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AnimalsTranscript
00:00Thank you for listening.
00:38Asia is home to the most extraordinary animals.
00:46But they are under pressure that is increasing as never before.
00:54All over the continent, remarkable people are dedicating their lives to saving them.
01:10Their aim is to ensure a future where humans and wildlife can coexist.
01:32Northeast Borneo.
01:37Home to one of Asia's most elusive mammals.
01:48Sun bears.
01:55No one knows how many are left in the wild.
02:00But they face tremendous threats from deforestation and poaching.
02:10All too often, orphaned cubs are sold as pets.
02:22And those that are rescued end up at the Bornean Sun Bear Conservation Centre run by Dr. Su Ti Wong.
02:34Hi, hi, hi. Be nice, be nice.
02:37Also known as Papa Bear.
02:42People give me that name, Papa Bear, because all of this is my kids.
02:48But yet, I'm a wildlife biologist.
02:50I want bears to live in the forest and not in captivity, not even here.
02:58One of the sanctuary's residents, Sika, is about to begin her journey back to the wild.
03:09This will be the culmination of years of care and rehabilitation.
03:16Sika came to our centre on March 2017.
03:21When we first got her, she was about three, four months old.
03:26You see her eyes look very sad, do not want to interact.
03:33Here, of course, we have to play the roles as a surrogate mother.
03:42And then she is getting bigger now, you know.
03:45And hey, with that kind of strength, this is something that you do not want to mess with.
03:51You need to have a lot of love and patience.
03:56The process of rehabilitating and taking care of the back-up is a very, very long process.
04:02It takes years.
04:08Before her release can begin, Sika must be darted.
04:13To avoid unnecessary stress.
04:16And to protect the team.
04:26Although roughly the size of a Labrador,
04:29some bears have incredibly strong jaws.
04:34And they could easily kill a human.
04:40Once sedated, the team have limited time to move her.
04:48The clock is ticking definitely.
04:51Finger crossed that everything is go well.
04:57She is placed in a metal crate, specially designed so that she cannot chew her way out.
05:05Okay.
05:06There is no going back now.
05:13Okay.
05:14Satu, dua, tiga.
05:15Okay.
05:17Okay.
05:18One, two, three.
05:20Alright.
05:21Let's go.
05:29The team travel at night to avoid the searing heat of the day,
05:34which could be fatal for an animal inside a metal box.
05:38In order for our reductions to be successful,
05:42we need to send them deep in the jungle where they are not going to see any humans ever again.
05:53The final leg of Seeker's journey will be by helicopter.
06:08The sedative is wearing off.
06:12And the temperature is rising.
06:15And there's a bigger problem.
06:19The landing site is under cloud cover.
06:22I'd give it about an hour, like 10.30 at least.
06:2510.30?
06:2610.30, we decide, because it's still very covered on that side.
06:29It looks kind of blue now.
06:30Uh-huh.
06:30It's moving that way, but it's still kind of sitting.
06:33Uh, it's not ideal for the bears to be big under the sun for too long.
06:38Yeah, so basically you need to do it before this last trip.
06:40Yes, yes, yes, yeah, yeah.
06:43Working in the forest or working with the animals,
06:47safety always comes first.
06:50It is very dangerous.
06:52But I feel like we still need to continue to work,
06:55because if we don't do it, nobody will, and the bears will have no future.
07:00Yeah, okay.
07:02Pergi, uh, pergi turun sekarang.
07:06News come through that there's a break in the weather.
07:10Okay, berhenti sekejap.
07:15For the team, there is not a moment to lose.
07:32It's risky.
07:33The crate could spin uncontrollably,
07:36so palm fronds are attached to steady it.
07:47The only place to land is a small patch of volcanic mud.
08:15After over 20 hours in the crate,
08:19seeker is now only moments.
08:22from freedom.
08:27Oh, depan sikit, depan sikit.
08:29Okay, okay, okay.
08:30Alright, so get ready.
08:34Here.
08:35Alright, uh, Sika, this is it.
08:37Your last journey ends.
08:40So I wish you all the best.
08:42Yeah.
08:44Wish you all the best.
08:45Wish you all the best.
08:47Wish you happy.
08:49Wish you long life.
08:52Yeah, I'm okay.
08:55Okay.
08:56Pulling.
08:57Go.
