No, I don't know.
11:01Avin.
11:03It's a house of Avin.
11:04It's a way of thinking about it.
11:08Yes.
11:13It's a day?
11:14Yes.
11:15It's fine.
11:16It's a day for yourself.
11:20I'm going to go to the hospital.
11:23I know that you're a little girl.
11:25That's why...
11:28...you're going to think about it.
11:30...and you're going to be a problem.
11:32Yes, I'm a nurse.
11:34I'm a nurse.
11:36I'm a nurse who started her for a child.
11:39If we have a husband's way of knowing,
11:40...if we'll give her a business,
11:41...and I believe we'll back up.
11:42If I prove to my nurse,
11:44...he'll give her a license,
11:45...and let me be an athlete.
11:47But I'll be an athlete.
11:49I'm a child.
11:51I know my wife.
11:52You should say my husband.
11:54I'm a nurse.
11:55I've been so happy,
11:57...and my baby is good.
11:58I don't have to do this.
12:00I can only tell you everything.
12:02I would like you to think about it.
12:08You know what I mean?
12:09I'm a mother.
12:13I'm a beloved mother.
12:28My name is Zagari.
12:31Let me know what you mean.
12:38When you say what you say to me, what you say to me?
12:43Or what you say to me, I'm going to ask you to ask you.
12:48I'm going to give you a chance to be free.
12:51I'm going to tell you that I'm not alone.
12:53I'm not alone.
12:54I'm just Bishnu.
12:56I'm going to ask you to request me.
12:59This may be a big deal to think of.
13:01I'm not alone.
13:03I'm not alone.
13:04I'm going to make a deal of without you.
13:20Let's go.
13:24I don't know what to do.
13:54In Iran, I am very proud of you.
13:57I am very proud of you.
13:58Well, I am a model.
14:00I am very proud of you because I am very proud of you.
14:03It's sexy.
14:07Well, I am very proud of you.
14:12Do you work on television?
14:13No, I don't mind.
14:15Let me tell you what you want.
14:16No, no, there is no control.
14:18There is no control.
14:19There is no control.
14:20If you want to make a design.
14:21Are these shorts?
14:28I am very proud of you.
14:34Nothing new to report, Mr. Ratcliffe.
14:36Which is not to say dialogue is halted.
14:38Both the ambassador and minister are involved personally.
14:42Did you see my emails?
14:43We did.
14:44We read all of your emails.
14:45She was told she was to be released.
14:47She called her family and told them
14:49her car would be taking her to Kerman Airport.
14:52Yes, I saw.
14:53Did she get inside the car?
14:55Did she travel to the airport?
14:56Where is she now?
15:01These are my concerns.
15:03Is she alive is another.
15:04We are raising these shared concerns, Mr. Ratcliffe.
15:08Let me assure you, we are taking this matter very seriously.
15:18One question.
15:19Why are you here?
15:21When you still have other more important things to be getting on with?
15:26Yeah, I'm doing my best, Patrick.
15:31I'm getting some things done.
15:35I don't think I've been totally useless.
15:37Richard, I'm not suggesting anything other than paid leave of absence.
15:42So go.
15:43Get Nazanin home safely.
15:45Then come back and do your job.
15:47Take a look at this photograph.
16:04This picture was taken from my phone.
16:09It is private.
16:19Who are these people?
16:21Who do you think they are?
16:23You know who they are.
16:26They're my family.
16:28It's my husband's brother, his new wife and an elephant.
16:33Do I need to tell you which is which?
16:35I don't know.
16:49I'm telling the truth.
16:54You will stop lying!
17:05I'm telling you the truth.
17:10Do my family know where I am?
17:15Do my family know where I am?
17:20Do my family know where I am?
17:22You have been trained to lie.
17:24The names you've just spoken, I don't know.
17:29I am telling you the truth.
17:31I was raised to tell the truth.
17:33Why did you say the truth?
17:35You say the truth.
17:38Yes.
17:39Do you mean I am?
17:42God is a model.
17:46A model.
17:48That is something she told.
17:50She says that you have encouraged her to flee from Iran.
17:54That is not true.
17:55And cross the Kurdish border.
17:57That is not true.
17:58Are you saying she is lying to me?
18:00No.
18:01No, I'm saying it is you who's not telling the truth.
18:04But your cell is spelled. We've heard every word spoken.
18:07Then you will know what I'm saying is true.
18:10Stop it with your lies and your tricks. Stop it.
18:17This will not end until you cooperate.
18:21We are very patient.
18:23I want to see my daughter.
