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(FILES) CEO of Paris airports group Groupe ADP Augustin de Romanet de Beaune (C) arrives with his lawyer Jean-Marc Fedida (L) for his trial on suspicion of favouritism at French public financial institution Caisse des Depots at the Batignolles district courthouse in Paris, on March 21, 2024. (Photo by Thomas SAMSON / AFP) (Photo by THOMAS SAMSON/AFP via Getty Images)
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(FILES) French politician, diplomat and Civil Servant Jean-Pierre Jouyet arrives for his trial, on suspicion of favouritism at French public financial institution Caisse des Depots at the Batignolles district courthouse in Paris, on March 21, 2024. (Photo by Thomas SAMSON / AFP) (Photo by THOMAS SAMSON/AFP via Getty Images)
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(FILES) (COMBO) This combination of file photos made on MArch 17, 2024, shows (L-R) French politician, diplomat and Civil Servant Jean-Pierre Jouyet in Paris on February 21, 2024; CEO of Paris airports group Groupe ADP Augustin de Romanet de Beaune in Chantilly on January 11, 2024; and French criminologist and professor at the Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers (CNAM) Alain Bauer in Paris on September 30, 2022. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by JOEL SAGETLUDOVIC MARINSTEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP via Getty Images)
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(FILES) French criminologist and professor at the Conservatoire national des Arts et Metiers (CNAM) Alain Bauer gives an interview to AFP in Paris on September 30, 2022. (Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP) (Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP via Getty Images)
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An Indigenous woman sells groceries at Mercado Lanza in La Paz on November 20, 2024. Margarita Avila, a 66-year-old grocery seller, stoically observes her neighbors' closed stalls at a market in La Paz. "We have had good years (...). We knew how much we were going to earn, how much we were going to invest," she recalls. Now the shortage of dollars, the climate of protests, and the discrediting of the authorities have plunged Bolivia into continuous uncertainty. (Photo by AIZAR RALDES / AFP) (Photo by AIZAR RALDES/AFP via Getty Images)
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Margarita Avila, 66, sells groceries at Mercado Lanza in La Paz on November 20, 2024. Margarita Avila, a 66-year-old grocery seller, stoically observes her neighbors' closed stalls at a market in La Paz. "We have had good years (...). We knew how much we were going to earn, how much we were going to invest," she recalls. Now the shortage of dollars, the climate of protests, and the discrediting of the authorities have plunged Bolivia into continuous uncertainty. (Photo by AIZAR RALDES / AFP) (Photo by AIZAR RALDES/AFP via Getty Images)
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An Indigenous woman sells groceries at Mercado Lanza in La Paz on November 20, 2024. Margarita Avila, a 66-year-old grocery seller, stoically observes her neighbors' closed stalls at a market in La Paz. "We have had good years (...). We knew how much we were going to earn, how much we were going to invest," she recalls. Now the shortage of dollars, the climate of protests, and the discrediting of the authorities have plunged Bolivia into continuous uncertainty. (Photo by AIZAR RALDES / AFP) (Photo by AIZAR RALDES/AFP via Getty Images)
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An Indigenous woman sells groceries at Mercado Lanza in La Paz on November 20, 2024. Margarita Avila, a 66-year-old grocery seller, stoically observes her neighbors' closed stalls at a market in La Paz. "We have had good years (...). We knew how much we were going to earn, how much we were going to invest," she recalls. Now the shortage of dollars, the climate of protests, and the discrediting of the authorities have plunged Bolivia into continuous uncertainty. (Photo by AIZAR RALDES / AFP) (Photo by AIZAR RALDES/AFP via Getty Images)