Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 136South Africa
Porrit and Another v National Prosecuting Authority of South Africa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 136; B825/2023 (6 March 2023)
Headnotes
SUMMARY: Urgent application for a mandamus to compel the issue of a certificate nolle prosequi in terms of s 7(2)(a) of the Criminal Procedure Act – time period for institution of proceedings lapsing on 16 March 2023, 20 years after alleged offence – NDPP declined to prosecute on 19 November 2009 – unexplained delay in requesting certificate – when request made discovered that docket lost - insufficient time to reconstruct so that NDPP may issue a valid certificate – lex non cogit ad impossibilia – application dismissed; no order as to costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Porrit and Another v National Prosecuting Authority of South Africa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 136; B825/2023 (6 March 2023)
Porrit and Another v National Prosecuting Authority of South Africa and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 136; B825/2023 (6 March 2023)
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sino date 6 March 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case
No. B825/2023
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED
NO
6
MARCH 2023
In the matter between:
PORRITT,
GARY
PATRICK
1
ST
APPLICANT
BENNETT,
SUSAN
HILARY
2
ND
APPLICANT
And
NATIONAL
PROSECUTING AUTHORITY OF SOUTH AFRICA
1
ST
RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
2
ND
RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS, PRETORIA
3
RD
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Millar J
Heard on
:
3 March 2023
Delivered:
6 March 2023 - This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being uploaded
to the
CaseLines
system
of the Gauteng Division and by release to SAFLII. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 12H15 on 6 March
2023.
SUMMARY:
Urgent application for a
mandamus
to compel the issue of a
certificate
nolle prosequi
in terms of s 7(2)(a) of the
Criminal Procedure Act – time period for institution of
proceedings lapsing on 16 March 2023,
20 years after alleged offence
– NDPP declined to prosecute on 19 November 2009 –
unexplained delay in requesting certificate
– when request made
discovered that docket lost - insufficient time to reconstruct so
that NDPP may issue a valid certificate
–
lex non cogit ad
impossibilia
– application dismissed; no order as to costs.
ORDER
It is ordered: -
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
INTRODUCTION AND
BACKGROUND
1.
The applicants seek a
mandamus
compelling the issue of a certificate of
nolle
prosequi
in terms of
s7(2)(a)
and (b)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
(“CPA”) by the
second respondent – the National Director of Public
Prosecutions (“NDPP”). The application
was brought as a
matter of urgency for the reasons that appear below.
2.
The first applicant (“Mr. Porritt”)
was formerly a director of Shawcell Holdings (Pty) Ltd (“Shawcell”).
This company, according to Mr. Porritt was finally liquidated in June
2003. It is alleged that the liquidation was in direct consequence
of
income tax assessments levied by the South African Revenue Services
(“SARS”) in the sum of R162 929 001.00
(One
Hundred and Sixty-Two Million Nine Hundred and Twenty-Nine Thousand
and One Rand).
3.
The second applicant (“Ms. Bennett”)
was a director of PSC Guaranteed Growth Fund (“PSC”), a
company that
is also in liquidation and whose 3000 shareholders
entire investment was with Shawcell.
4.
According to the applicants, neither of
them have any legal qualifications, both however have gained
experience of the criminal
justice system since 2002 when they were
first arrested. Their engagement with the criminal justice system
continues to this day
with them presently being on trial in the High
Court in Johannesburg.
5.
Ms. Bennett appeared personally to move
this application. Mr. Porritt is presently incarcerated at the
Johannesburg Central Prison
and did not appear for this application.
Ms. Bennett made common cause with Mr. Porritt and the submissions
made by her were also
made on his behalf.
6.
It was alleged by the applicants that SARS
in levying the assessments that they had, had also sought independent
advice before doing
so. It was in consequence of the assessments (and
ostensibly on the basis of the advice) which the applicants contend
was fraudulent,
that Shawcell had been liquidated and the PSC
investors had suffered loss. There was also a knock-on effect in
respect of other
inter-related companies, one of which was Shawcell
Communications Ltd, a company listed on the Johannesburg Stock
Exchange. This
company was also liquidated. The applicants lay the
blame for the failure of these commercial endeavours on the SARS
assessment
and specifically the persons they believe contrived it.
