absurd-rti-replies
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| + | ====== 10 Most Absurd RTI Replies in India That Will Surprise You (Real Cases) ====== | ||
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| + | <WRAP important> | ||
| + | **Disclaimer (please read).** | ||
| + | * This list is based on publicly reported RTI cases in mainstream Indian media. | ||
| + | * The classification of a reply as " | ||
| + | * This article does not intend to mock any individual, public authority, or PIO. | ||
| + | * The goal is to illustrate how **imprecise RTI questions**, | ||
| + | * Media links are provided against each case. Readers are encouraged to read the original reports for full context. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== What is RTI, in one line? ===== | ||
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| + | The Right to Information Act, 2005 lets any Indian citizen ask a **public authority** for records, documents, or reasons behind a decision — to be replied to in writing within **30 days**. The officer who processes the request is called a **Public Information Officer (PIO)**. Most RTI replies in India are clean, factual, and helpful. A few — a very small fraction of the tens of lakhs filed each year — end up surprising readers, either because the question was phrased oddly, because a statutory exemption produced a literal reply, or because the reply itself contained unexpected numbers. | ||
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| + | This article picks ten of those widely-reported replies, with sources. | ||
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| + | ===== Why some RTI replies become unusual ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * **Bureaucratic literalism.** Public information officers are trained to reply strictly from the record. If a question is phrased as an opinion, the reply is "we don't maintain such a record" | ||
| + | * **Ambiguous questions.** "Why has this not been done?" is an opinion; "What is the file status and who is the officer?" | ||
| + | * **Legal limitations.** The RTI Act's Section 8 lists nine kinds of exempt information; | ||
| + | * **Human element.** PIOs are human. Sometimes a reply is unusually worded; sometimes the file itself contains a surprise. | ||
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| + | Seen this way, " | ||
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| + | ===== The 10 most widely-reported cases ===== | ||
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| + | ==== 1. Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose files — "PM has no power to declassify" | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** Over the years, multiple RTI applicants — including Netaji' | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** In February 2015, the Prime Minister' | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** The Prime Minister, the highest executive authority, replying that the office does not have power to declassify files on a freedom fighter surprised many. (The government subsequently declassified many of these files in 2016, starting with the West Bengal set, and then by the Centre.) | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 8(1)(a) permits withholding information that would prejudicially affect India' | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** When a Section 8(1)(a) denial seems over-broad, invoke Section 8(2) and Section 8(3) in your First Appeal. | ||
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| + | **Source.** //PM has no power to declassify Netaji files: PMO// — //The Tribune//, 17 February 2015: '' | ||
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| + | ==== 2. " | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** In 2012, a Class 6 student in Lucknow named Aishwarya Parashar filed an RTI asking the President and PMO to officially notify Mahatma Gandhi as " | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The Ministry of Home Affairs, replying to a subsequent RTI, stated that no such official notification could be traced — Mahatma Gandhi has never been formally notified as " | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** A widely-shared title, used in every textbook, turned out to be convention rather than a gazette notification. | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 2(f) defines " | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** Ask for **records that are likely to exist**. If the record does not exist, the reply itself becomes informative — a new fact emerges. | ||
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| + | **Source.** //Mahatma Gandhi was never declared " | ||
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| + | ==== 3. Taj Mahal — "No Hindu idols in basement rooms" (ASI RTI reply, 2022) ==== | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** Multiple RTI applicants have sought answers from the Archaeological Survey of India on the historical status of the Taj Mahal — whether it is a Mughal mausoleum or a Hindu temple ("Tejo Mahalaya" | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The ASI, in a 2017 reply to BK Ayyangar, stated "no such record is available" | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** A one-line RTI reply became the most cited piece of evidence against a 30-year-old theory. | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 2(f) — " | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** A clean " | ||
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| + | **Source.** //Taj Mahal a Shiva Temple? Yes, an RTI Plea Asks ASI Exactly That// — //The Quint//: '' | ||
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| + | ==== 4. "PM on duty all the time" — PMO on leaves (RTI reply, 2015-onwards) ==== | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** An applicant asked how many sick and casual leaves the Prime Ministers of India have availed in the last 10 years, and whether the sitting PM follows official working hours. | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The PMO replied that PM Narendra Modi had not taken a single day off after taking charge on 26 May 2014, and that "he is on duty all the time". | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** The reply was widely shared as a quotable line; it also illustrates that **attendance registers** for the PM's office are a public record. | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** A PIO must answer from the record. Where the record is a roster / attendance register, the reply must reflect it. | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** "How many" and "how often" are sharp questions. " | ||
