The man who would be
king
Suyash Dixit, a young IT entrepreneur from
Indore has claimed a disputed land bordering Egypt and declared it was his
kingdom. How did he do it? What does he plan to do next?
Suyash Dixit with the ‘Kingdom of Dixit’ flag in Bir Tawil near Egypt
The king is a coder: a bit nerdy, a bit goofy,
easily amused, and with the hint of a stutter when he gets excited—which is
often—though it’s so minor he won’t need any help giving speeches.
The king, a large man with a head of
curly hair and a warm, disarming laugh, is in his office, a terrace covered and
converted into a workspace with prefab material. Discarded computer parts have
been recycled as décor: a constellation of keyboards hang artistically from the
ceiling, a motherboard is propped against a block of wood, a PlayStation
steering wheel sits on a desk.
There is a ping-pong table on one side
of the room, but from the state of the paddles and balls stacked next to it, it
is evident no one has used them for a while. On the floor below the terrace
there are a handful of people on computers, some on bean bags and others on
massage chairs, in a small open-plan room painted in bright shades of green. It
is a modest office, spread across two floors of a narrow three-story building
in a quiet, residential neighbourhood in Indore. A young entrepreneur, the king
is also the chief executive officer of his own company, an IT services firm
called Softinator that employs 40 people, and which, according to him, had a
revenue of approximately Rs15 crore last financial year.
Until last month, very few people knew
the king outside his circle of friends, family, and colleagues. He was an
ordinary young man, though perhaps neatly emblematic of a certain strand of
aspirational, “new India” narrative: a boy from a tier-II town blazing his own
way as a programmer, running a successful company at 24, travelling around the
world attending developer conferences. His father has a crisp anecdote about
him, a sort of legend-in-the-making statement: “Even before he had started
school, at an age when most children grab a pencil, he grabbed a keyboard.”
And then, on 7 November, the king,
whose name is Suyash Dixit, posted something on his Facebook page that brought
near-instant internet stardom.
It read: “I, Suyash Dixit, first of my
name and the protector of the realm, declare myself as the king of “Kingdom of
Dixit”. I call myself King Suyash First from today. I declare this unclaimed
land of Bir Tawil as my country from now to the eternity of time. I pledge to
continue to work for the prosperity of my people of the country and this
motherland.
I travelled 319km (to and fro) in far
desert with no roads to claim this unclaimed land of Bir Tawil. This 800 sq.
miles of land belongs to no country. It is the only place on earth where humans
can live and survive but is not a part of any state/country. Following the
early civilization ethics and rule, if you want to claim a land then you need
to grow crops on it. I have added a seed and poured some water on it today. It
is mine.”
The text was accompanied by five
images, all of the new king in his new, arid, kingdom, standing next to his
self-designed flag, planting sunflower seeds, and smiling goofily.
Suyash (right) with his older brother Suyog in their office in Indore.
At first, the declaration created
barely a ripple. But within a couple of days, news media began to pick up the
story, everyone from local websites to the international press. An American
farmer from Virginia called Jeremiah Heaton, now entered the fray, claiming
that Bir Tawil was his, and that he had laid stake to the land by planting a
flag there a good three years before Dixit. Heaton said that Dixit was lying
about reaching Bir Tawil—which is a zone of no-man’s-land near a troubled
border of Egypt. This conflict brought a fresh round of media attention. Then a
Russian ham radio operator joined the fight, saying Bir Tawil was his, and that
both Dixit and Heaton had lied about reaching the area.
Dixit’s “kingdom” website was flooded
with applications as soon as it went live. Then it crashed. Dixit tried
desperately to keep it going, even offering the web host a payment of Rs20,000
per hour to manage the traffic coming in. It was not enough. He soon knew the
reason why. On that day, 15 November, he was the most searched for person in
India on Google.
“Even Sunny Leone was behind me,”
Dixit said with a poker face.
A king sets forth
Bir Tawil is a mixed desert and
scrubland zone of 2,060 sq. km that is a disputed border between Egypt and
Sudan; it is commonly described as the only habitable area on earth that has
not been claimed by any country. Here lies its allure. In this age of powerful
nation-states, it is the closest thing to a new frontier.