18:24I want to speak to my husband, my family.
18:27Why are you doing this to me?
18:28Why? Why? Why? Why?
18:31Why? Why? Why? Why? Why? Why? Why is it their life very well?
18:50Why? Why is it still working?
18:53Why is it still working?
18:56I don't know.
18:57My darling little child, my body is aching for you.
19:12It knows you're gone and I miss you.
19:20Where have you been all this time?
19:23What have you been doing?
19:24What have you been thinking each day when I'm not there?
19:50Gissel? Gissel? Gissel!
19:52Richard! Richard! Richard!
20:05It's been a long time for me.
20:12I'm going to tell you what's going on.
20:14I'm telling you,
20:16I'm telling you,
20:18the other thing is that you are going to be able to do it.
20:22Please,
20:24please,
20:26please,
20:28please,
20:30please,
20:32please,
20:34please,
20:36please,
20:38please,
20:40please
20:42please,
20:44you're good.
20:46D krij CE.
20:50I'm sorry.
21:00Bye.
21:02Bye.
21:04Come on.
21:06Come on.
21:08We'll fuck.
21:10oh
21:28foreign
21:30foreign
21:32foreign
21:34foreign
21:36I want you to tell me everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing.
22:06I want you to tell me everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing, everything you've been doing.
22:36I want you to tell me everything you've been doing. I'm going to tell you everything you've been doing.
22:48What's your name?
22:50They're telling you everything. I can't tell you everything you've done.
22:56I can't tell you everything you've got.
23:00I can't tell you everything you've been doing.
23:04Tell me about the government of Britannia.
23:08He'll accept this.
23:10If you do this, he'll be free to you.
23:18What's your opinion?
23:22What do you say to Richard?
23:30Mr. Ratcliffe, are you still there?
23:33Yes, yes I am.
23:34As far as I've been able to establish, there is no such deal.
23:38Nothing.
23:40Well, I'm just repeating what her brother in Iran was told.
23:45I mean, if there's no such deal, then why would they say there is?
23:49The Iranians say many things.
23:51There is no deal. No agreement to be made.
23:54We have no idea why her interrogators would claim that there is.
23:58Right. Thank you.
24:17Who do you think is telling the truth?
24:19The Iranians saying there is an agreement to be made,
24:21or the Foreign Office saying there isn't?
24:24I want to believe the Iranians.
24:29Because that means there's a reason Nazanin's being held.
24:33But I...
24:35I also want to believe in the Foreign Office.
24:38And that maybe there's a reason they can't say anything.
24:43That's right.
24:45We don't know.
24:47I desperately want to trust them.
24:49Us.
24:50The British.
24:52They...
24:53They will be doing something.
24:56They will be doing something.
25:05Mr. Zagari.
25:07He will say the speaker of the Foreign Office.
25:11He will also tell us once again.
25:15He would say the speaker of the Foreign Office...
25:16He would say...
25:17This speaker...
25:18He will say...
25:19He is the speaker of the Foreign Office.
25:20He will say that he is called the Foreign Office.
25:21His speaker also tells us the government of letters.
25:22He must tell us about the отпριränation on the foreign foreign minister.
25:24He has also been so often.
25:25He has been so often.
25:26He has been so often.
25:28No great, Adam.
25:55No great timing for us to be fair.
25:57All anyone's interested in is Brexit.
26:04Thank you for coming.
26:06Today marks the hundredth day of Nazanin's abduction.
26:11For a hundred days, a mother, a British citizen,
26:14has been held inside an Iranian prison,
26:16willfully separated from her child.
26:19The intelligence services are admitting that they are detaining a mother and baby,
26:24not because of any suspicious activity in Iran, but as collateral for an unknown political deal.
26:29And they have asked me to make this unknown deal known to you, the media.
26:34Now backed by over 780,000 voices, this petition will be delivered to number 10.
26:41I'm asking the Prime Minister, David Cameron, and his Foreign Secretary, Philip Hammond,
26:46to condemn Iran's actions in Parliament,
26:50and to ask the question, what is this deal Iran is seeking?
27:32I'm going to get you.
28:02You have a daughter?
28:04I have a daughter.
28:08What?
28:09I'm a project of Thompson Reuters.
28:11I'm a person who is a good person.
28:14I'm not sure about it.
28:16I'm not sure about it.
28:18You can't do anything you want to do with this job.
28:21I'm going to wait for a person to do it.
28:23I'm going to wait for a person to do it.
28:25¿Verdad?
28:31No, I'm not sure about it.
28:33Is it for BBC?