09:11The moment I open that door
09:14and the bears dash out into the forest,
09:16they are all on their own.
09:17I cannot help them anymore.
09:22It's not guaranteed that we can
09:25make sure that the bears can live happily ever after.
09:33But I think after all the hard work,
09:36it is still the right thing to do.
09:39The bears deserve a second chance to be in the wild.
09:57In this protected reserve,
10:02bears like Sika can still make a home.
10:09But in some of the continent's forests,
10:12wildlife is being removed at an alarming rate.
10:24Java, Indonesia.
10:30This rainforest should provide a habitat for a multitude of birds with melodious songs.
10:43But the jungle is falling silent.
10:54In stark contrast, the bird markets are noisier than ever.
11:03keeping birds that sing as pets is a deep-rooted tradition in Indonesia.
11:12And in recent years, a new craze has emerged.
11:22singing competitions take place all over the country.
11:34The stakes are high.
11:40Big money prizes are on offer.
11:49Many of these birds have been taken from the wild.
11:54And the hobby is driving some species towards extinction.
12:06Panji Gusta Akbar is determined that one very special species isn't going to vanish.
12:16All this security is here for a reason.
12:22Within these walls is one of the rarest birds in the world.
12:30The Javan Green Magpie.
12:38Here we have, at the moment, 62 Javan Green Magpie.
12:42Which is the biggest population in captivity in the world.
12:48Probably even more than we have in the wild.
12:52Okay, so we start with the body condition score.
12:56Three and a half.
12:58They are precious species.
13:01All of them are very attractive for birders and poachers and the like.
13:09Here, a breeding program is being run with the aim of releasing captive bred magpies into the wild.
13:19But the team face a huge challenge.
13:29Panji will only release his captive bred birds if he can find a population of wild magpies with which they
13:37can breed.
13:47But with so few left, it's a near impossible task.
14:00He is deploying new technology.
14:04Sound traps.
14:07Microphones that pick up every noise in the jungle.
14:15Software powered by artificial intelligence helps Panji analyze all the recordings.
14:28But it still takes hours and hours of listening.
14:37We just need to hear one magpie.
14:44This isn't Panji's only problem.
14:52There is no point in releasing birds if they are then just poached again.
14:58So, he must also change the hearts and minds of those who make a living from them.
15:04Hello.
15:06Hello.
15:09How are you?
15:09Panji is meeting with Mr. Neo, who owns several award-winning singing birds.
15:19This year?
15:21Yes.
15:23Yes.
15:24Yes.
15:27Yes.
15:28Yes.
15:29Yes.
15:36Astonishingly, in Mr. Neo's backyard, Panji finds a bird he never expected to see here.
15:44A Javan green magpie.
15:48Is there anything more?
15:50Yes.
16:02Yes.
16:04Yes.
16:05Yes.
16:07Yes.
16:09Yes.
16:09Yes.
16:11Yes.
16:12Yes.
16:38I care about birds a lot, but I also care about people.
16:42I care about the culture, I care about the income of these people.
16:46And you can't just forcefully tell them to stop depending their daily life on this activity without giving any solutions.
16:57Panji needs to convince people like Mr. Neo that there's another way to appreciate birds.
17:07He wants to show him a project in central Java that might persuade him.
17:15The village of Jatimulyo was once a hotbed for poaching, but now instead the locals make a living from bird
17:25tourism and photography competitions.
17:32It attracts birders from across Asia.
17:38And now the poaching has stopped.
17:44This is called Hide.
17:46So if we want to take care of our friends, we can take care of our friends.
17:53But if you want to take care of our friends, you can take care of our friends.
18:11You can take care of our friends.
18:13We want to take care of our friends.
18:13Wow, he's so beautiful.
18:18He's so beautiful.
18:19He's more beautiful than the world.
18:22He's so beautiful.
18:32It's a living solution for everyone.
18:35You bring benefit to the community.
18:38You bring benefit to the nature.
18:41You can bring benefit to people who come to the village.
18:46It just works.
18:50This is basically the inspiration and also the aim for the Java Green Magpie programs.
18:57where people and animals live side by side with the nature without removing them from the wild.
19:10Panji is hopeful for the future because he now knows a change of heart is possible.
19:23Mr. Neo has donated his bird to the sanctuary.
19:30And after months of work, there is more good news.
19:34Wait.
19:35Wait.
19:37This is interesting.
