Case Law[2025] ZASCA 81South Africa
Minister of Home Affairs and Another v Vindiren Magadzire and Another (245/2024) [2025] ZASCA 81; 2025 (5) SA 374 (SCA) (6 June 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
6 June 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Judicial review – final relief in one review – interim relief pending another review – overlapping grounds of review and orders – redundancy – interim relief as discretionary relief – mootness – res judicata – issue estoppel.
Judgment
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## Minister of Home Affairs and Another v Vindiren Magadzire and Another (245/2024) [2025] ZASCA 81; 2025 (5) SA 374 (SCA) (6 June 2025)
Minister of Home Affairs and Another v Vindiren Magadzire and Another (245/2024) [2025] ZASCA 81; 2025 (5) SA 374 (SCA) (6 June 2025)
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sino date 6 June 2025
FLYNOTES:
IMMIGRATION
– Zimbabwean Exemption Permits –
Decision
to terminate programme –
Interim
relief granted – Minister’s decision set aside in a
separate but related case – Challenge on grounds
of mootness
and res judicata – Redundancy argument rejected –
Distinctiveness of amended relief justified interim
order –
Raised unique constitutional and legal issues not resolved in
related case – Interim order necessary
to protect
respondents’ interests – Appeal dismissed –
Immigration Act 13 of 2002
,
s 31(2)(b)
–
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 245/2024
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
FIRST APPELLANT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF
HOME AFFAIRS
SECOND APPELLANT
and
VINDIREN
MAGADZIRE
FIRST RESPONDENT
ZIMBABWE
IMMIGRATION FEDERATION
NPC
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Minister of Home Affairs and Another v Vindiren Magadzire and
Another
(245/2024)
[2025] ZASCA 81
(6 June 2025)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MBATHA and UNTERHALTER JJA and DAWOOD and MODIBA AJJA
Heard:
13 May 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed to be
11h00 on 6 June 2025.
Summary:
Judicial review – final relief in one review –
interim relief pending another review – overlapping grounds of
review and orders – redundancy – interim relief as
discretionary relief – mootness –
res judicata
–
issue estoppel.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Collis and Malindi JJ and Motha AJ, sitting as a court of first
instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter
JA (Mocumie, Mbatha JJA and Dawood, Modiba AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
Since 2000, a substantial number of Zimbabwe nationals
have come to
South Africa. Some claim the protection of South Africa as refugees
and asylum seekers; some have left Zimbabwe complaining
of systemic
discrimination; and others are likely to be economic migrants. The
South African authorities lacked the administrative
capacity to
determine the status of so many migrants, and to make decisions
concerning their rights. From 2009, the first appellant,
the Minister
of Home Affairs (the Minister) has exercised powers under s 31(2) of
the Immigration Act 13 of 2002 (the
Immigration Act) to
permit some
180 000 undocumented Zimbabweans to remain lawfully in South Africa.
This was done under successive permitting regimes,
the most recent of
which is the Zimbabwe Exemption Permit (ZEP, and in the plural ZEPs).
[2]
In November 2021, the Minister announced that he would
not be
extending the ZEP regime, and ZEPs were due to expire on 31 December
2021. On 29 December 2021, however, the Minister issued
Immigration
Directive No 1 of 2021 extending the ZEPs for a further 12 months to
permit holders to apply for visas under the
Immigration Act. This
extension was preceded by an announcement issued by the Cabinet, on
24 November 2021, that the ZEP dispensation would not be renewed.
A
grace period of 12 months would be given to allow Zimbabwe nationals
who had enjoyed exemptions under the ZEP regime to regularise
their
status in terms of the
Immigration Act, hence
the Immigration
Directive No 1.
[3]
The respondents, Mr Magadzire and the Zimbabwe Immigration
Federation
NPC brought proceedings in the high court (Gauteng Division,
Pretoria) to review the decision of the Minister not to
renew the ZEP
regime. Mr Magadzire is a Zimbabwean who lives and works in South
Africa. The Zimbabwe Immigration Federation NPC
(the Federation) is a
voluntary association of ZEP holders and their immediate family
members. The proceedings in the high court
were brought in the
interests of Mr Magadzire and the Federation, its members, and in the
public interest. I shall refer to the
respondents collectively as the
Federation.