28:35Yes, but for years we have done this job,
28:37has been working with you.
28:39Yes, until the last year I did the final job by myself,
28:42I've done it.
28:44Did you give the BBC a piece of food?
28:48No, I didn't do it.
28:50At the end I feel bad about it.
28:52If you don't tell me that,
28:53Do you know what you are saying?
28:55It's a law of law.
28:57It's a law of law.
28:59It's a law of law.
29:05You should know how you do this.
29:07You should know how to make this law.
29:09This law is a law of law.
29:11It's a law law.
29:13You should know how to make this law.
29:45I can't wait to see you again.
30:15For now,
30:45They say that stone will turn into ruby by enduring patience.
30:50Yes, it will.
30:51But with that comes so much pain.
30:54From Farah.
30:55For Farah.
30:57Thank you for your poem.
30:59I pray it will give me the strength I will need in the years to come.
31:08Yeah.
32:45If you don't have a problem, you will give a problem.
32:48I don't want to have a problem. I'm going to make a problem.
32:53I'm going to get my problem.
32:58If you don't have a problem, you'll give a problem.
33:02But I'm going to give you a problem.
33:05I'm going to give you an English word.
33:08We just want to talk about something.
33:15Hello, Richard, my love.
33:41Natalie, darling.
33:42How are you?
33:43Where are you?
33:45Richard, they say I'm guilty.
33:52Of what?
33:53I've been sentenced to five years of prison.
33:57Guilty of what?
34:00Five years.
34:02That is the sentence, yes, but what is it they say you are convicted of?
34:06Five years, my baby will be seven.
34:09No, no, that's an end.
34:10No, no, listen to me.
34:12We will get through this, and I promise, I promise you, I'll devote every hour to bringing you home.
34:16Five years apart.
34:18We will bring you home.
34:21I promise.
34:26That's it.
34:26No, no, no.
34:31No, no.
34:32No.
34:32No.
34:33No.
34:33No.
34:34No.
34:34No.
34:35No.
34:35No.
34:46No.
34:46Yes, it's an end to you.
34:48I'll show you later.
34:51I'll show you later.
35:02I'll show you later.
35:05I'll show you later.
35:07My wife.
35:12I'm going to show you later.
35:18I'll show you later.
35:20I'll show you later.
35:48I'll show you later.
35:58Hello.
36:00Is this Richard Radcliffe?
36:02Husband to Nazanin Zagari?
36:05Who is this?
36:07I can't say. Not yet.
36:09Is this Richard Radcliffe?
36:11It is.
36:13Richard, do you have a pen and paper?
36:16You are going to want to write this down.
36:22Yes, Colin.
36:23Regarding your claim of an outstanding deal between the Iranian and British governments, you are not wrong.
36:29The company you should investigate is called IMS, International Military Services Limited.
36:36They are fully owned by the British Ministry of Defense.
36:40They owe money and they are currently being dragged through the British courts by MOD Iran no less.
36:44If this is all true, it would help to know who you are.
36:47It's all true, my friend.
36:49Dig deep. The information is there.
36:51Good luck.
36:592002 and we have something interesting.
37:18IMS make a payment of 400 million pounds to a UK court as a security bond.
37:23Why would they do that?
37:24A dispute. It has to be some kind of debt, doesn't it?
37:26It is a debt. Look.
37:27An award of damages plus interest was made against the company in connection with a contractual dispute with the government of Iran.
37:35There is a reduction in the debt from 500 to 400 million in 2006.
37:39But after that, there is no record of either a 400 million pound payment or cancellation of the debt.
37:46A statement for the subsequent years shows that the dispute is ongoing.
37:51The latest negotiations taking place in 2016.
37:57IMS did indeed pay a sizeable amount of money to the UK courts as security for a debt owed to Iran.
38:15The claimant being the Iranian Ministry of Defense.
38:18Wow.
38:19It all dates back to the 1970s, would you believe, over 40 years ago.
38:26But this argument is still very much alive.
38:31In fact, closed door negotiations between the UK and Iranian governments last took place in March and May of this year, 2016.
38:39The outcome of these negotiations was what, Penny?
38:40Well, as far as I can see, no agreement was reached.
38:44But we were told they were holding on to her in May.
38:52Coincidence or were the Iranians trying to force an agreement?
38:55Penny, can you talk us through everything you found, please, beginning in the 1970s?
38:59It's 1971 and the oil rich Shah of Iran signs a 650 million pound contract with the British government for weaponry and military vehicles, including tanks.
39:18The contract is made with the commercial arm of the MOD, International military services, a limited company, IMS.
