TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

SDG Roundtable: Innovation for women and equality

27m 1s4,121 mots625 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

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foreign

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[Music]

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still perpetuate bias inequality and

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violence in the lives of women and girls

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technological progress is outpacing

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progress towards gender equality this is

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not programmable

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on this International women's day we

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make four calls one remove all barriers

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to access the digital world 2. educate

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and train women and girls in stem 3.

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enable women to create Tech that meets

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their needs 4. eliminate online

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gender-based violence today we power on

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to create an equal digital future for

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wall

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please

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[Music]

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foreign

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[Music]

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hello and welcome to the sdg Roundtable

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this month gender equality champions

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from around the world are gathering here

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in New York to attend the 67th session

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of the commission on the status of women

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coming from governments the U.N the

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private sector ngos the media and

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Academia this year we're talking about

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Innovation and technology for gender

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equality

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it's been less than a hundred years

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since the invention of modern computers

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the world has been transformed with the

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internet social media and now generative

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AI

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gender equality on the other hand will

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take another 300 years according to you

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and women so the question is how can we

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ensure that this rapid technological

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progress drives sdg5 forward and not

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deepen existing inequalities as the

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Secretary General has said the math is

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simple without the insights and

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creativity of half the world

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Science and Technology will fulfill just

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half their potential the UN is

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determined to scale solutions for Global

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Gender equality both online and offline

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my name is Anne-Marie and I'm the

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executive director of un Partnerships

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and I'll be your moderator joining me

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are four inspiring women leaders Dr

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abiola akiyodi afolabi

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executive director women Advocate

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research and Documentation Center Hoda

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Osman executive editor at Arab reporters

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for an investigative journalism welcome

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on screen we've got Valentina munas

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rabanal the UN secretary General's sdg

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Advocate and feminist Stan activists and

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hilani galpaya chief executive officer

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of learn Asia welcome and thank you for

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being with us

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halani as we're approaching the end of

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csw and have learned about the Striking

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discrimination and marginalization of

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women in technology

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37 percent of women do not use the

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internet in the least developed

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countries only 19 percent of the women

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are online what's causing these digital

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access gaps and how can we ensure

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meaningful access to technology and

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digitally Empower women and girls thank

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you Anne Murray

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Anne-Marie you are absolutely right the

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situation has improved with women's

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access over time but we have really a

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long long way to go now I really wish

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there was a really cute answer that I

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can say you know let's do X and women

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will be online

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the reason it's a complex set of reasons

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is that because women's digital access

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lies in a context of low access to a

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whole lot of other factors and those

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factors Drive Mobile phone ownership

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adoption use and internet access

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so as researchers we look at this and we

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when we look at nationally

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representative data from Africa Asia and

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Latin America we see women are women who

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are unconnected are less educated less

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likely to be working less likely to be

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earning a regular income less likely to

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earn a high income and less likely to

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have a have digital skills and a whole

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set of other skills living households

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with electricity and so on so these are

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these compounding factors and all of

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them really have a significant impact on

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whether they have mobile access or not

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right so the unpalatable answer while

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those are the reasons so we actually

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need a cocktail of solutions right to

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improve women's skills

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so we we had this really weird natural

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experiment during Kobe 19. for example

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in India 81 million people came online

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for the first time and majority of them

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came because of covid-19 induced uh

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reasons and majority were women or women

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headed households because they had to

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work I needed a phone wanted to start a

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business and wanted other income streams

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because the husband has been laid off or

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children had to study so the idea might

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be to find these discontinuities in

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women's lives not kovid hopefully but

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something like childbirth which many

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women go through and build programs

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around it that give some meaningful

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benefit for women owning a phone and

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find the financing mechanism so we

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actually solve some of that access and

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ownership Gap thank you helani I'm I'm

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hearing about context that we have to

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look at the context that women are in

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find those Milestone moments so that

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peop women particularly can engage

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meaningfully online and we're going to

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turn to them so building our on that let

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me turn to you abiola the commission

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strongly emphasized the importance of

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Education not only to close digital

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access gaps but also into sure women's

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participation in decision making how can

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digital technology and education Empower

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and women and girls to gain effective

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participation in political economic

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social and Civic life it's a lot to ask

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for it is it is it's quite a lot to ask

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um actually and from what you were

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saying education is very critical it's

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critical for empowerment and also is

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also critical for advancement of digital

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and you know technological learning

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particularly for women and that's why

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the sustainable development goal is also

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very clear about the role of Education

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you know in terms of being able to

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achieve the sdg itself and one thing

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that is also very important is

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especially when you're talking about

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context when you think about social

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norms culture and how that affects you

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know the ability of women to be able to

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use uh technology it's also about this

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call you know the climate the score the

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issue of safety the issue of security of

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the girl child in school you know

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because we need the school to be safe

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you know for girl child to be able to

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have that kind of digital learning you

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know that can help them to move from

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where they are you know to 5.0 you know

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to be able to be very active you know in

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the society and where we don't have that

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then that becomes a problem and I think

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in the global South that's one of the

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major challenge that we are having with

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the security with insecurity uh with the

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conflict you know uh for example in

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Israel you know in Nigeria and other

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places where girls are now being

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discouraged you know from you know going

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to school so it's important to deal with

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that and I and I and that's why I I

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would commend the U.N democracy

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foundation for uh the work that they're

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doing with respect to ensuring that they

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keep you know girls in school and make

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the school to be safe you know and are

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secure I haven't said that so there's

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also you need to link that you know to

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the old discussion around the digital

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divide uh where you know uh there are

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issues of gender equality there are

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issues of uh there are new nuances you

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know that keep you know women and girls

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you know out of that knowledge you know

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ability to be able you know to acquire

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the necessary knowledge if you look at

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politics for example

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um recently I was doing some work in

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Nigeria I was an election I just

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finished and I was talking and training

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women who are in into politics and you

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find out that some of them don't even

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have a space on the internet they don't

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