7.
The applicants allege that on advice, Mr.
Porritt had laid criminal charges against the SARS Commissioner and
the then leader of
the audit team that had audited Shawcell. These
charges were laid in 2005 at the Sunnyside Police Station in
Pretoria.
8.
It was averred by Mr. Porritt that,
although he regarded the assessments as being fraudulent, because
Shawcell was in liquidation,
he believed that he was unable to lodge
objections to those assessments. When the first meeting of creditors
was held, the issue
of an objection to the assessments was raised and
he believed that the liquidators would do so. When they did not do
so, on 15
March 2006, the attorney representing him, lodged those
objections. The objections were on the same grounds as those set out
in
the criminal complaint and did not find any favour with SARS.
9.
Thereafter, Mr. Porritt engaged with the
director of Public Prosecutions in Pretoria (“DPP”). A
letter was sent on 4
August 2006 in which the frustration of the
Applicants at the way in which the DPP was dealing with the matter
was expressed. Tellingly,
in that letter which was quoted by Mr.
Porritt in his founding affidavit, although the letter itself was not
attached, he is alleged
to have stated:
“
6.
I can only assume from your conduct and that of the State that you
have no intention of treating this
matter with the priority that it
deserves. In fact, the inevitable conclusion that must be drawn is
that the State intends to sweep
this matter under the carpet in the
same manner in which it has treated every other legitimate complaint
laid with the SAPS with
which I or Sue Bennett is associated.
7.
I have been advised that such
conduct, in which you appear to be participating, is aimed at
defeating the ends of justice and is
a criminal offence.”
10.
Despite the laying of the charges and the
follow up on 4 August 2006, somewhat inexplicably, there is neither
allegation nor evidence
proferred on the part of the applicants that
they took any further steps to follow up on the matter. According to
them, they focused
the case in which they had been charged. It was
during the course of this case in early 2016, when they had attempted
to have the
prosecutors removed, that they had discovered that SARS
had been independently advised before levying the assessments on
Shawcell.
11.
It was alleged by the Mr. Porritt in his
founding affidavit, that:
“
15.
There can be no doubt that the NPA has intentionally elected to
ignore the Sunnyside case as it does
not suit the NPA to accept
financial and prosecutorial assistance from SARS in their pursuit of
the criminal case against us and,
at the same time, prosecute
principal members of the prosecution team.
16.
It is therefore politically convenient for the NPA to let the
Sunnyside case slide into prescription.
17.
It is respectfully submitted that justice demands that the NPA should
have prosecuted the case a long time
ago “without fear or
favour” as it is required to do.”
12.
The intention of the applicants in the
bringing of the present application is to “
launch
our own private prosecution against the individuals at SARS and
Advocate {name omitted}……., who have been jointly
instrumental in the commission of the frauds.”
13.
On 3 February 2023, some 18 years after the
charges were laid, the applicants addressed a letter to the first
respondent (“NDPP”)
requesting the issue of a certificate
of
nolle prosequi
by
no later than 17 February 2023.
14.
Since
it was alleged that the demands and thus on the date which the
offences had occurred was 17 March 2003, the time within which
the
private prosecution could be timeously instituted would expire on 16
March 2023.
[1]
It is for this
reason that the present application was said to be urgent because the
NDPP did not respond to the letter of 3 February
2023.
15.
The respondents for their part, did not
place in issue that the SARS assessments had been issued on 17 March
2003 or that the criminal
complaint had been made. What the
respondents did place in issue, was the timing of the present
application.
16.
It
was averred on the part of the respondents that on 19 November
2009,
[2]
a decision had been
taken in terms of which the NDPP had declined to prosecute. An
affidavit was filed by the investigating officer
confirming this. She
also stated:
“
3.4
A decision was made by Adv {name omitted} and Adv {name omitted} of
the Specialist Tax Unit at the DPP Pretoria,
that they decline to
prosecute the matter, a so-called Nolle Prosequi, on 19 November
2009.