39:31Fast forward to 1978, 1979, and we have the Iranian revolution.
39:36I remember it.
39:37I remember it being on the news.
39:39The Shah is overthrown and he flees the country.
39:52At this point, the Shah has already paid 100 million pounds to IMS for tanks which, bar the odd few, have yet to be delivered and now will never be delivered.
40:03So Iran wants his money back, with interest.
40:07And why not?
40:08They're demanding their money back.
40:09This is when?
40:11Early 1980s.
40:12It becomes a legal dispute early 1990s.
40:15Iran takes IMS to the European Court of Arbitration in the Netherlands and they win.
40:21IMS appeals on spurious grounds.
40:23The case goes to the Dutch Supreme Court which rules in favour of Iran and the arbitration becomes enforceable.
40:30So where's the problem, besides us paying the silly buggers?
40:34Well, initially the Iran-Iraq war.
40:38Saddam Hussein was our man in the Middle East.
40:45Iraq actually received some of the tanks Iran had paid for.
40:49Oh dear God.
40:50The war lasts between 1980 and 1988.
40:54Legal arguments begin early 90s all the way through to the noughties.
40:59Then EU sanctions against Iran kick in around about 2008.
41:03But everything changed in January this year, 2016.
41:08The nuclear deal.
41:10JCPOA?
41:12Yes.
41:14What's that?
41:15Joint comprehensive plan of action between Iran, the US and the EU.
41:20Very good Jeff.
41:22Common knowledge.
41:23The plan of action allowed EU sanctions to be lifted.
41:27That is, most sanctions.
41:29Meaning that we, the UK, could pay 400 million to the Iranian Ministry of Health, for instance.
41:34But they can't pay, won't pay the now 400 million to the Iranian Ministry of Defence.
41:39Even though it's their money.
41:41Even though we'd just be giving it back.
41:42Exactly.
41:43So it's not a payment, it's a refund.
41:44What we have to do, is show that this debt is the reason Nazanin was taken.
41:57Oh.
41:58It's extraordinary.
42:14Maman?
42:18Maman?
42:31What's wrong?
42:35What's wrong with you?
42:41What's wrong with you?
42:44Oh, Maman.
42:45Oh, my.
42:46Oh, my.
42:47Oh.
42:52Oh, my.
42:53What's wrong with me?
42:54Oh.
42:55Oh, my.
42:56Oh.
42:57Oh.
42:58Oh.
43:00Oh.
43:02Oh.
43:05Oh.
43:08Oh.
43:10Oh.
43:11Oh.
43:12Oh.
43:13I don't know.
43:43I don't know.
44:13I don't know.
44:43I don't know.
45:13What are you saying?
45:14It would be easier for you to forget me.
45:17You must move on with your lives without me.
45:22No, that's it. No, I do not accept that.
45:25I need you. Gabriella needs you.
45:27We love you. That isn't going to change.
45:30Ever.
45:30Hello.
45:38I, I'm the man looking after your wife.
45:47I hope you will collect her soon.
45:58I'm the man looking after your wife.
46:06I'm the man looking after your wife.
46:19I want to say it out loud. I want the public to know that my wife is being held in solitary confinement in an Iranian prison
46:4940-year-old tank debt.
46:53I feel the Foreign Office know that too, but they won't admit it.
46:56So, how best do we do that?
47:06I know a journalist at the Sunday Times I might help.
47:08Is he good? Do we know him?
47:09No, you wouldn't know him, but he's well thought of.
47:11Yeah, Sunday Times is good.
47:13I'm in a splash of the times. May well lead to more publicity.
47:16We could try for the Today programme. It is a political story.
47:19I think we should inform the Foreign Office of our intentions.
47:23I'll write to Tobias Elwood, tell him we have all the details of the tank debt and request a meeting.
47:28All right?
47:28My dear darling husband.
47:47I've loved you so much.
47:50Forgive me.
47:53I cannot be apart from you.
47:56I cannot be apart from Gisu.
47:58And I cannot bear for you to be apart from your daughter whom you love so dearly.
48:07I release you, my love.
48:28I cannot bear for you to be apart from your daughter whom you love so dearly.
48:37I cannot bear for you to be apart from your daughter whom you love so dearly.
48:39I will release you.
48:45I cannot bear for you to be apart from your daughter whom you love so dearly.
48:47He can't bear for you to be apart from your daughter.
48:48You are not able to marry her.
48:50You are not going to be apart from your daughter.
48:53God!
48:58Come here!
49:00Come here!
49:01Come here!