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| + | **Source.** //15 bizarre RTI queries on PM Modi and their interesting replies// — //India TV//: '' | ||
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| + | ==== 5. " | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** An RTI applicant, and later BJP MLA Charan Waghmare, sought the records of the pest-control contract at Mantralaya, Maharashtra' | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The RTI disclosure showed that a contractor had been paid for killing **3,19,400 rats in seven days** — a rate of around 45,000 rats per day, or 32 rats every minute. | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** Former minister Eknath Khadse raised the figure publicly, asking how such a large number could have been killed in a week. The BJP later clarified that the figure referred to poison tablets used, not rats killed, but the RTI papers had originally quoted rats. The episode became known as the " | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 4(1)(b)(xi) — budget heads and contracts of a public authority are proactive-disclosure items. Section 4(1)(b)(xii) — subsidy details of beneficiaries. | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** Pest-control contracts, sanitation contracts, consumable purchases — all are RTI-able. Focus on the BoQ and the running bills. | ||
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| + | **Source.** //Over 3 lakh rats were killed in an Indian government office// — //Quartz India//, March 2018: '' | ||
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| + | ==== 6. " | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** An RTI applicant asked the PMO for the graduation percentage of the Prime Minister. | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The PMO replied that "the information sought does not form part of the records" | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** The reply brought out an interesting point — personal academic records of a public figure are not held by the PMO as an office; they sit with the university. A separate RTI to Delhi University led to a Central Information Commission order; the DU CPIO was fined Rs. 25,000 for rejecting an RTI on the PM's degree without adequate reason. | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 6(3) — if the PIO does not hold the information, | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** Route your RTI to the **custodian** of the record. If the PMO doesn' | ||
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| + | **Source.** //DU official fined Rs25K for rejecting RTI query on Modi's degree// — // | ||
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| + | ==== 7. "PMO received 23 petitions for Dr Kurien' | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** Activists who organised an online petition with nearly **13,000 signatures** for Dr Verghese Kurien — the " | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The PMO replied that it had received only **23 petitions** for Dr Kurien. (For comparison, Sachin Tendulkar was shown to have received 20.) | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** An online petition with 13,000 signatures had translated to just 23 petitions on the PMO record. The gap highlighted how civic campaigns must be converted into **formal written submissions** to be counted. | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 2(f) — records held by the public authority are disclosable. Whatever has reached the PMO's dak is the record; online signatures are not. | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** A signed online petition is moral persuasion. A formal posted petition is a **record**. Convert advocacy into paperwork. | ||
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| + | **Source.** //About 13,000 signed online petition for Dr V Kurien' | ||
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| + | ==== 8. "Rs 83 lakh on Kasturba anniversaries — 60% more than on Mahatma Gandhi' | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** An RTI applicant asked the Union government for the expenditure on official commemorations of Mahatma Gandhi' | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The RTI disclosed that nearly **Rs 83 lakh** had been spent on Kasturba Gandhi' | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** Commemoration budgets are usually small line items that nobody asks about. This RTI surfaced a disproportionate allocation that no Parliament question had previously exposed. | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 4(1)(b)(xi) again — budget heads and expenditure details are proactive-disclosure information. | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** The interesting data often lives in **small, routine budget lines**. Large line items are already audited; small ones less so. | ||
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| + | **Source.** // | ||
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| + | ==== 9. " | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** An RTI applicant asked what was the broadband internet speed available at the PMO and at 7, Race Course Road (now Lok Kalyan Marg). | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The PMO replied that the internet speed available was **34 Mbps**. | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** A single-number, | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** Section 2(f) — technical specifications of infrastructure procured by a public authority are " | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** Technical facts (equipment, broadband, vehicles, staff sanction) are disclosable. They build the factual scaffolding for any civic story. | ||
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| + | **Source.** //15 bizarre RTI queries on PM Modi and their interesting replies// — //India TV// (link above). | ||
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| + | ==== 10. Ram Setu — "No record on natural or man-made; not a protected monument" | ||
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| + | **What was asked.** An RTI applicant asked the Archaeological Survey of India whether the Ram Setu (Adam' | ||
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| + | **What the reply said.** The ASI stated that Ram Setu is **not currently protected** as a monument of national importance and that **no proposal** is pending at its headquarters. It **declined to take a position** on whether the structure is natural or man-made, saying its records do not contain a definitive view. | ||