19:38This is interesting.
19:43That's a magpie.
19:44That's a magpie.
19:45This is a magpie.
19:49We found it.
19:53We found it.
19:56With the Java Green Magpies confirmed at a secret location,
20:01Panji is now a step closer to releasing his captive bred birds
20:06and help ensure the survival of this newly discovered population.
20:23Okinawa Island, Japan.
20:28Scientists here are developing techniques that give us a glimpse of what conservation could become in the future.
20:56Marine biologists, Mr. Tomita and Mr. Kaneko, are taking delivery of some very precious
21:03cargo. There is only limited time to get the refrigerated unit back to their laboratory.
21:50Their task is to take pregnant sharks killed accidentally in fishing nets and rescue their unborn young.
22:06He is still alive. I don't know how to do it.
22:13I'm going to try to do it.
22:15I'm going to try to do it.
22:18It's very fast to do it.
22:24It is actually working on the machine.
22:27I like this.
22:30The machine is working on it.
22:32It's all right!
22:35I am done.
22:53They have developed an incubating system that simulates the mother shark's womb.
23:02The delicate embryos are fed by their existing yolk sacs.
23:09But they need to be surrounded by a special chemical fluid similar to that provided by
23:15their mother, and are kept dark, as they would be naturally.
23:38When the mother is dying, she can't live to die, but she can't use the human brain.
23:51The baby is dead, and she can't live to die, but she can't live to die.
24:10The process requires constant monitoring and the liquid must be changed as time passes.
24:20To become gradually more like seawater.
24:35After several months, the baby sharks are ready to be released into a tank,
24:44where their development will continue.
25:05As we learn more about the animals with which we share the world, we also invent new techniques for conserving
25:13them.
25:14And a recent discovery may prevent rare species of fish from being caught in the first place.
25:28Muncha, on the eastern tip of Java, is home to one of the region's largest fishing fleets.
25:39Many rare species that are caught in drift nets by accident end up in the market here.
25:50They are known collectively as bycatch.
25:55And Egin Salim and his team at the Mobula Project Indonesia monitor it.
26:11It's not just small rays that suffer.
26:17This giant Mobula ray was caught by accident last night.
26:24In the dark depths, it couldn't see the net and swam straight into it.
26:38They are limited as long as you would get used to work.
26:44People are recognized and dire-cards of looking to separate snatches.
26:53F marry, so the image is unequally
26:53this difference is bigger.
26:58These one numbers are the size of a paniaccut.
26:59Mobula-Mobula, they only can get one pup every two years, so it's quite sad that
27:08she ending up in the fish market like this one.
27:13When you're diving and you see the Mobula race,
27:19it's magical.
27:23They can swim like they're flying on the ocean.
27:31It's a very charismatic fish.
27:39Some new research could help protect the rays.
27:48Egin is working with scientists, including Betty Legelbauer, who is an expert on ray eyesight.
27:55I'm good, I'm good.
27:56We think we've finally been able to basically identify which wavelengths the animals can detect.
28:03We're really curious to see if we could use some lights that basically shine light in the specific
28:09wavelengths that these animals can detect to try to get them to notice the nets in the water before
28:14they swim into them.
28:17If Betty's theory is correct, traditional fishermen like Egin's friend Pak Usyk
28:25could help conserve the species.
28:30But will he be willing to adopt the idea?
28:33You can see?
28:37Look, it's turning.
28:38Put the sailor over there?
28:39Turn it here.
28:39Now, this is the full color.
28:42When in the water, it's very little.
28:43It's really cool.
28:45To see if we're at the ceiling.
28:47What is this?
28:49I'm just holding the rock straight from the beach.
28:52Look at the music.
28:53It's okay.
28:55I'm just kidding.
28:56When did it…
28:57Bye, I'm just kidding.
28:58Who is that?
28:59My name is Ramayan Shanks.
29:02What does it matter?
29:09Tonight, the lights will be tested on the net.
29:17If the science is accurate, green lights will be visible to rays, but not to the fish that
29:24Spak Usyk and his crew depend on to feed their families.
29:38It's the moment of truth.
29:48There are plenty of target fish.
29:53And no rays have been caught in the net tonight.
30:01Bak Usyk is relieved.
30:11This initial trial gives hope that there might be a way to safeguard ray species across Asia.