[4]
The Federation’s application was brought in two
parts. Part B
sought to review and set aside the decision of the Minister taken in
terms of
s 31(2)
(d)
of the
Immigration Act not to
extend the
exemptions granted to Zimbabwean nationals under
s 31(2)
(b)
.
In addition, the Federation prayed that the matter be remitted back
to the Minister to reconsider whether to grant an extension
of the
exemptions, to do so observing procedural fairness in terms of ss 3
and 4 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
3 of 2000
(PAJA); and while doing so, interdicts were sought, in essence, to
ensure that ZEP holders continue to secure the benefits
of the
exemptions that they once enjoyed. I shall refer to this relief as
the original Part B relief. In Part A, the Federation
sought interim
relief, pending the outcome of the original Part B relief. In
essence, an interim interdict was sought to prevent
the arrest or
deportation of ZEP holders, to prevent them from being dealt with as
undesirable persons or illegal foreigners under
the
Immigration Act,
and
to permit ZEP holders to enter and exit South Africa without
detriment. I shall refer to this relief as the Part A relief.
[5]
The Minister filed an
answering affidavit opposing the application. The Director General,
Mr Makhode, who deposed to this affidavit,
made the following plain:
‘This affidavit deals only with the interim relief sought in
Part A . . .’. When the matter
came before a full bench of the
high court, it was set down for hearing before the same court as
another application which has
now resulted in a judgment in
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Minister of Home Affairs
(
Helen
Suzman
).
[1]
It is common ground before us that in
Helen
Suzman
the
applicants in that case sought to review the same decision of the
Minister that is challenged in the application brought by
the
Federation. The applicants in
Helen
Suzman
prevailed.
The high court made an order, in sum : to declare unlawful, review
and set aside the decision of the Minister to terminate
the ZEP
regime; to remit the matter to the Minister for reconsideration,
following a fair process; and pending the conclusion of
that process
and the Minister’s further decision within 12 months, ZEP
holders would enjoy protections akin to the interim
relief sought in
the Part A relief in the Federation’s application. I shall
refer to this order as the HSF order.
[6]
What precisely occurred before the high court when the
Helen
Suzman
and the Federation applications were called is not a
matter of record before us. However, the following is clear from the
judgment
given by the high court (
per
Collis, Malindi JJ and
Motha AJA) in the appeal now before us. The Federation, at the
commencement of the proceedings, sought to
move for final relief on
the basis that the Federation waived its right to the record under
Rule 53
, and was willing to proceed on the papers as they stood. The
Minister opposed this. His counsel contended that, as I have
observed,
the answering affidavit was framed to be responsive to the
Part A relief; that the Minister wished to file further affidavits to
deal with the original Part B relief, and the Minister would be
prejudiced if he could not do so. The high court ruled, after a
short
adjournment, that it would only hear the Part A relief.
[7]
That was understandable, given the stance of the Minister.
But it is
also common ground before us that the high court proceeded to hear
the Federation application in the motion court week
that the same
court heard the
Helen Suzman
application. That was an
application for final relief to review and set aside the Minister’s
decision not to extend the ZEP
regime. The relief sought by the
applicants in
Helen Suzman
was ultimately granted by way of
the HSF order.
[8]
What the high court did not explain in its judgment in
Helen
Suzman,
nor in the judgment now on appeal before us, was what
would transpire if it were to grant final relief in
Helen Suzman,
and the Part A relief to the Federation. That is precisely what
occurred. In
Helen Suzman
, we were informed by counsel for the
Minister, the Minister sought leave to appeal. This was refused, as
was the Minister’s
petition to this Court. The HSF order made
in
Helen Suzman
is thus being implemented, and, as a result,
the Minister is following a fair process, we were told, to reconsider
his refusal
to extend the ZEP regime. Pending this, ZEP holders enjoy
the protections extended by the HSF order
,
akin to the Part A
relief sought in the Federation’s application. The same court
also granted the interim relief sought by
the Federation: being the
Part A order. The judgments in both cases were handed down on the
same day, 28 June 2023, by the same
court. The Minister sought leave
to appeal the Part A order. The high court refused leave to appeal.