49:04Mama!
49:08I release you, my love.
49:15She must have written the note when she was refusing food.
49:18Is that all?
49:27But now things have changed.
49:29They brought her food when we were dead.
49:31She is a prize to them.
49:33She has value.
49:37She needs to know that she is not forgotten.
49:40She needs to know that we are here.
49:42I am here.
49:43Always.
49:44Do you hear me, Mohammed? Always.
49:47Always.
49:48And I always will be.
49:49Always.
49:52She needs to know I will keep my promise.
50:00The husband of a woman who is in jail in Iran has accused the Foreign Office of dragging its feet on seeking her release.
50:06Mrs. Zaghari Ratcliffe's husband, Richard Ratcliffe, says the Foreign Office has not done all it could do.
50:11Could do.
50:12And he thinks he knows why.
50:13She says she is being used as a bargaining chip.
50:15Iran says that Britain owes it 400 million pounds as part of an arms deal dating back 40 years or so.
50:22The Foreign Office won't tell us anything about that particular situation.
50:25You've seen it?
50:30Yeah, I've seen it.
50:33What the fuck has happened?
50:34Were we not promised a splash?
50:36With only one source, it's you claiming one thing and the Foreign Office saying another.
50:40And I think we may well have been briefed against.
50:45Meaning what?
50:46Meaning that one or two people in the media will have been told, quite sympathetically, that Richard Ratcliffe is understandably emotional and going through a very difficult and traumatic time.
51:01So what now?
51:04You answer your phone, we'll go for a pint.
51:08It's Penny.
51:10Penny, yes, I've seen it.
51:12Forget that, that's old news. We've been offered a meeting with Tobias Elwood.
51:16When?
51:17Day after tomorrow. It's unheard of.
51:21Is he rattled, do you think?
51:24Well, we certainly have his attention.
51:27Both we at the Foreign Office and the Iranian Minister are aware of your most recent press appearance, the BBC's Today programme and the piece in the Sunday Times.
51:38Yes.
51:40The Iranians are concerned that you're trying to politicise the agenda.
51:43No, all I want to do is to bring Nazanin home safely and soon.
51:48Which is what I told them.
51:49But it does not help that you appear to be, if not misinformed, then misguided.
51:56Your emotional response is, of course, natural and understandable.
52:01Perhaps some form of therapy might help.
52:08Thank you for your concern.
52:12And perhaps if I clarified the position in relation to the tanks.
52:15Please.
52:16The tanks were due to be sold to the Iranians in the 1970s.
52:20The British government took the money but did not supply the tanks.
52:23Instead, those tanks went to Iraq.
52:26All the money received from Iran then sat in an account.
52:30However, due to the sanctions now in place, it's not possible to deliver this money to Iran.
52:34There's no way around this? By using the Amanis, for example?
52:38No. The Iranians are aware of this.
52:40So what did the Revolutionary Guard mean when they said, tell your government to do a deal?
52:46Well, they are part of a hard-line government who are encouraging you to highlight quite falsely that the West does not play fair.
52:53Pure propaganda.
52:55Nazanin being taken and the tank deal are very much two separate issues.
52:59Then why have they taken her? If not for leverage?
53:05Paranoia. You would agree there are thousands of Iranians in exactly the same position as Nazanin.
53:12Anyone who appears suspicious will be on their radar.
53:14This is a mother and baby. The only thing that could identify Nazanin as being suspicious is her dual nationality.
53:22Her passport is why she was taken and her passport gives them leverage.
53:27It's not us or our campaign that has politicized her kidnapping.
53:32You are emotional and under enormous pressure of that, I am certain.
53:36And pressure leads to misunderstandings.
53:40Make no mistake, the Iranians watch for every word spoken, be it Prime Minister's questions in the press or the Today programme.
53:51Your approach and your campaign are, to put it bluntly, damaging.
53:57You have people around you who are saying, well done, but they are wrong.
54:02We must be seen by the Iranians, Richard, to be as one.
54:05You could tweet that you've just met with Tobias Elwood, for example.
54:10You mean, well, of course you do.
54:13But perhaps a more useful outlet for both you and Nazanin would be to keep a diary.
54:19Would be to keep a diary.
54:20Would be to keep a diary.
54:49You can do it.
54:50Who is there
54:52By the way?
54:54You can leave your life.
54:59I will be a doctor.
55:01Who can you, please?
55:04By the way.
55:06By the way.
55:10By the way.
55:11By the way.
55:13By the way.
55:15By the way.
55:16By the way.
55:17By the way.
55:18I don't know.
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