30:32Technology is increasingly being used in the fight to save wildlife.
30:41And in Hong Kong, a small team are testing a new way of protecting another of Asia's most
30:50threatened marine creatures.
30:56This city consumes over 800 tons of seafood every day, including one rare coral reef species.
31:07The ultimate luxury delicacy, the Napoleon fish.
31:19Yvonne Sadovy, a marine biologist from the University of Hong Kong, is an expert on this species.
31:31These animals are complex, they're very intelligent, and in the wild get really, really big.
31:39Over one and a half meters.
31:45It lives a very long time.
31:47It lives a very long time.
31:47We're talking about well over 30 years.
31:50Longer than lions, longer than tigers.
31:53So these big males, they're like the old men of the reef, the wise men of the reef.
32:00But nowadays, there aren't many large ones left.
32:03They're being fished quite heavily, and they're disappearing.
32:11Because of their status, very few Napoleon fish are allowed to be imported, and then sold
32:18in Hong Kong under international law.
32:26But only some restaurants are sticking to the quotas, and too many fish are ending up
32:32on dinner plates.
32:38A number of years ago, I would go to work every day past a little restaurant.
32:43And I seemed to be seeing the same two Napoleons in that tank every day for weeks and weeks
32:49and weeks.
32:52I started taking photographs of them every day.
32:55And what I noticed over time was a changeover in fish, as I could tell by the facial markings.
33:04Something like 14 fish had gone through the tank.
33:10We realized how easy it was to actually just replace legally imported fish with one that's
33:16illegally imported.
33:20how ever would anyone detect that?
33:25Yvonne has gathered together a team to work on an innovative solution to this problem.
33:34Every Napoleon fish has unique markings on the side of its head.
33:41Lobie Hull is helping Yvonne develop a facial recognition app.
33:47It should allow them to identify individual fish, and so monitor the number on sale across
33:54the city's restaurants.
34:01We are trying to develop a new technique to protect the species.
34:11Hi, Lobie.
34:13Come in.
34:16We think what we developed can really be a breakthrough in conservation.
34:22We have the similarity score from 0% to 100%.
34:26We can keep improving it with more images.
34:30Right.
34:33The app has been over five years in the making, and with the prototype now at an advanced stage,
34:43the team are training it with as many images of Napoleon fish as they can gather.
34:51So what's the percentage match, for example, with this one?
34:5698.
34:5798.
34:58Absolutely fantastic.
35:13If the app is to be a success, it will need the support of people like Li Choi-Wa.
35:19who represents live seafood traders throughout Hong Kong.
35:24I understand.
35:27I understand.
35:27I understand.
35:28It's like a computer.
35:30It's like that.
35:31Yes.
35:33It's good to know.
35:35I tell you.
35:36Yeah.
35:38With the support of organizations such as Mr. Lee's, widespread take-up of the app is now
35:46a real possibility.
35:50Absolutely the next step has to be that the government adopts this approach in their enforcement
35:56work.
35:57There is no other choice.
36:01The technology now exists to monitor the number of Napoleon fish being sold and so control
36:08the illegal trade and the species.
36:12It has the potential to be a game changer.
36:25Globally, wildlife is one of the largest black market commodities alongside drugs and arms.
36:43And one country in Asia sits at its crossroads.
36:56Nepal.
36:59It has a thousand-mile border used by smugglers who take animals from the wild in Southern Asia
37:11to sell to sell to wealthy buyers in China.
37:21At the border crossing, many globally threatened species are seized, including red pandas and leopards.
37:34Kumar Paudel is working to stop this criminal activity.
37:42Today he's teaching customs officials how to identify animal products.
37:49People in India were trying to find animals like animals.
37:50This could be rare wildlife species, it could be antelope.
37:53We see lots of this kind of things.
37:56The animal products have to trade.
37:58It only is that the animals have to harvest.
38:02The animals like grass, and the animals, are puritan and wild plants.
38:11Intercepting illegal goods is a positive step.
38:16But catching the traffickers who operate inside Nepal is key.
38:23In Kathmandu, Kumar and his team collect information on smugglers
38:30and share their findings with police.
38:45Kumar has some important intelligence for his contacts in the Specialist Wildlife Unit
38:52that is at the front line in the fight against trafficking.
39:22The police have confirmed Kumar's information
39:26and are planning a sting operation.