The Minister petitioned this
Court for special leave, which leave was
granted.
[9]
The principal contention advanced before us by the Minister
was this.
The HSF order is final relief. Efforts to appeal the HSF order have
been exhausted, and the order is in effect. This
means that the
Minister’s decision not to extend the ZEP regime has been set
aside. There is no point in the Federation’s
Part B relief.
This relief seeks to review and set aside the very same decision that
was reviewed and set aside in the HSF order.
Once that is so, the
Part A order cannot be sustained because it is interim relief granted
pending the set down for hearing of
the Part B relief. The Part B
relief cannot be litigated because it has been secured under the HSF
order. In sum, once the high
court had decided to grant the HSF order
it could not make the Part A order, and hence the Part A order cannot
stand. This Court
should, on appeal, set it aside, and replace it
with an order dismissing the Part A application, with costs.
Furthermore, the HSF
order also protects those persons on behalf of
whom the Federation’s application was brought, whilst the
Minister reconsiders
his decision and pursues a fair process. The
Minister argued that the Part A order should not have been granted by
the high court,
and invoked mootness,
res judicata
, and issue
estoppel as the basis for this argument. I will reference the
Minister’s argument as the redundancy argument.
[10]
The Federation contends that the Minister’s appeal should be
dismissed.
First, it submits that the Part A order is not appealable.
Second, if it is appealable, the redundancy argument is flawed
because
the cause of action that the Federation will pursue in Part B
is distinctive, and does not replicate what was decided in the
Helen
Suzman
case. Further, the apparent identity of the relief secured
by the HSF order and the original Part B relief no longer holds.
Since
the HSF order was handed down, the Federation has amended its
Part B relief. We were furnished with a copy of the amended notice
of motion. The amended Part B relief, although it retains a prayer to
review and set aside the decision of the Minister not to
extend the
ZEP regime, now also seeks declaratory relief that this decision of
the Minister is unconstitutional. Counsel for the
Federation
explained that the basis of this declarator is that the Minister does
not enjoy the power to undo or revise the protections
that ZEP
holders have enjoyed over a long period – only Parliament may
do so. This is so in virtue of the constitutional
rights of ZEP
holders, and the exclusive competence of Parliament to abridge these
rights. In addition, Part B of the Federation’s
application
raises an issue of law that formed no part of the
Helen Suzman
case. The issue is this.
Section 31(2)
(b)
(ii) of the
Immigration Act permits
the Minister to withdraw a right ‘for
good cause’. The Minister, so it will be contended in Part B,
did not establish
the jurisdictional fact of good cause to enjoy the
power to bring to an end the dispensation of exemption enjoyed by ZEP
holders.
The Minister thus acted
ultra vires
in doing so. And
would continue to do so, if, following the implementation of the HSF
order, he was again to seek to decide to revoke
the exemption
dispensation. In sum, the Federation submits that both as to the
cause of action it relies upon in Part B and the
amended relief it
now seeks, Part B concerns live issues for the high court to
determine that were not decided in the
Helen Suzman
case.
Hence, the Part A order continues to enjoy efficacy and has no
redundancy, notwithstanding the HSF order.
Appealability
[11]
I turn first to the
question as to whether the Part A order is appealable. In
Lebashe
,
[2]
the Constitutional Court decided that an interim interdict may be
appealable, even if it lacks the attributes identified in
Zweni
,
[3]
if the interests of justice so dictate. Quite what this capacious
criterion entails is a work in progress. In this matter, the
Part A
order does not meet the test in
Zweni:
it may be altered by the
high court; it is not predicated on any definitive determination of
the rights and obligations of the parties;
and it does not dispose of
the main issues that now fall for decision under the amended relief
sought in Part B. However, I am
nevertheless of the view that it
would be in the interests of justice for this Court to entertain this
appeal. That is so because
the principal ground of appeal raised by
the Minister poses a somewhat novel question as to whether the high
court could have made
the Part A order, in the face of what it
ordered in the
Helen
Suzman
case.