3.5
I received the notice and the docket. I cannot recall in this case
specifically, but my standard operating
procedure is to telephone the
complainant and inform them of the decision. As previously stated, I
must have spoken to Mr Porritt’s
spokesperson, because I don’t
recall ever speaking to Mr Porritt.
3.6
I finalised, closed and filed the docket in early 2010 and have never
dealt with it again. I have not received
any enquiries regarding the
docket, in any shape or form, until {name omitted}, of the Specialist
Tax Unit Pretoria, contacted
me on 27 February 2023.
3.7
A diligent search of our storage facility revealed that the docket
cannot be found and is most likely to have
been disposed of due to
prescripts on passage of time and constraints of space.”
17.
The applicants in reply, save for a
personal attack on the integrity of the investigating officer and
denial of the correctness
of inter alia paragraphs 3.4 to 3.6 were
unable to place in issue that as a matter of fact, the docket is now
no longer available.
18.
The respondents for their part opposed the
application, firstly on the basis that it was not urgent and lastly
that the applicants
lack locus
standi
to conduct a private prosecution.
URGENCY
19.
On the matter of urgency, it was alleged
that the applicants had been dilatory in their pursuit of the matter
and that any urgency
that there may be was self-created.
20.
In
East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
[3]
it
was held:
“
An
applicant has to set forth specifically the circumstances which he
avers that render the matter urgent. More importantly, the
Applicant
must state the reasons why he claims that he cannot be afforded
substantial redress at the hearing in due course. The
question of
whether the matter is sufficiently urgent to be enrolled and heard as
an urgent application is underpinned by the issue
of . . .
substantial redress is an application in due course. The rules allow
the court to come to the assistance of a litigant
because if the
latter were to weight for the normal course laid down by the rules,
it will not obtain substantial redress.”
21.
It
is incontrovertible that if the right to institute proceedings is
time barred and that a hearing in due course will only take
place
after the bar becomes effective. There is no prospect of any redress
at a hearing in due course.
[4]
This is the case for urgency made out by the applicants. I am
satisfied that the application, for this reason is properly brought
before the court as an urgent one.
APPLICANTS’
LOCUS STANDI
22.
In
regard to the
locus
standi
,
the NDPP argued that the applicants lack
locus
standi
.
In this regard, I was referred to
Moloto
Communal Property Association v Tshoane
[5]
,
in which it was held:
“
As
a general rule applicable to locus standi, the applicant must have a
direct interest in the subject matter which interest must
not be far
removed. A mere moral interest is insufficient to ground a right to
institute a matter”.
23.
In
Nundalal
v Director of Public Prosecutions KZN and Others
[6]
, it was held:
“
[19]
. . . A certificate is quite simply confirmation that the DPP
declines to prosecute, nothing more nothing less. It is
not a tarot
foretelling that the private prosecutor has ‘substantial and
peculiar interests’ and has been injured personally
as a
consequence of the offence.”
24.
In
issue in this matter, is not whether the applicants have an interest
in the prosecution or for that matter whether they have
locus
standi
to successfully establish title to prosecute.
[7]
25.
The issue of a certificate
nolle
prosequi
is an administrative act which
results in establishing the first of two jurisdictional facts
necessary for the private prosecutor
to even be able to establish
title and to proceed with such prosecution.
THE ORDER SOUGHT
26.
The applicants seek an order that “
The
Second Respondent immediately issue a certificate of nolle prosequi
in terms of
section 7(2)(a)
and (b) of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51
of 1977
, as amended, in respect of Sunnyside CAS No. 945/05/2005.”
27.
