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Dirty Business S01E03 (2026) [Full Movie] [Trending]Full EP - Full
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01:24Ne?
01:55Okay.
01:57Okay.
02:27Okay.
02:35Okay.
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04:31I did see it, yeah.
04:33You probably saw it, I hung up.
04:36Just to...
04:36Yeah, I just think that what we need now is we need a whistleblower.
04:43And we need someone from inside the agency.
04:47And high up.
04:48From the top.
04:51Eileen said that we must be making a difference.
04:53Did she?
04:54Yeah, she did.
04:55So, come on, let's...
04:57That's the point, isn't it?
04:58Yeah, we are.
04:58There's no point doing this unless we make a difference.
05:00No, let's keep going.
05:01Let's keep going and let's find that fucking whistleblower.
05:04Right.
05:05June 2019.
05:07Sir James Bevan Environment Agency.
05:10Dear Sir James, I'm writing to your office as I'm sure you will know where to direct the question.
05:14October 2019.
05:17Dear Sir James, I wrote to you to raise concerns about a serious integrity issue involving the agency.
05:23Dear Sir James, 34 days have now passed since I sent you evidence.
05:27I've given up expecting a reply from you.
05:31Dear Ashley, I am in the receipt of your email to Sir James.
05:41Would you mind coming to our office and would the 19th suit?
05:55Is Sir James not coming?
05:57I'm afraid not.
05:58No, Sir James wouldn't routinely attend meetings at this kind of level.
06:02I'd hoped he'd be here.
06:04He's time for.
06:06He's aware of your work.
06:07Well, we're trying to find out what you're going to do about the illegal sewage overflow at Boughton.
06:14The combined storm overflow.
06:15The combined storm overflow at Burton has shown no detectable effects on the water quality.
06:21The water quality is stable and not deteriorating.
06:24I mean, our data shows very clearly that we have the best quality water since the Industrial Revolution.
06:31The water's turned brown.
06:32Yeah.
06:33It's turned so brown that when it joins the Thames at Newbridge, it makes the Thames look like a Swiss
06:38mountain stream.
06:40The water is brown in places, but that's a natural phenomenon.
06:45It's caused by a geological fault.
06:46Sorry, a geological fault?
06:48Yeah.
06:49Yeah.
06:49Sorry, a geological fault is millions of years old.
06:53We remember when the water was clear.
06:55No one remembers the good old days before the geological fault.
06:58In the last 12 months since we installed sensors, there's been no evidence of pollution.
07:03Well, that's because you've installed the monitors upstream from the sewage pipes.
07:06Now, is that incompetence or an attempt to cover up a scandal?
07:10No, no.
07:10The agency would never position a monitor to achieve a particular reading.
07:14We are working extremely hard to transform the environment.
07:16We've improved and protected something like, I think it's 15,000 kilometres of river.
07:22It's right, but you've had 92 complaints from the general public about sewage pollution.
07:28And that's just the wind rush.
07:29I've actually got the breakdown here.
07:35In 36 of those cases, there was no offence.
07:40And in 39, there was insufficient evidence.
07:44And in 6, we were unable to identify the offender.
07:49What do you mean you couldn't identify the offenders?
07:51Why can't you identify the offenders?
07:52There's seven sewage works along the wind rush.
07:55They're all run by Thames Water.
07:56I mean, you say you've got insufficient evidence, but we keep giving you the evidence.
08:00All we ever do is give you the evidence, and all we get back is it's under investigation.
08:04And then nothing, nothing, nothing ever happens.
08:09In exceptional circumstances, for example, after heavy rain, the sewage systems are allowed
08:14to overflow.
08:15No, no, no.
08:17You see, that's not the law.
08:18The law is that in all normal climatic conditions, including heavy rainfall, the water companies
08:24have to treat the sewage.
08:26They have to make it safe before they put it back into the river.
08:29The law is a grey area.
08:30No.
08:31No, it's not a grey area with respect.
08:33It's the law.
08:33Sorry, can I?
08:35Sorry.
08:37Thames is their own data.
08:40It shows they stopped treating sewage at Northridge for more than three months.
08:46Now, they told us that their senses had broken down, but we think they're lying.
08:54They're lying.
08:55So why would they do that?