Bir Tawil’s peculiar status is the
result of a unsolved colonial-era border controversy. In 1899, after nearly two
decades of battle, Britain and Egypt defeated the forces of the “Mahdi” of
Sudan and together took over the administration of the territory. They drew the
northern border with Egypt in a straight line along the 22nd parallel, cutting
through the Nubian desert. Three years later, the British redrew a portion of
that border to accommodate the demands of various tribes in the region: a part
just south of the 22nd parallel—Bir Tawil—was now given over to Egypt and a
much larger chunk north of the 22nd, the Hala’ib triangle, was to be Sudan’s.
You need to do something crazy at
least once in your life. Get your name in the Guinness book [of records], or
become a celebrity, or do something like this, a little bit of anarchy.
- Suyash Dixit
When Sudan gained independence in
1956, Egypt and Sudan immediately bickered over this tweaked border. Both
wanted the Hala’ib triangle, a prime piece of land measuring 20,580 sq. km,
with a coastline along the Red Sea and the promise of mineral riches. Sudan
asserted the validity of the border of 1902, which gave them the Hala’ib and
Bir Tawil to Egypt. Egypt insisted that the original 1899 border was the true
demarcation, which meant that the Hala’ib was theirs and Bir Tawil Sudan’s.
The simmering disagreement reached a
head in the 1990s when an oil firm expressed interest in prospecting the
Hala’ib. Egypt sent its troops to take control of the region. This is where the
matter stands. Both countries claim the Hala’ib, and as a consequence neither claims
Bir Tawil. As the British journalist Jack Shenker, who travelled to Bir Tawil
in 2011 for an article for The Guardian, writes: “There is nothing else quite
like it on the planet.”
When Dixit was 20, in his second year
of college, he chanced upon an entry on Bir Tawil while surfing the net. “I was
like wow, wow, wow, this place is so cool…it’s epic…” Dixit recalls in his
exuberant fashion. “It’s just fascinating that there is a place on earth that’s
independent of any other country.”
In October this year Dixit, who heads
the central India chapter of the Google Developer Group, was invited to a GDG
conference in Cairo. Dixit says he always takes a few days off to travel when
he is invited to such conferences.
“I was researching where I could go
after the conference, and I was looking at the map of Egypt when I suddenly
recognized Bir Tawil,” he says. “It’s easy to recognize because it has a
rhomboid shape. I was like, dude, this is the same place I read about years
ago!”
Dixit decided that he must make an
attempt to get to this chunk of no man’s land. He went to his computer engineer
brother Suyog, five years his senior, and told him, “Don’t scold me, but I have
a plan, so first listen to the whole thing and then react.”
Suyog heard him out and declared that
his brother had gone mad. But then, a few minutes later, he told Dixit: “If
there’s even a one percent chance that you can get there, we need to try.”
A little anarchy
“You need to do something crazy at
least once in your life,” Dixit says. “Get your name in the Guinness book [of
records], or become a celebrity, or do something like this, a little bit of
anarchy.”
For the next few days the brothers
lived a double life. Work occupied them during the day, but at night, without
letting anyone else know of their plan, they researched a route to Bir Tawil.
The first thing they did was to switch from Google Maps, which has a very basic
layout for the region, to Bing Maps, rendered in far greater detail. They
contacted online colleagues and friends in Egypt, asking indirect questions
about routes and hiring cars without revealing their purpose.
Dixit was sure about one thing. If he
made it to Bir Tawil he would claim it as his own. He needed to plant a flag.
He designed one in red and gold—the colour of sand at dusk or dawn—and a
medieval-looking coat of arms. Suyog was tasked with the printing. He called
his younger brother from the shop to check if it was necessary to print both
sides of the cloth, since it would cost more and take more time. They decided
it was not important.
“To be frank, at this point of time my
plan was purely to have an adventure and get to a place people don’t usually
get to,” Dixit says. “It felt like it would be fun. But no matter how much of a
fantasy it was, I had a feeling deep inside that something special will come
out of this.”
That feeling was soon reinforced.
Dixit delivered a lecture in Cairo on “conversational AI” (how bots can be made
to handle the live chat support function on websites), and then flew from the
capital to Aswan, where he spent a day sightseeing. He then took a flight to
Abu Simbel, the southernmost town in Egypt, just 40km from the border with
Sudan. The EgyptAir plane, with a seating capacity of just over 70 people, was
empty save one passenger: Dixit.