Section 7
of the CPA provides:
“
7
Private
prosecution on certificate
nolle
prosequi
(1)
In any
case in which a Director of Public Prosecutions declines to prosecute
for an alleged offence-
(a)any
private person who proves some substantial and peculiar interest in
the issue of the trial arising out of some injury which
he
individually suffered in consequence of the commission of the said
offence;
(b)
a
husband, if the said offence was committed in respect of his
wife;
(c)
the wife
or child or, if there is no wife or child, any of the
next of kin of
any deceased person, if the death of such person is alleged to have
been caused by the said offence; or
(d)
the
legal guardian or curator of a minor or lunatic, if the said
offence
was committed against his ward, may, subject to the provisions of
section 9
and
section 59
(2) of the
Child Justice Act, 2008
, either
in person or by a legal representative, institute and conduct a
prosecution in respect of such offence in any court competent
to try
that offence.
(2) (a)
No private prosecutor under this section shall obtain the
process of
any court for summoning any person to answer any charge unless such
private prosecutor produces to the officer authorized
by law to issue
such process a certificate signed by the attorney-general
[8]
that
he has seen the statements or affidavits on which the charge is based
and that he declines to prosecute at the instance of the State. (my
underlining)
(b)
The attorney-general shall, in any case in which he declines
to
prosecute, at the request of the person intending to prosecute, grant
the certificate referred to in paragraph (a).
(c)
A certificate issued under this subsection shall lapse unless
proceedings in respect of the offence in question are instituted by
the issue of the process referred to in paragraph (a) within
three months of the date of the certificate.
(d)
…..”
28.
In
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v King
[9]
it
was stated that:
“
[1]
Police dockets, forming a prosecutor’s brief,
consist normally of three sections. Section A contains statements
of
witnesses, expert reports and documentary evidence. Section B
contains internal reports and memoranda, and Section C the
investigation
diary.”
29.
The decision to
prosecute or not is made on the entirety of the contents of the
docket and hinges essentially upon the question
of whether the
persons in respect of whom the complaint is made can be successfully
prosecuted.
30.
The docket is also
important for the private prosecutor – he does not have the
resources of the state with which to investigate
or prosecute and is
unlikely to do so in the face of evidence that there is no prospect
of a successful prosecution. It is for
this reason that the NDPP’s
consideration of
“
statements
or affidavits on which the charge is based”
–
in other
words the evidence in Section A of the docket is so important.
31.
Before turning to the provisions of
s 7
it
is important to consider the sequence of events leading up to the
request for a certificate
nolle
prosequi
. These are:
31.1
An offence must have been committed or at
least there must be the apprehension that an offence has been
committed;
31.2
A charge is laid with the SAPS and a
statement under oath in which the knowledge of the complainant as to
the offence and of the
alleged perpetrators are set out.
31.3
The SAPS conduct an investigation of the
complaint;
31.4
The docket, which is the full record of the
complaint and the investigations is then submitted to the DPP for a
decision on whether
or not the state will prosecute.
32.
If the DPP declines to prosecute, as
occurred in the present case, it is only then that a certificate of
nolle prosequi
can be requested. Put differently, the certificate can only ever be
requested once the DPP has decided not to prosecute –
until
then, a complainant or any other party has no legal right to request
the issue of the certificate.
33.
Once the decision not to prosecute has been
made and the certificate has been requested, then the provisions of
s7(1)
read together with
s 7(2)(b)
and subject to
s 7(2)(a)
become
operative. The DPP must then issue the certificate.
34.
S7(2)(a)
deals with the issue of the
certificate. The requirements of this section are peremptory. The
person who is to assume the role
of private prosecutor is prohibited
from proceeding with such prosecution without the certificate. It is
a pre-requisite for the
issue of the certificate that it is “
a
certificate signed by the attorney general that he has seen the
statements or affidavits on which the charge is based and that
he
declines to prosecute at the instance of the state.”
35.
So, once the office of the DPP has made a
decision not to prosecute and a certificate is then requested, the
docket must then be
resubmitted to the NDPP for reconsideration of
its contents and confirmation that the state will not proceed with a
prosecution.
36.
This is an important step in the process of
private criminal prosecution and ensures that in matters in respect
of which the DPP
has declined to prosecute, the decision is subjected
to the scrutiny of the NDPP before it is confirmed and a certificate
nolle prosequi
issued.
37.