08:58Why would they lie to you?
09:12Doors are closed here.
09:17We're attempting regulators.
09:22Sorry?
09:24The regulation isn't real.
09:27The government want us to look like a regulator, but they won't let us do our job.
09:32Okay.
09:34When Cameron and Trust gutted the agency, we went from regulating the industry to doing
09:39its bidding.
09:41Do you think we could take your number?
09:43Look, just keep going.
09:47This is going to be the first government in modern history that at the end of its parliamentary
09:52term has less regulation in place than there was at the beginning.
09:56We've now identified those 3,000 regulations that we're going to scrap.
10:00Let's reduce the amount and the burden of regulation.
10:03We're strangled by red tape back, the health and safety monster.
10:06Cut guidance by 80% and we reduce farm inspections by 34,000 every year.
10:12Regulations will...
10:13None of my ministers could introduce a regulation unless they abolished one at the same time.
10:17Massively reduce the number of rules, laws and regulations that frankly treat all of you
10:23by idiots.
10:27So, really, it's about stripping out as much unnecessary regulation as possible and taking responsibility
10:35for climate change and saying, what more can we do to get us to net zero?
10:41As you know, this is a passion project for Sir James, who feels that we can bring our car
10:48usage down by 70%.
10:51Yeah.
10:53It's...
10:53Yeah.
10:54So, from next month, we're going to be taking the bold decision to cut back decisively on our
11:00car leases.
11:04Yeah.
11:05Come on.
11:06Sorry.
11:07Just like to clarify what you're going to get rid of our cars.
11:12So, it's about reducing the agency's carbon footprint.
11:16Just getting that...
11:17Yeah.
11:18Go ahead, Hannah.
11:19The cars that we drive to the inspections in.
11:23Right.
11:24Yeah.
11:24So, self-monitoring and a more desk-based regulation is really, it's really helping us move the needle
11:31on climate change.
11:35But the remaining inspections...
11:39Yeah.
11:40How do we get to those without a car?
11:43Yeah.
11:45It's a great question.
11:46It's a really great question.
11:48And we'll take that forward to the next discussion meeting.
11:51Thanks, Hannah.
11:53Yeah, lovely.
11:53Thanks, everyone.
11:54Not easy news to break, is it?
11:56Yeah, surprise.
11:57Ebby's got something to say.
11:58I know.
11:58I know.
11:59I know.
11:59But my car...
11:59Everyone's driving cars, we're the environment agency.
12:02Absolutely.
12:02What's wrong with the train?
12:03I'll keep mine, I think.
12:04So, yeah.
12:05Mmm, coffee.
12:06How do I get a coffee?
12:09Does anybody know what we're looking at?
12:12Anybody?
12:14Okay.
12:15Could you tell me what the reactants are?
12:17So, if you move your head even slightly, the vertigo gets more intense?
12:21Yeah.
12:22And the attack's happening maybe twice a week?
12:24About that, yeah.
12:29The good news is that you don't have cancer.
12:32We actually think it's Meniere's.
12:34It's a disease of the inner ear.
12:36The main symptom is acute vertigo episodes, vomiting, tinnitus.
12:43It's a pretty neat fit with your presentation.
12:48They were dumping sewage in the water the last time before I got sick.
12:54Right, you know that from...
12:57The Suffers Against Sewage app.
12:59Okay.
13:01Might that be...
13:02The causes are unclear.
13:04It's post-viral.
13:05This often starts with an ear infection.
13:07You know, they're common in surfers.
13:08Yeah, every surfer I know.
13:13This is a chronic condition.
13:16I'm afraid there's no cure.
13:39Should we leave the table away?
13:43Just hold his back.
13:44Say the afloat.
13:48No, no, no.
13:52No.
13:54No, no, no.
22:23And it is still going.
22:24All right, that is the water company's responsibility to report to us.
22:29You know this.
22:32Okay?
22:32And Justine says that actually really, because of the high dispersal rate,
22:37that it should come down to a Category 4.
22:41Be a Category 4?
22:43Yes.
22:43Right.
22:43Mm-hmm.
22:45So no impact on the environment, no action needed?
22:50Yes.
22:52Mm-hmm.
22:56Oh, you want me to change it on this?
22:58Would you?
22:58Could you?