“I was thinking, this is so bizarre!
How can it be?” Dixit says. “When I entered the flight, everyone broke out into
laughter—the pilot, me, the attendants. We could not stop laughing.”
The pilot told Dixit that flying a single
passenger was a first for him, too. The attendants laughed through the
pre-flight instructions, and then laid out all the different varieties of food
on board for a kingly repast. “I ate non-stop through the hour-long flight,”
Dixit says.
At Abu Simbel, Dixit visited the
enormous temple of Rameses II, and then met his driver for next morning’s
secretive quest. To avoid detection Dixit had booked the services of three
different drivers, though only one knew the real nature of his trip. The first
would take him from Abu Simbel to a nearby town, the next would drive him
further south to a village, and the third driver and Dixit would attempt to
off-road it to Bir Tawil. Dixit refuses to share details of the exact route he
used since it involved illegally crossing borders in a disputed area.
Under a full moon
Dixit picked a full moon night for the
expedition since it was likely to get dark by the time they made their way back
from Bir Tawil. A car headlight—which can be seen from miles in all directions
in this desert—would attract not just the Egyptian military but also bandits and
terrorists. Dixit left behind his expensive laptop, a DSLR camera and lenses,
and the rings he wears on his fingers, and instead stocked the car with
torches, water, and food.
He left Abu Simbel at 4 in the
morning. At this time border security does not permit cars to leave town
limits, but he managed to slip past this first hurdle, convincing the police he
was an amateur photographer who wanted a certain shot at dawn. Before leaving,
he had made a final call, to his closest friend in Egypt, an interior design
student in Cairo, confiding his plans and giving her a set of phone numbers to
call in case she did not hear from him by 11pm that night.
“I have gone skydiving, scuba diving,
travelled solo. But here I got my ass kicked. I was really scared,” Dixit says.
“This was a border area, a terrorist area, where even the military and the
police shoot first and ask questions later. It was like a Boolean variable [a
computational and mathematical term describing a variable that can take only
one of two values, typically 0 and 1]. Either you come back or you don’t.”
Dixit says he got the drivers to
cooperate by paying them handsomely. By 11 in the morning he was past the final
village on his route, and in his final car, beyond the reach of mobile phone
towers, driving into the roadless wilderness of the Nubian desert. “We drove
through dusty, barren lands. Desert everywhere you looked, a few small hills,”
Dixit says, “and nothing at all for miles and miles.”
“My initial plan was to spend a couple
of hours at Bir Tawil, but very soon into the drive we realized that it would
take us much more time than we had planned. So I told my driver, just get me
there, touch the area and we will start back.”
Meanwhile, back in Indore, Dixit’s
brother was frozen with such tension that his wife noticed something was not
right. Suyog had no option but to reveal what was happening almost 5000km away.
They waited breathlessly for Dixit’s call.
At around 4pm local time, the map on
Dixit’s phone informed him that he had crossed the Egyptian border and was in
Bir Tawil.
Excited, but also worried about the
time, Dixit quickly planted his flag, had the driver click photos, and planted
sunflower seeds in the ground, feeling a bit like Matt Damon’s character in The
Martian, a botanist trying to grow potatoes on Mars. The observation was not
far off the mark—Bir Tawil looks a lot like the Jordanian desert of Wadi Rum,
which stood in as the red planet’s landscape in the movie.
Then Dixit applied his 15-minute rule:
At each new place he travels to, there is a time when he sets aside his camera
and his phone, and sits silently for 15 minutes. The sand and the red soil, the
42° heat, the stress of the journey, the adrenalin rush of reaching the end of
his quest, all combined to give him a peculiar sense of peace.
When Dixit was finally back in cell
phone range, well inside Egyptian borders, it was almost midnight. He rang his
brother. He also spoke to his parents, who were bewildered at first. He wished
his father happy birthday and told him that, as a gift, he was making him
president of Bir Tawil, which, now that he had claimed it, was to be called the
Kingdom of Dixit.
Suyash Dixit watering the seed he sowed in Bir Tawil.
My father was puzzled but happy that I
declared him president,” Dixit says, “but my mother was not pleased. She
scolded me over the phone for an hour I think.”
For fear of any action the Egyptian
authorities might take, Dixit did not make his adventure public till he was on
the plane for his flight back to India.