If we do not resolve this question, the parties will be left in some
doubt as to whether the Part A order can be enforced.
This
uncertainty would be prejudicial both to the Minister and the
Zimbabwean nationals on whose behalf the Federation brought
its
application. For these reasons, the Part A order is appealable, and I
do so find.
The
Part A order
[12]
I recall that the redundancy argument proceeds from the premise that
the Part
A order should not have been granted by the high court
because it is predicated upon the Part B relief which cannot be
litigated
because it was determined in the
Helen Suzman
case
by the very same court that granted the Part A order. The Minister
sought to advance this argument under different propositions
of law.
The Part A order was said to be moot, alternatively the relief should
not have been granted by reason of the doctrines
of
res judicata
or issue estoppel.
[13]
None of these legal
characterisations has purchase. If the Part A order had become moot
because it was overtaken by the HSF order,
that would be a basis for
us to decline to entertain the Minister’s appeal.
Res
judicata
also
cannot be relied upon. The parties in the
Helen
Suzman
case
are not the same as those who brought the proceedings in the
Federation’s application. There may be some question as
to
whether the HSF order is
in
rem
.
But as I shall explore in what follows, the Federation is not seeking
the same thing on the same grounds as that which was sought
in the
Helen
Suzman
case.
[4]
Res
judicata
is
thus not a defence that was available to the Minister to preclude the
high court from giving the Part A order. Nor is it available
on
appeal. So too, issue estoppel does not arise: the parties are not
the same, and there remain issues for determination in Part
B that
are distinctive.
[14]
The difficulty that has arisen in this case is attributable to the
disposition
of the Federation’s application and the
Helen
Suzman
case by the high court. The Minister made it clear at the
commencement of the hearing of the Federation’s application
that
his answering affidavit served only to deal with the order
sought by the Federation in Part A, and that it would be prejudicial
to the Minister were the high court to entertain the final relief
sought by the Federation in Part B. This much is clear from the
judgment of the high court. Once the high court decided that it would
proceed only with Part A of the Federation’s application,
it
should have given some consideration to the question as to what
consequences would result should it transpire that the Federation
secured an order under Part A, and the applicants in the
Helen
Suzman
case obtained final relief. Since both applications were
set down before the same court, in the same week, there was reason to
expect
such consideration. What transpired is simply that the high
court handed down judgment in both cases on the same day. It would
have been prudent, even if consolidation was not ordered, to have
considered the question of interim relief in both cases, and when
Part B of the Federation’s case was ripe, then to have heard
both cases together. Regrettably, that did not happen, and we
must
determine the legal consequences of the grant of the Part A order and
the HSF order.
[15]
The essential complaint
of the Minister is that the high court could not, and most certainly
should not, have made the Part A order,
if it was to make a final
order in the
Helen
Suzman
case
to review and set aside the Minister’s decision to terminate
the ZEP regime. In
OUTA
,
[5]
the Constitutional Court offered cautionary words as to the grant of
injunctive relief that restrains the exercise of executive
or
legislative competence. The case before us is very different, but the
cautionary warning remains salient. An interim interdict
is a
discretionary remedy. Where an interim order sought at the instance
of litigants in case A would be entirely redundant because
a final
order granted (or to be granted) in case B would entirely dispose of
the final relief that was ultimately to be sought
in case A, there
would be strong reasons for a court to decline to grant an interim
order. That would be so, even if the requirements
of
res
judicata
or
issue estoppel are not met. First, there would be no apprehension of
irreparable and imminent harm if the interim interdict were
not to be
granted in case A because the remedy in case B would likely cure any
such apprehension. Second, there would, in addition,
be reason in
case A to exercise the court’s discretion against the grant of
interim relief because it would serve no purpose.