22:59Yeah?
23:00Okay, thanks so much.
23:01Thank you.
23:02That's great.
23:03Lovely.
23:12So, you see how well we're doing?
23:14Yeah, of course.
23:14What are you joking?
23:15I'm not joking.
23:17You know SROIC?
23:19No, what's that?
23:21Strategic Review of Incident Charges.
23:22Yeah, it's like what we charge the clients for permits and that.
23:26So we don't have clients, Cheryl.
23:28We're an environment agency.
23:29Okay, yes.
23:30Sorry.
23:30Yes.
23:31We don't have clients.
23:32But Sir James has put the prices up, yeah?
23:35And I'm talking like up, up.
23:37Big time.
23:39Well, he's charging the water companies more.
23:41Yep.
23:43Well, surely they've gone down to the government, like, lobbying them, going, my, JG, and the
23:46charges are taken down.
23:48No.
23:48Not a peep.
23:49Not a peep.
23:51Sorry, they're just paying it.
23:53We've basically had such a high revenue spike, yeah?
23:58That we are on our way to becoming a client-funded regulator.
24:04Sorry, hold on one minute.
24:05This is going a bit...
24:06So you're saying that the water companies are funding the environment agency.
24:12That's what you're...
24:14Lee, you see the issues there.
24:16You can't be serious.
24:17A client-funded regulator.
24:22Amazing, isn't it?
24:22How can that even be a thing?
24:25It's a thing.
24:26Well, hold on, because literally, the other day, Sir James said that you get the regulation
24:31that you pay for.
24:32Yeah.
24:32That we haven't got the money to do the investigations that we used to do.
24:37Nobody's paying for them.
24:38Okay.
24:38That's your area, isn't it?
24:40I mean, all I know is that we have got more cash than we've ever had before.
24:47Just making conversation.
24:51I've got the job.
24:53Hostman?
24:54Mm-hmm.
24:54No?
24:54Yeah.
24:55Did you?
24:55Yeah.
24:56Oh, my God.
24:57Yeah, really good timing.
25:00Uh-huh.
25:01Because I did two pregnancy tests this morning.
25:06What?
25:06And, yeah, I'm pregnant.
25:08What?
25:09Yeah, pregnant.
25:10No.
25:11Yeah.
25:12Yeah.
25:13I sort of just had a funny feeling and then, yeah, did one test, two lines, and then I
25:19did another test and it said two lines.
25:21And so, I was like, fuck.
25:32I'm Susan Davey.
25:35I am the CEO of Southwest Water.
25:37Basically, the wet weather events put a strain on our Victorian networks.
25:43And, unfortunately, we have a Victorian sewage system, which we have inherited, and that
25:49means things do go wrong.
25:51How do you say Victorian sewage network?
25:5312 percent.
25:5412?
25:5612 percent?
25:56What's 12 percent?
25:5812 percent of the sewage system is Victorian.
26:01What do they tell you?
26:02We knew that the whole of the system was Victorian, so that meant that the investment would be
26:07so high that it'd be impossible to actually fix it all.
26:11Bollocks.
26:12Shall I tell you what stopped it?
26:14When privatization came in, they just stopped spending.
26:17After the war, they kept upgrading.
26:19Then after privatization came in, they just stopped.
26:24Not just Thames, all of them.
26:26Six percent new plant since privatization.
26:29Six percent?
26:30Six percent.
26:31Is that all?
26:31You know, it'd be good if we could maybe come and visit one of the works.
26:35I don't know about that.
26:36Well, I'd have to see, lads, honestly, because even just doing this, I feel a bit nervous.
26:42Fucking London Stadium.
26:43That's not a proper stadium.
26:45Fucking massive.
26:46Upton Park.
26:46Now, that was a proper stadium, mate.
26:48London Stadium's too big.
26:49You need fucking binoculars.
26:50Do you know what I mean?
26:51Yeah.
26:51Sorry, Pete, did you want to see an EDM?
26:54Oh, yes, yes, that's right.
26:55Well remembered.
26:56So this is an event duration monitor.
26:59Now, we fitted one of these on every sewage pipe in England.
27:03In 2012, the coalition government, they ordered all the water companies to record how much time
27:09they spend dumping raw sewage.