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| + | **Why it stands out.** A decades-long national debate — natural shoals or a man-made bridge? — was met with a straight-faced "we don't have a recorded view". | ||
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| + | **What the law actually says.** A public authority cannot express an opinion under RTI; it can only disclose records. If the records don't contain a finding, the reply will say so. | ||
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| + | **Lesson for citizens.** Ask for **what the record shows**, not for what the officer personally believes. A "no record" | ||
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| + | **Source.** //Ram Setu ' | ||
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| + | ===== What these cases teach us about RTI ===== | ||
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| + | ==== Five patterns ==== | ||
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| + | * **Literal replies are not wrong.** The PIO's job is to quote the record, not to narrate history. An unexpected reply is often a **correctly worded one** to an imprecise question. | ||
| + | * **Negative findings are information.** "No record available" | ||
| + | * **Records travel in small line items.** Pest-control bills, commemoration budgets, broadband plans — small items produce big stories. | ||
| + | * **Custodian matters.** A PMO reply on a university degree will fail; the university is the custodian. Route correctly. | ||
| + | * **Statutory exemptions are real.** Section 8(1)(a), (d), (h), (i), (j) produce genuine refusals. They are not arbitrary. | ||
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| + | ==== Why good questions matter ==== | ||
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| + | A well-phrased RTI has three features: | ||
| + | - **A specific record sought** (a register, a contract, a file number). | ||
| + | - **A defined period** (dates, not "since forever" | ||
| + | - **A named office** (PIO of the correct public authority). | ||
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| + | When all three are present, even " | ||
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| + | ===== How to avoid getting such replies yourself ===== | ||
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| + | * **Ask for records**, not explanations. "Give me the attendance register" | ||
| + | * **Avoid opinion-style questions.** "Why has this not happened?" | ||
| + | * **Route to the custodian.** Find out which office holds the record before you write. | ||
| + | * **Quote a period and a reference.** A year, a file number, an account number — the PIO thanks you. | ||
| + | * **Check Section 8 first.** If your request falls in exempt territory (privacy, security, commercial confidence), | ||
| + | * **Read the reply carefully.** Many " | ||
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| + | ===== Responsible use of RTI ===== | ||
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| + | RTI is one of India' | ||
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| + | * RTI has exposed scams, reformed policies, and restored benefits to lakhs of citizens. | ||
| + | * Most RTIs in India get **clean, helpful replies**. | ||
| + | * The more specific the citizen' | ||
| + | * The tool rewards patience and precision. It punishes sweeping, rhetorical asks. | ||
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| + | For a deeper discussion, see our guide on [[: | ||
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| + | ===== FAQs ===== | ||
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| + | **Q1. Are these cases fake or exaggerated? | ||
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| + | **Q2. Can I file an RTI on anything I want?**\\ You can file RTI on any matter, but the PIO can refuse if the information falls within Section 8 exemptions or if the request is too broad under Section 7(9). A focused, specific RTI works best. | ||
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| + | **Q3. Can I be penalised for filing an unusual RTI?**\\ No. RTI is your legal right under a central Act. But frivolous, harassing RTIs are discouraged and can, in extreme cases, attract the Information Commission' | ||
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| + | **Q4. Can I ask for an officer' | ||
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| + | **Q5. Will a PIO refuse a sensitive question? | ||
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| + | **Q6. What if my RTI reply is clearly wrong?**\\ Deliberately incorrect RTI replies can attract a penalty of up to Rs. 25,000 on the PIO under Section 20. See // | ||
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| + | ===== Conclusion ===== | ||
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| + | RTI is the grammar of a democracy. Most replies are clean and routine. A handful are unexpected, quotable, and — yes — sometimes funny. But read carefully, even those unexpected replies teach you how the system works, what the record actually contains, and how to frame the next application sharper. | ||
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| + | Laugh when appropriate. Learn always. And file the next RTI a little better. | ||
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| + | ===== Related reading ===== | ||
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| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
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| + | ===== Sources ===== | ||
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| + | * //The Tribune// — //PM has no power to declassify Netaji files: PMO// (2015): '' | ||
| + | * //The Times of India// — //Mahatma Gandhi was never declared " | ||
| + | * //The Quint// — //Taj Mahal a Shiva Temple? Yes, an RTI Plea Asks ASI Exactly That//: '' | ||
| + | * //India TV// — //15 bizarre RTI queries on PM Modi and their interesting replies//: '' | ||
| + | * //Quartz India// — //Killing of over 300,000 rats at Maharashtra' | ||
| + | * //Business Standard// — //Rats in Mantralaya: BJP says Khadse got the number wrong//: '' | ||
| + | * // | ||
| + | * // | ||
| + | * // | ||
| + | * //India Today// — //Ram Setu ' | ||
| + | * //Business Standard// — // | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
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| + | //Last reviewed: 21 April 2026. Citations follow widely-reported media sources; readers are encouraged to visit the original articles for full context.// | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
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