Who is king?
“Man, I felt famous! It was
overnight,” Dixit says. “I could no longer accept friend requests on Facebook
because I had reached my quota. My phone was ringing constantly. There were
reporters at our house, god knows how they found it! My mailbox was full. My
[social media] messenger crashed. It was very strange, a dream-like feeling. I loved
it. I thought, it won’t last for more than a week, so let’s enjoy this! Epic!”
Then came Heaton, an organic farmer
from a small town called Abingdon in Virginia, USA.
Heaton had travelled to Bir Tawil in
2014 with the express purpose of claiming it as his kingdom because he had made
a promise to his young daughter that she will be a “real” princess one day.
Heaton named Bir Tawil “The Kingdom of North Sudan”, and his adventure was
reported across the world, with reactions ranging from reports that called the
whole thing a fairy tale, to those that labelled it a deplorable act of racist
neo-imperialism. Disney announced they would make a movie out of the story, but
dropped the plan when a social media storm drove home the point that a movie
about a white man claiming an African land so his daughter could be a princess,
was going to be a hard sell.
Whatever the criticism, Heaton has
absolutely no doubt the land is his. He announced on social media that Dixit
had faked his journey. Dixit called Heaton. “I told him, ‘Look, this was my
route, and you know this is the right one because this is how you went there as
well’,” Dixit says. “He told me, ‘I have been at this for more than two years
now, I have given up everything to make this a reality, so don’t suddenly come
in and start spoiling things’.”
The two men reached an agreement—from
now on, they would work together to formulate development plans for Bir Tawil.
Then Dmitry Zhikharev, a ham radio
operator from Moscow, muscled into the fight. He called both men liars, saying
that neither Dixit nor Heaton had proof they had reached Bir Tawil, whereas he
has geo-tagged photos of himself from 2014, holding aloft a flag on a very
tall, bent, pole at Bir Tawil, to back his claim. Heaton told Dixit to “dismiss
the Russian”.
“Now you may ask, ‘Who then is
king?’,” Dixit says. “It’s a race between Heaton and me. Whoever’s claim is
recognized first is king. But what is more important is that we are both on the
same page about developing Bir Tawil.”
What had been a personal adventure for
Dixit was now suddenly a serious matter. Like Heaton and Zhikharev, Dixit has
no doubt that his claim to Bir Tawil is rightful. “I am absolutely serious,” he
says.
Terra Nullius
Dixit has put serious thought and time
into understanding how land is claimed and a new nation formed. He’s come to a
bleak conclusion: “There really are no rules! How a country is made or divided
follows no set patterns,” he says. “It’s messy. Anybody can claim a country.”
Preposterous as it sounds, there is
truth to the statement. Heaton, for instance, has brazened his way through
accusations that his act echoes a deeply shameful history of colonial arrogance
and imperialism. In an interview with the MEL magazine in May 2017, he said: “I
don’t need permission from anyone to found my own country. People don’t really
understand the concept of terra nullius: If a volcanic island were to pop up in
the middle of international waters, you could occupy the island, and it’d be a
self-sufficient community with its own government and legal structure. That’s
what exists with Bir Tawil.
“I didn’t represent the USA…The land
was unoccupied—and is still unoccupied—from any type of native population that
exists there, so I’m not taking land from anyone. I haven’t exported resources.
I haven’t subjugated anyone. Therefore I don’t fit the definition of
colonialist in any way.”
Multiple e-mails to Heaton requesting
an interview for this article elicited no response.
Heaton is either blind to—or chooses
to ignore—the history of colonial imperialism. He invokes Terra Nullius, a
legal phrase that translates to ‘No Man’s Land’, which was used by the European
colonial powers to claim land, most devastatingly by the British in Australia
in the 19th century, where they wiped out most of the island’s indigenous
population, and by Belgium in the Congo, also in the 19th century—perhaps the
most brutal example of colonial massacre in modern history. It was also invoked
in the 16th and 17th centuries by European nations racing to establish colonies
in the Americas.
Terra Nullius continues to be a legal term in
international law, and continues to generate controversy. Japan and China’s
bitter fight over a group of islands called Senkaku in the East China Sea is
based on it. In 2002, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruled over a
dispute between Malaysia and Indonesia on two other islands, Ligitan and
Sipadan, which Malaysia claimed were Terra Nullius when they occupied it. The
ICJ agreed.