27:12These little units, they measure how much poo goes into the river by hours.
27:16Management have been dragging their feet for eight years now.
27:19But we're finally getting most of it in now.
27:22And the agency, they've published the numbers.
27:25They have to, by law.
27:26They're not going to like it, but tough shit.
27:30EDMs.
27:32Yes.
27:34So, we are finalizing plans for the statutory publication of the EDM numbers.
27:44As you know, there have been some technical delays, but it looks like they're almost ready.
27:50And they're going to come as a bit of a shock.
27:56The data's going to show that the water companies discharged raw sewage 400,000 times in 2020.
28:06That's 1,100 times a day for a total of 3.1 million hours.
28:17It's a bit of a shocker.
28:18Can I just say that since operator self-monitoring, we've had to rely on the water companies to report back
28:26to us.
28:27I think that the key here is that this doesn't get framed as a failure of regulation.
28:32That would be quite wrong.
28:35And I think managing comms on this is going to be key.
28:38And we are working actively with the water companies to bear down on the problem.
28:46But that's 1,100 criminal offences a day.
28:51Well, that's actually, that's debatable because that depends on the terms of the permit and the circumstances around each spill.
28:57Yeah, and we know the legislation permits discharging after heavy rainfall.
29:02No, no, it doesn't.
29:04Sorry, Hannah.
29:04The law doesn't say that you can just dump sewage after heavy rain.
29:09It says that in all normal, climatic and seasonal circumstances, the water companies have to treat the sewage, not just
29:16dump it.
29:17But it's not the agency's job to adjudicate legal matters.
29:20I mean, this is actually a matter for the courts.
29:23No, no, no. This is our job.
29:25It's our job to enforce the law.
29:28Yeah, that's what we're here to do.
29:33What?
29:35Can you, um, you...
29:37Did you want to...
29:37No, no, you finish off here, Sophie.
29:41Thank you.
29:43So we've identified the problem and now we work on the problem.
29:45Yeah.
29:46Which is reframing and owning the narrative.
29:48Yeah, we don't want this to get misconstrued as some sort of failure on our part because it just isn't.
29:52Thanks.
29:52Thanks so much.
29:54Thanks.
29:56Cool.
29:57Lovely.
29:57Thanks, guys.
29:58Thanks so much.
29:59By the way, um, so, I've heard you're going to give evidence in Parliament.
30:05Yes.
30:06Yes.
30:06Amazing.
30:07Yeah, I think you're bad.
30:09What does that mean, thinking about it?
30:11He's, uh, he's nervous.
30:13No, I'm not nervous.
30:14He's nervous.
30:15No, it's not that I'm nervous.
30:16And I want to do it.
30:17It's just difficult.
30:19Pete.
30:19Don't worry about it.
30:21We're counting on you.
30:22We are really counting on you.
30:23And you can explain it in a scientific way.
30:25You're going to come across brilliantly.
30:26They're going to believe you, mate.
30:28Well, it's not really as simple as that.
30:31The boys from Ogden called me earlier, right?
30:34They told me that they dumped two billion litres of sewage in the Thames over two days.
30:40Environment Agency haven't got a Scooby.
30:42Did they send you the data?
30:43I've got the data, yeah.
30:44Can you send that to us?
30:45I will send it to you.
30:46We're not going to let you down.
30:48Please, you can do this.
30:49Come on, Pete.
30:50I know.
30:52You're a legend, mate.
30:53Come on.
31:03We now have the lowest number of serious pollution incidents from water companies that we have yet recorded.
31:11More water companies are now at the highest level of performance, what we call four-star performance.
31:19I mean, we now have the lowest number of serious pollution incidents from water companies that we have yet recorded.
31:54I'm an environment officer.
31:55I'm an environment officer at the agency.
31:56I investigate sewage pollution.
32:01When I first joined, it wasn't a job to get rich on.
32:07I could see I was making a difference.
32:11You know, corporations want to make money.
32:14We make sure that they don't poison the rivers doing it.
32:16We could investigate, prosecute, whatever it took.
32:22But then they told the companies that they could regulate themselves.
32:27That's a praise of self-monitoring.
32:29Exactly.
32:31Then came the Cameron cuts, then the trust cuts.
32:35They laid off investigators, slashed prosecutions.