39:31An undercover officer will go ahead, posing as a buyer.
39:44The rest of the team will follow and move in once contact is made.
40:01Wildlife crime operates in a very complex network.
40:14I have interviewed hundreds of wildlife prisoners to understand why they are doing it
40:20and how we can help to stop them.
40:25Poor people, they are the one being hired by the International Criminal Group to hunt down the wildlife.
40:51The team goes in on the target.
40:54Videos theal out
41:13for the conference briefsсячง
41:14diem. The police
41:17are the volunteers to get the characters to hide
41:19not Store Olds' Market. They will
41:20look back on the street to watch them. I want
41:20to see them.
41:21Destined for the black market, a sack of scales from a pangolin,
41:27a critically endangered mammal.
41:30And people are risking their freedom for it.
41:36They know it's illegal,
41:37but they don't understand the consequences for their life and for their family.
42:02We won't be able to stop the international life crime by only arresting indigenous and poor communities.
42:12If we really want to control the trade,
42:15then we should focus on breaking the international chain
42:20and arresting the ones who are driving the trade.
42:30Conservation is a human choice.
42:33But I'm very hopeful because this is something we can fix if we really want.
42:40The problem is we don't have much time left.
42:49Across Asia, pangolin numbers are in serious decline.
42:54And although poaching is the main threat they face,
42:58there are other issues.
43:15Zunda pangolins are now being squeezed out of their remaining forest habitats by urban development.
43:29In Singapore, the few that remain are forced to eke out an existence in the shadow of the city's skyscrapers.
43:40And pangolins often find themselves in trouble,
43:44out of place,
43:46and in the heart of the city.
44:00Talae Balakrishnan runs the only 24-hour wildlife rescue charity here.
44:07And he's a busy man.
44:10Is this where you saw the band?
44:11Yeah, it's where I last saw it.
44:14He's in the door frame.
44:15Oh my God! Is it in the door frame?
44:19Considering how small we are,
44:21and considering how little forest cover we have left,
44:26I would say that we are pretty rich in biodiversity.
44:32Currently, we are averaging about 1,800 coals a month.
44:42Definitely there has been an increase in wildlife coming into urban areas.
44:50There are more and more species that are involved in this conflict with people.
44:55A lot of pangolins that we rescue, they are in urban areas.
44:59They are obviously coming out either because of development or maybe they are looking for a mate.
45:05We have rescued them under flats,
45:09in drains,
45:12in construction sites.
45:17A call has just come in.
45:20A pangolin has been found in a critical condition.
45:25We don't know what might have happened.
45:27A pangolin seemed to be in pretty bad shape in the middle of a golf course.
45:35A lot of pangolins here unfortunately die from road kills,
45:40because a lot of our roads are dividing the nature reserves and the greenery that we have here, their habitats.
45:46So, yeah, we want to do this as soon as possible so that he has a better chance of surviving
45:51as a critically endangered species.
45:59In a lot of the rescues we do, we often get asked this question.
46:04Where did this animal come from?
46:11People don't realise that they were always here, it's we who moved in,
46:16and they are just trying to survive alongside us.
46:23I think his back legs are broken.
46:26It has a depression in the side of the abdomen, which is not a good thing.
46:33Can I work with specialist vets, who are world-class pioneers in caring for pangolins.
46:45The team will do everything they can for this elderly, fragile male.
46:50No.
46:55He's lost a lot of body condition, he can't seem to manage his wounds very well.
47:01He cannot fend for himself.
47:07Sometimes I think all of us just want to give up.
47:12But I think tenacity is a very important thing.
47:17You just got to really believe that every living thing has a value and has a place, yeah.
47:26The passion and the wanting to help animals is very important.
47:31I grew up being like that.
47:35But as much as you try, you can't always succeed.
47:55Only a few hours later,
47:57Calai is called out to a multi-storey car park to pick up another pangolin.
48:04Right.
48:09It's okay, it's okay.
48:14It's okay.
48:15It's a youngster.
48:17Less than six months old and full of life.
48:23You're fine.
48:24You got to make it.
48:25You got to make it.
48:26You got to make it.
48:27Okay.
48:28It's okay.
48:29It's okay.
48:30Calai has arrived just in time.
48:33The pangolin is out of harm's way and can be released where it won't get run over.
48:39So we're just going to pop this guy in.
48:42And yeah, just let him go.