As polar ice continues to melt,
nations fighting for a piece of the Arctic pie are using almost exactly the
same methods as Dixit, Heaton, and Zhikharev, which in turn are the same ones
used by adventurers in the heady days of the first polar expeditions: get to
the land first and plant a flag. In 2007, for example, the Russian Arktika
expedition dropped a titanium tube containing the Russian flag near the North
Pole as a part of their campaign to claim territory there.
The one thing that firmly goes against
Dixit and Heaton’s efforts is that they are individuals—and not nation
states—trying to claim land and proclaim sovereignty. Such a thing has never
really succeeded. There is a weird tapestry of similar attempts in recent
history, each claim darkly amusing.
Consider the Free Republic of
Liberland, proclaimed on 13 April 2015 by a Czech libertarian politician called
Vít Jedlička, a wooded, uninhabited 7 sq. km of land along a disputed border
between Serbia and Croatia, which, like Bir Tawil, lies unclaimed by both
countries. An article in the Chicago Journal of International Law examined the
claim and declared it valid. Heaton’s Kingdom of North Sudan has recognized
Liberland, hoping in turn to be recognized by them. Recognition also came from
the Principality of Sealand, another chimerical kingdom with a fascinating
history.
Sealand is a 120ft x 50ft rusty
offshore platform soaring above the North Sea on a pair of hollow concrete
pillars, roughly 12km off the coast of Suffolk, England. An anti-aircraft gun
platform built during the Second World War that was then abandoned until the
1960s, it became a “pirate radio” haven. In 1967, Paddy Roy Bates, a pugnacious
former British Army major who had served in the World War, forcibly ousted the
unlicensed radio station then operating from the platform and established his
own station there. Bates’ station never took off; instead, on 2 September that
year, Bates declared the platform an independent country. What followed was one
freakish adventure after another: an unsuccessful attempt by another pirate
radio station to storm Sealand, the Royal Navy fired upon when they tried to
board the platform, and a court case accusing the Bates family of possession of
illegal weapons—thrown out by a British Court which ruled that the platform was
not in British territorial waters. In 1974, the Bates family issued a
constitution, flag, national anthem, currency, and passports for the
Principality of Sealand.
Sealand than attempted to launch
multiple businesses, including delusional plans of turning it into an offshore
banking centre.
The most memorable effort was by two
American “digital rebels”, who formed a company called HavenCo in 2000 that
proposed to host a highly protected “data haven”, a no-questions-asked data
location service that would operate outside the digital laws of other
countries.
It got almost no business, partly
because there are plenty of countries in the world that offer excellent data
privacy, with far better infrastructure and a stable business environment; and
partly because countries trying to rein in illegal digital activity can just
arrest the people involved with it without having to touch the actual server
holding the data (think Edward Snowden and Ross William Ulbricht, aka “Dread
Pirate Roberts” who was arrested for running the dark net marketplace Silk
Road).
Paddy Bates died in England at the age
of 91, after appointing his son the “prince regent” of Sealand. The last news
of note from Sealand was when English mountaineer Kenton Cool, one of the
world’s leading Alpinists, placed a Sealand flag atop Mount Everest in 2013.
‘This land is my land’
These lessons from history have not
made a dent to Heaton or Dixit’s plans. Since 2014, Heaton has led a stormy
campaign, including a crowdfunding effort, to establish his claim to Bir Tawil,
announcing grandiose projects for the area, and opening “embassies” for the
Kingdom of North Sudan in the US, Copenhagen, Lithuania, and Prague. On the
Kingdom of North Sudan’s website there are announcements that promise
everything from turning Bir Tawil into the “world’s largest greenfield project…
developing mechanical methods for terraforming the barren, dry desert into a
high-yield, closed loop model for the future of food production..” that will
lead to a “future free of hunger”; establishing a solar power farm that will
shape the “next generation of energy conservation”; a financial model based on
digital currency that will revolutionize economics; to building a server farm
that will become “a lasting stronghold of free speech, information exchange and
eCommerce”. You can even buy citizenship by donating on their website.