32:39I mean, they even took our cars off of us so we couldn't visit pollution sites.
32:42So all these cuts meant you couldn't do your job properly?
32:45That's not it.
32:49In 2021, Sir James hiked the prices the water companies paid for their permits.
32:55It was called charge-funded regulation.
32:58We get 96 million from the government.
33:01We are now pulling in 411 million from charges.
33:06All these cuts, they're just a smokescreen.
33:10We're swimming in cash.
33:13I am doing this because I know that it is wrong.
33:16And it has ruined my whole working life.
33:23Good luck.
33:49The Environment Agency has refused to comment on whether agency directors currently hold shares in UK water companies.
33:58The agency claimed it would break data protection laws if it disclosed the information.
34:03Environment Agency chiefs secretly held a series of private dinners with water company bosses at the Royal Automobile Club in
34:11central London.
34:11Documents released under the Freedom of Information Act showed the meetings were held to discuss how to quell public anger
34:18over sewage space.
34:19As the sewage scandal deepens, Environment Agency CEO Sir James Bevan has been called to give evidence to a parliamentary
34:26committee.
34:27We need to talk about what we say in public and the responsibilities we have.
34:33You have a duty not to openly criticise or discredit the organisation in the media or on social media.
34:43Or to disclose confidential information to anyone not authorised to receive it.
34:51If your comments, inside or outside work, impact on the agency's reputation by making derogatory comments about the organisation, or
34:59your managers,
35:00or you make comments that bring the organisation into disrepute,
35:04you may be subject to disciplinary action.
35:08And in more serious cases, dismissal.
35:14Thank you.
35:24Work's one of those five agents said that over the last, over the last ten years.
35:29I don't think I want to do this.
35:30You'll be fine.
35:32Need the toilet?
35:34I'm alright.
35:35I need a bloody toilet.
35:37Do you want a pie?
35:38What does that mean?
35:42Well, um, my garden is a, uh, an island which the Windrush, uh, wraps around.
35:52I've watched it closely for 18 years, and I watched the water turn brown.
35:57I led a team of scientists using a machine learning analysis of two sewage treatment works run by Tense Water.
36:07One of those works, the Environment Agency, said that over ten years, only two pollution incidents have been reported.
36:16Our machine learning analysis, uh, it showed hundreds of illegal spills, uh, more than, than 300 lasted 24 hours,
36:29and some, uh, longer than ten days, and some for a month.
36:36Have you shown this evidence to the Environment Agency?
36:39Well, we are, I've shown the evidence, like, many times.
36:44What usually happens is that they, uh, they say that, uh, they show a sign of interest, but then nothing
36:51happens.
36:54We work very closely with Professor Hammond of, uh, Windrush against sewage pollution.
37:01We have a regular and very fruitful dialogue with him.
37:05You've worked closely with Professor Hammond.
37:09Uh, he and Ashley Smith sent you at least 13 emails detailing evidence of illegal sewage dumping.
37:17He published five evidence reports documenting water company criminality,
37:23all of which were sent to you or your senior colleagues.
37:26They invited you to come and look at the river in 2019,
37:31and the following year sent you an email with the heading
37:36Environment Agency Complicit in Lawbreaking.
37:44They never heard back.
37:46You never once replied in five years.
37:51How did you manage to work so closely with Professor Hammond when you never once spoke to him?
37:55At the Thames Water Modern Treatment Works, there was a spill of 240 Olympic swimming pools of sewage in a
38:07single day.
38:08The existing monitoring failed to pick that up.
38:11Now, why was that?
38:13There will always be times when, uh, something happens.
38:26Does appropriate action include prosecuting water company executives?
38:30Prosecution is a very high bar, but, uh...
38:34Where we think that's appropriate, we wouldn't hesitate.
38:38Did you prosecute in this case?
38:40No.
38:42Have you ever prosecuted any water company executives?
38:45No, but if we thought the evidence warranted it, we wouldn't hesitate.
38:53Last year, you told this committee that you became aware of sewage dumping in May 2021.
38:58Yes.
38:59But three weeks after that, you told the committee that the water companies were improving,
39:04and that more of them were getting four out of four stars.
39:08Why were you telling the committee that the water companies were doing a four-star job?