48:47Giving this precious individual a second chance.
48:56Calai's work gives urban wildlife a much needed helping hand.
49:04But elsewhere in Asia, conservationists are attempting something even more ambitious.
49:12They're trying to break the link between the destruction of the natural world and poverty.
49:29The Batang Toru cloud forest in Sumatra.
49:37This is home to the most recently discovered great ape.
49:44But it's already the most threatened.
49:59The Tapanuli Oranutan.
50:07This baby and its mother are two of only 800 left.
50:22Potting on Pasungu is working to save them alongside the local community.
50:30Oranutan Tapanuli.
50:32It's a key species.
50:34It's umbrella species.
50:36They are very important in the welfare of other animals.
50:43Oranutan Tapanuli.
50:47Now we are facing this issue of extinction.
50:51It will not only impact Oranutan itself but also with other wildlife in the ecosystem.
51:09Even though the Oranutan's habitat is remote, their last stronghold is under extreme pressure from human encroachment.
51:22But Hotlin has a unique approach to conservation, one that involves the entire community.
51:31And it all starts in a most unlikely place.
51:44I am a dentist.
51:47I work in a rural area.
51:51The community are very poor.
51:56Dental care is still very limited.
51:59Health care is expensive.
52:02They believe that the forest should be protected.
52:05That the forest is important for their well-being.
52:09But when they have no other option to survive, they have to cut trees for timber.
52:17There is connection between poverty and logging.
52:22And poverty brings more poverty.
52:27To reverse deforestation, Hotlin has come up with an ingenious solution.
52:36Villagers are encouraged to grow trees from seeds at home.
52:40And then bring the saplings along to the clinic as part payment for their treatment.
52:50Chainsaws can also be traded in.
52:55They can have the treatment at the same time, they can also help to protect and rehabilitate the forest.
53:06Given time, Hotlin's work will help take pressure off the forest and the Oranutan.
53:30Orangutan is important for us.
53:33It's a mutual relationship.
53:37They are the one who look after the forest.
53:41They will save the source of water for the people who live nearby.
53:49The forest will produce the healthy air that we breathe.
53:58Like the lung of our planet.
54:03Saving and looking after our environment, the animals, the wildlife.
54:10The forest is actually looking after ourself.
54:13It might seem like a huge leap of faith.
54:18But there is real evidence this concept works.
54:24Back in 2007, on the neighboring island of Borneo,
54:30Hotlin co-founded the world's first conservation health clinic
54:34with a staff of fewer than 10.
54:44Today, it has over 90.
54:48And is thriving.
55:04The challenge when we started this, I said if you want to do something good, you have to believe in
55:11it.
55:12And sometimes we don't even know how it will turn out.
55:16But just believe and don't compromise in what you want to achieve.
55:23So I tell them it's like in a Bollywood movie.
55:26At the end, we will dance at the end.
55:35The Ashri Clinic now has a huge bank of saplings brought in by patients to help pay for treatment.
55:45These are being used to reforest areas that were once stripped to vegetation.
55:52It's been five years, in 2017.
55:57Now, it's been five or six years.
55:59It's been a mini forest.
56:06And once the trees return,
56:14the animals follow.
56:28From its bustling cities,
56:33to its rich oceans.
56:37Across Asia,
56:40individuals are working tirelessly to bring about positive change.
56:47united by one aim.
56:53To protect the continent's natural riches for future generations.
57:02There is a long way to go.
57:05And they may not succeed.
57:09But if this region,
57:12home to almost 60% of the people on the planet,
57:16can find ways to coexist with wildlife,
57:21then there is surely hope for the rest of the world.
57:30The Ashri Clinic
57:30The Ashri Clinic
57:34The Ashri Clinic
57:38The Ashri Clinic
57:40The Ashri Clinic
57:41The Ashri Clinic
57:41The Ashri Clinic
57:41The Ashri Clinic
57:41The Ashri Clinic
57:41The Ashri Clinic
57:42The Ashri Clinic
57:42The Ashri Clinic
57:42The Ashri Clinic
57:43The Ashri Clinic
57:43The Ashri Clinic
57:43The Ashri Clinic
57:44The Ashri Clinic
57:44The Ashri Clinic
57:45The Ashri Clinic
57:47The Ashri Clinic
57:49The Ashri Clinic
57:51The Ashri Clinic
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