Once the certificate is issued, the private
prosecutor may then proceed to obtain the process of a court and to
initiate proceedings.
These proceedings are not civil proceedings –
they are criminal proceedings.
38.
In the present instance, the DPP declined
to prosecute 19 November 2009. In consequence of this, a certificate
could have been requested
at any time from then.
39.
The docket is no longer available. There is
no suggestion that this was deliberate on the part of either the NDPP
or the SAPS, the
party tasked with safe custody.
40.
It is simply not possible for the NDPP to
issue a certificate without having consideration of the contents of
the docket. If a certificate
was issued without the NDPP having
regard thereto, the certificate would not comply with
s 7(2)(a)
and
would not confer lawful title to prosecute upon the private
prosecutor.
41.
The
issue of the certificate is in consequence of two separate and
sequential administrative decisions.
[10]
Each of the decisions variously affect the rights
[11]
of the person requesting the certificate, the person/s named in the
complaint as well as the private prosecutor.
42.
The issue of the certificate sets the law
in motion against the person/s named in the complaint and it is
self-evident that they
too are entitled to expect that a fair and
just procedure has been followed with the process before the private
prosecutor can
act to set the law upon them.
43.
In the present matter, the failure of the
applicants to request the issue of a certificate until now:
43.1
1 month short of 20 years after the offence
is said to have occurred.
43.2
18 years after the complaint was made,
43.3
17 years after there had been
correspondence by Mr. Porritt requesting that the prosecution be
pursued,
43.4
12
years after Mr. Porritt in applying for the removal of the
prosecutors in his own case, pertinently objected to the fact that
there had been no prosecution in the present matter;
[12]
and
43.5
7
years after Mr. Porritt in a further application for a permanent stay
of the criminal case against him and again for the removal
of the
prosecutors again objected to the fact that there had been no
prosecution.
[13]
Is not indicative of a
serious desire to pursue the matter. The dilatoriness of the
applicants does not however absolve the respondents
from the
obligation to issue a certificate within the time allowed by law. It
does however have a bearing on their request in the
present case.
44.
While the first jurisdictional requirement
for the issue of a certificate has been met, it is simply not
possible for the second
to be met. The docket cannot be found and so
the NDPP is not able to meet the precondition of having “seen”
the affidavits
and statements contained in the docket before the
issue of the certificate.
45.
Accordingly,
although the applicants have the right to apply for the issue of a
certificate, in consequence of the non-availability
of the docket,
the NDPP is not able as a matter of law,
[14]
to issue the certificate.
46.
The
general principle is aptly stated in
Van
Zyl N.O v Road Accident Fund
[15]
as follows:
“
[54]
For a law to be applied as law, compliance must be possible.
Conversely and my necessary implication, a law which is
impossible to
comply with cannot be applied as law. It is this which sets the
impossibility principle apart from other principles
of the common
law.”
47.
The circumstances of the present matter are
unique. Ordinarily, it would be expected that a complainant would be
more diligent in
engaging with the DPP to ascertain when a decision
was made to prosecute or not and to thereafter seek the issue of a
certificate.
48.
The fact that a docket has become
unavailable does not in and of itself mean that it would be the end
of the matter. Dockets can
be reconstructed and then resubmitted for
consideration. What distinguishes the present matter is that with
less than 2 weeks to
go before the right to prosecute lapses, the
ineluctable inference to be drawn is that it is simply not possible
to reconstruct
the docket.
49.
In the present matter there was a 4-year
investigation conducted before the decision not to prosecute was made
and it is not known
what the contents of the docket were when the
decision was made. Were it not for the effluxion of time the
impossibility now faced
by the NDPP could have been obviated.
50.
The order sought by Mr. Porritt and Ms.
Bennett is for the issue of a certificate
nolle
prosequi
so that they may set the law
in motion.
51.
It is not possible for the reasons set out
above for the NDPP to issue a certificate which complies with
s7(2)(a)
and accordingly the application must fail.
52.
On consideration of the matter as a whole,
I am of the view that the applicants and respondents respectively
should bear their own
costs.