39:15Well, you've quoted everything I said.
39:19I think I stand by everything I said.
39:23I think you'll find them mutually consistent.
39:28The agency's job is to make sure the water companies obey the criminal law,
39:34but it doesn't do it, and the water companies do whatever they want.
39:37The alleged crimes of their directors are never prosecuted.
39:43They've built criminality into their business models because pollution is highly profitable,
39:49and repeat offending has no consequences.
39:52Therefore, in the light of the remarkable absence of any counter-corruption measures,
39:58we demand an investigation into the Environment Agency.
40:04The key test for me on regulation...
40:07Less regulation...
40:08Is it something that enables the builders, not the blockers?
40:11Cut guidance by 80%.
40:13We've also got to look at regulation...
40:15Regulations will go...
40:17And where it is needlessly holding back the investment...
40:19Reduce the amount and the burden of regulation...
40:22Rip up the bureaucracy that blocks investment...
40:25Northumbria and Morton recorded 30.1 spills per overflow over the course of 2023.
40:30280,000 hours and change in total.
40:35The chief executive, Heidi Mottram, received a bonus of £234,000 that year.
40:43Why did you take for all tickets from the parent company?
40:47Well, I didn't.
40:49OK.
40:49C.K. Hutchins Holdings owns 75% of Chung Kong Infrastructure Holdings,
40:54the owner of Northumbria and Water.
40:56And you declared £2,000 in football tickets and hospitality.
40:59Well, on that occasion, there was nobody from a water company that was involved in offering those tickets.
41:05There was nobody from a water company at that event.
41:08Well, I wouldn't have known that.
41:10They weren't present.
41:11Why didn't you know? You should have known that.
41:11You said that these sort of people should potentially be in the dock if they have been found to break
41:16the rules.
41:17You took £2,000 in tickets and hospitality for a football match from bosses linked to that company that polluted
41:23that water.
41:25Why should people in Northumbria think that you're fit for your job?
41:28Well, I certainly wouldn't have known that.
41:29And judge me by what I did.
41:29Why not?
41:30Judge me by what I did.
41:31No, no, that is what you did.
41:44Environment Minister Steve Reid is pursuing legal action against a group of anglers
41:49trying to restore the ecosystem of their local river
41:52on the grounds that cleaning up individual rivers is administratively unworkable.
41:59Concerns have been raised about the number of leading labour figures
42:02with links to lobbying firms working for water companies.
42:05Among the invited guests at the government's international investment summit was Macquarie Bank.
42:10Described as the vampire kangaroo by critics,
42:14Macquarie presided over the near collapse of Thames Water,
42:17leaving it £10 billion in debt after having illegally dumped billions of litres of raw sewage.
42:47I know I can't be left alone with her.
42:59That the water privatisation, I believe, will go very successfully indeed.
43:04That will go very successfully indeed.
43:07And perhaps therefore we have better wait and see
43:09so that we can contemplate in the light of the fact.
43:12How did it come to this?
43:16How did it happen that England is the only place in the whole world
43:24whose water system is wholly privatised?
43:29That our seas and our rivers are full of shite?
43:35I just feel like we're trying to bring down England's biggest organised crime syndicate.
43:43I mean, they're not the mafia, these water companies.
43:47They're not a drugs cartel, but they do dump sewage a thousand times a day.
43:53And almost all of those are illegal.
43:56And the cash, they've accumulated £145 billion since privatisation.
44:05And they've got that because they seem to have built criminality into their business models.
44:11So they are like an organised crime syndicate.
44:16And the CEOs and the owners are like crime bosses.
44:21I mean, they don't murder people, obviously.
44:24They're not assassins.
44:28But me and Peter are sitting here waiting for these crime lords to put things right.
44:36And if we leave them to their own devices, they never will.
44:43They never will.
44:45We've put the things that we own and care about together.
44:51We've put them into the hands of financial speculators,
44:54whose job it is, is just to make money.
44:58We need to put the people who care in charge.
45:31Thank you very much.
45:34We need to do this.
45:35Thank you.
45:42Thank you.
45:48Thank you.
46:18İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
46:48İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
47:18İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
47:48İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
48:18İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
48:46İzlediğiniz için teşekkür ederim.
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