[16]
The question is whether the grant of the Part A order by the high
court is
a case of such redundancy. I have set out above the
essential features of the Federation’s cause of action. I
recall that
the Federation invokes the constitutional rights of ZEP
holders and contends that the Minister’s decision to terminate
the
ZEP regime is
ultra vires
. We do not have the benefit of
the papers that served before the high court in
Helen Suzman
.
However, the judgment in
Helen Suzman
does traverse the
grounds upon which the decision of the Minister was claimed to be
reviewable, and which led the court to review
and set aside the
Minister’s decision.
[17]
In essence, the case made out by the applicants to the
satisfaction of
the high court in
Helen Suzman
was predicated
upon three grounds of review. First, the Minister’s decision
was procedurally irrational because, as the court
held, ‘the
Minister not only failed to invite representation but also failed to
consider any representations before taking
the decision’.
Second, the Minister failed to assess the impact of a decision to
terminate the ZEP regime upon the constitutional
rights of ZEP
holders, their families, and children. The court found no evidence
that the Minister had done so, and hence concluded
that the Minister
had failed to take account of relevant information and had acted
unreasonably. Third, the court held that the
termination of the ZEP
regime affected the constitutional rights of ZEP holders to dignity
(encompassing the right to health, education,
and protection from
deportation) and the rights of their dependent children. No adequate
case had been made out by the Minister
for the limitation of these
rights, and hence the court concluded that ‘the Minister’s
decision is an unjustified limitation
of rights which is
unconstitutional and invalid in terms of s 172(1) of the Constitution
and must be reviewed and set aside’.
I shall refer to these
findings of the high court in
Helen Suzman
as the HSF review
findings.
[18]
There is some overlap between the case for review that is advanced by
the Federation
in its founding affidavit and the review that found
favour with the high court in
Helen Suzman
, and led that court
to make the HSF review findings. The Federation’s founding
affidavit has a section headed ‘Part
B: Grounds of Review’.
There the Federation relies upon the Minister having acted in a
procedurally irrational and unfair
manner; the Minister’s
failure to take into account relevant considerations and his
consideration of irrelevant considerations.
These grounds of review
cover similar territory to those that are to be found in the HSF
review findings. The Federation’s
review also invokes the
constitutional rights of ZEP holders and their dependent children.
[19]
However, the Federation’s review also raised distinctive
grounds of review
that do not figure in the HSF review findings.
First, it contends that the Minister acted
ultra vires
his
powers under
s 31(2)
(b)
(ii) of the
Immigration Act in
terminating the ZEP regime because good cause is a jurisdictional
fact necessary for the exercise of this power and it was lacking.
Since the circumstances prevailing in Zimbabwe have not materially
changed, there was no good cause established for the Minister
to
terminate the protections afforded by the ZEP regime, and there is no
reason to suppose that this will change in the foreseeable
future.
Second, the Minister made an error of law in that his decision was
based upon the belief that after 31 December ZEP holders
would be
required to leave South Africa. However, those ZEP holders who fled
Zimbabwe and would qualify as refugees enjoy the protection
of the
principle of
non-refoulement
and may not be deported to
Zimbabwe. The Minister’s decision was thus, it is contended,
vitiated by a material error of law.
These grounds of review have no
analogue in the HSF review findings.
[20]
It might be thought that these distinctive grounds of review should
make no
difference because the original Part B relief set out in the
Federation’s notice of motion is very similar to the relief
ultimately granted by the high court in
Helen Suzman.
However,
the distinctive grounds of review, and, more generally the invocation
of the constitutional rights of the ZEP holders,
have provided a
springboard for the Federation’s amended notice of motion. As I
have explained, the relief now sought by
the Federation includes a
prayer for a declarator that the decision not to extend the
exemptions granted to Zimbabwean nationals
under
s 31(2)
(b)
of the
Immigration Act is
unconstitutional, invalid, and of no force
or effect. I will refer to this as the declaratory relief.
[21]
The declaratory relief is predicated upon the proposition that the
Minister
does not enjoy the power to decide whether to extend the ZEP
regime. ZEP holders and their dependents enjoy constitutional rights
to remain in South Africa, and the limitation of those may only be
effected by Parliament enacting a law of general application.