53.
In the circumstances, it is ordered:
53.1
The application is dismissed.
53.2
There is no order for costs.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
3 MARCH 2023
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
6 MARCH 2023
THE
APPLICANTS:
MRS H BENNETT IN PERSON
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
ADV. D MTSWENI
INSTRUCTED
BY:
THE STATE ATTORNEY PRETORIA
REFERENCE:
0679/23/Z42
[1]
In
terms of
s 18
Of the CPA the right to prosecute any offence other
than those referred to in paras (a) to (j) of the section, lapses 20
years
after the offence was committed. In the present instance, the
offence said to be committed was fraud which is not one of those
referred to in the said paras.
[2]
The
only document available was a scanned letter on the respondents’
computer system dated 19 November 2009 which recorded
that a
decision had been taken not to prosecute.
[3]
2011
JDR 1832 at para 6.
[4]
Moyane
v Ramaphosa
(2019) 1 ALL SA 718
(GP) at para [33].
[5]
(2017/86589)
(2019) ZAGPPHC 325 (19 February 2019) at para [5].
[6]
(AR723/2014)
[2015] ZAKZPHC 25 (8 May 2015) para [19], see also para [8] as to
the administrative nature of the decision to issue
the certificate.
[7]
It
was further held in
Nundalal
supra at para 21
that
“…
Whether
the private prosecutor fulfils the jurisdictional requirements is
not the DPP’s concern. Nor is it her concern what
the person
requesting the certificate plans to do with it.”
[8]
The
reference to the ‘attorney general’ must be read as a
reference to the National Director of Public Prosecutions
in terms
of
s 45(a)
of the
National Prosecuting Authority Act 32 of 1998
.
[9]
2010
(2) SACR 146
(SCA) at 210C referring to Shabalala and Others v
Attorney-General of Transvaal and Another
[1995] ZACC 12
;
1996 (1) SA 725
(CC) para
10.
[10]
The
decision to issue a certificate nolle prosequi in terms of
s 7(2)(a)
of the CPA is not a decision to “
institute
or continue a prosecution”
as provided for in
s 1
(ff) and which is excluded from the ambit of
PAJA.
[11]
See
s 33(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996;
see also s 3 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of
2000 (PAJA). The decision to issue a certificate nolle prosequi in
terms of s 7(2)(a) of the CPA is not a decision to
“institute
or continue a prosecution” as provided for in s 1 (ff) and
which is excluded from the ambit of PAJA.
[12]
In
paragraph 23.1 of the replying affidavit, the applicants referred to
affidavits filed in other proceedings by Mr. Porritt.
The full
affidavits were not made available in these proceedings but only
selective quotes. The pertinent paragraph of the affidavit
of 18 May
2011, which was quoted, reads:
“
318.
The NPA has done absolutely nothing about such complaint and and
(sic), despite the terms of its Service Charter, they have
persistently failed to respond to any enquiries from me pertaining
to this matter. It is the applicants’ view that this
is due to
the relationship between SARS and the NPA in the criminal
proceedings.”
[13]
In
paragraph 23.3 of the replying affidavit, the applicants referred to
affidavits filed in other proceedings by Mr. Porritt.
The full
affidavits were not made available in these proceedings but only
selective quotes. The pertinent paragraph of the affidavit
of 23
January 2016, which was quoted, reads:
“
355.
On the advice of counsel, a formal complaint of fraud was lodged by
Porritt in May 2005 with the
police under Sunnyside CAS 945/05/2005,
citing {names omitted}, as the offenders.
356.
As with the EuroPoint criminal case, again nothing was done. The
matter was assigned to Advocate
{name omitted} at the NPA who,
contrary to the NPA’s Service Charter
, failed to
respond to telephone calls and letters. Letters written to the
various NDPPs also produced no response.” (My
emphasis)”
[14]
Lex
non cogit ad impossibilia
–
the
law does not expect the impossible. See Van Zyl N.O v RAF
infra.
[15]
2022
(3) SA 45
(CC) at para [54].
sino noindex
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