Heaton has said that he wants to be
the “Elon Musk of agricultural development”, and has repeatedly asserted in
interviews that he is sitting on $1.5 billion of investments waiting to be put
to use. In the interview to Mel in 2017 he said, “The media has been sceptical
of the possibility of this becoming a reality, but the progress that we’ve been
making —our trade relationship talks between Egypt and Sudan are still
ongoing—has really been striking.”
When things took a serious turn for
Dixit, he sat down with his brother Suyog and their soft-spoken father Rajesh
Kumar Dixit, who is head of the department for physics and computer science at
the Government New Science College in Indore.
They found that to bring a new
sovereign state into being under international law, following the 1933
Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States, the following
provisos need to be met:
1. A defined territory (which they
have)
2. A permanent population (which they
don’t)
3. A government (which they are
working to establish) and
4. A capacity to enter into relations with
other states (which they are working on).
The convention also states that “the
political existence of a state is independent of recognition by other states”,
but there is also a more widely recognized, and conflicting, view that says
that a state exists only when other states recognize it.
In view of this, Dixit shot off a
letter to the UN asking for recognition for the Kingdom of Dixit. He received a
reply with the Montevideo Convention spelled out for him.
“If any of the UN countries gives me
even a small acknowledgement, I can go to countries like Zimbabwe and tell
them, ‘Look, we can help you if you help us by giving us recognition’,” Dixit
says. “And even if one country recognizes us, we are on our way.” He hasn’t
approached the government of India, Dixit says, because he doesn’t think he
will be taken seriously, at least not yet.
Meanwhile, a small group of friends
and extended family are working with Dixit to draft a constitution and develop
a concrete plan for forward action. Dixit says he is in the process of building
a bigger team and that there will be major announcements made by the middle of
the next year.
“There are two options, according to
me,” Dixit’s father, Rajesh, says. “One, you make a cybercountry with no
physical presence required. In that case, this will be the first place which
will have rules and regulations purely adapted to cyber requirements. The other
is that our great and beloved Prime Minister Modiji will come up with something
that will guide us forward.”
Rajesh suggests that one promising
prospect that may benefit the whole world is to turn Bir Tawil into a nuclear
waste dumping site.
Suyash Dixit in Bir Tawil.
Dixit, who is a tech freak, is less
keen to introduce radioactive waste to his kingdom and more interested in
establishing an ambitious “server farm”, which, in an eerie repeat of Sealand’s
plans, will become a “data haven” protected from prying governments.
But, apart from the myriad problems
already laid out, another enormous obstacle looms for him: cooling the server
farm.
A server farm, as the name suggests,
is a collection of computer servers, usually consisting of thousands of
computers acting as a data centre. They require an enormous amount of power to
run and even more to keep them cool, which is why the capacity of a server farm
is measured in performance per watt. It is also the reason why most large
server farms are located in cold environments—Facebook’s server farm lies on
the edge of the Arctic circle in Northern Sweden. Iceland, gifted with abundant
geothermal electric supply and Arctic cold weather, is building one of the
largest server farms in the world. A server farm located in the middle of
nowhere, in a desert with 40°C average temperatures, in a kingdom that is not
really a nation, and has no roads, no water, no electric supply and no actual
government, is quite the pipe dream.
Dixit, Suyog, and a few friends in
Egypt are looking to get people to settle in Bir Tawil, to accommodate the
“permanent population” dictum of the Montevideo Convention.
“Friends have gone to nearby villages
inside Egypt to ask them about problems they face so we can devise a plan on
how to make their lives better if they shift,” Suyog says. “First thing of
course is to get a good source of water, then electricity, and then road
connectivity. Plus there are claimants— “Tawila” groups in Sudan who say that
they were shifted out of the area by the British during the colonial rule, so
we will give them back their land.”
The brothers feel that Egypt and Sudan
will not object if they can bring investment into Bir Tawil and share the
revenue with both countries. “Egypt does not care,” Dixit says. “No one gives a
s**t about this area. It’s too far off the radar, too inhospitable.”
Dixit says that, so far, the price he
has paid for being king has been minor—treating friends to meals at 5-star
hotels, and a bit of a struggle to juggle his professional life and the demands
of trying to create a new country. The major challenges lie ahead.
“It’s both crazy and interesting,”
Dixit says, with a typically warm, friendly laugh. “And that’s the best part of
it, that’s the thrill. It’s epic.”
Source | Mint | 5th January 2018
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi
Institute of Management
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