Furthermore, the
ultra vires
challenge holds that the Minister
not only lacked the power to terminate the ZEP regime when he did,
but would continue to suffer
this disability in the future. The
declaratory relief has remedial entailments that are altogether
different from the relief that
was granted in
Helen Suzman
.
The HSF order remitted the matter back to the Minister for
reconsideration, and to do so following a fair process. The premise
of the HSF order is that it is open to the Minister to exercise his
powers under the
Immigration Act to
decide whether or not to extend
the ZEP regime. The declaratory relief, by contrast, is predicated
upon the proposition that the
Minister cannot exercise this power;
and no point would be served in sending the matter back to the
Minister. Rather, the ZEP holders
enjoy constitutional rights to
remain in South Africa that only Parliament can abridge. Further, the
ultra vires
challenge, if accepted, would not permit the
Minister to terminate the ZEP regime. That is a remedial outcome of a
considerably
more far-reaching kind, because it reaches into the
future and is not based upon a reconsideration by the Minister of his
decision
to terminate the ZEP regime.
[22]
Thus both the cause of action relied upon by the Federation, as also
the declaratory
relief now sought by it, render Part B of its
application distinctive. The redundancy argument accordingly cannot
hold. It may
be said (counsel for the Minister did not advance this
proposition in oral argument) that the amendment of the Federation’s
notice of motion occurred after the interim order was made by the
high court, and hence its enlarged remedial remit cannot provide
a
basis to defend the interim order that was made when the Part B
relief in the Federation’s notice of motion largely mimicked
the relief granted in
Helen Suzman
. Such a contention is
unavailing because the declaratory relief is, in part, based upon the
distinctive features of the Federation’s
cause of action, and
more generally, the invocation of constitutional rights, which though
common to those relied upon in
Helen Suzman,
can be put to
support a different remedial outcome.
[23]
Had the high court raised the issue with the parties as to whether an
interim
interdict should be issued, given the outcome that might
result in
Helen Suzman
, it would have been entirely
permissible for the Federation to raise the declaratory relief that
it has ultimately sought. The
high court simply did not raise the
matter with the parties. That omission does not prevent this Court
from considering whether
the interim relief was properly granted on
the basis that the Federation’s application raised issues and
was capable of supporting
relief that is distinctive of the
Helen
Suzman
decision. The Part A order was not redundant when granted,
nor has it become so, because it pends final relief in Part B, based
on grounds, not determined in the
Helen Suzman
judgment. I
caution that, in rejecting the redundancy argument, I should not be
understood to make any finding as to the prospects
that the grounds
advanced by the Federation in support of its declaratory relief will
succeed. The Minister did not seek to make
any case before us as to
whether the high court was incorrect to conclude that the Federation
had established a
prima facie
right, though open to some
doubt. The Federation’s Part B case awaits the adjudication of
the high court in due course.
[24]
For these reasons, the Minister’s appeal must fail. The
following order
is made:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
D
N UNTERHALTER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
W R Mokhare (with him T Mokhatla)
Instructed
by:
Denga Attorneys, Johannesburg
Webbers Attorneys Inc.,
Bloemfontein
For the
respondents:
T Ngcukaitobi
SC (with him N Chezi-Buthelezi and N Ka-Siboto)
Instructed
by:
Mabuza Attorneys, Johannesburg
MM Hattingh Attorneys
Inc., Bloemfontein.
[1]
Helen
Suzman Foundation & Another v Minister of Home Affairs and
Others
(32323/2022)
[
2023]
ZAGPPHC 490 (28 June 2023).
[2]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebahse Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2022]
ZACC 34
;
2022 (12) BCLR 1521
(CC);
2023 (1) SA 353
(CC) paras 43-45.
[3]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523
(A) at 532J-533A.
[4]
African
Farms and Townships Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1963
(2) 555 (A) at 562A.
[5]
National
Treasury v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
[2012]
ZACC 18
;
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC);
2012 (11) BCLR 1148
(CC) (
OUTA
)
para 65.
sino noindex
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