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question:You are an AI assistant. You will be given a task. You must generate a detailed and long answer. John Kerry: During their investigation of Noriega, Kerry's staff found reason to believe that the Pakistan-based Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) had facilitated Noriega's drug trafficking and money laundering. This led to a separate inquiry into BCCI, and as a result, banking regulators shut down BCCI in 1991. In December 1992, Kerry and Senator Hank Brown, a Republican from Colorado, released The BCCI Affair, a report on the BCCI scandal. The report showed that the bank was crooked and was working with terrorists, including Abu Nidal. It blasted the Department of Justice, the Department of the Treasury, the Customs Service, the Federal Reserve Bank, as well as influential lobbyists and the CIA. Please answer a question about this article. If the question is unanswerable, say "unanswerable". What was the BCCI report called?

answer:The BCCI report was called "The BCCI Affair."

question:The exercise is to decide whether the question accepts the proposed suggestion as a correct answer. If yes, write "True", otherwise write "False". Question: what triggered the civil war Suggestion: The Union soon controlled the border states and established a naval blockade that crippled the southern economy. The answer to this question is:

answer:False

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Noin 250 000 sudanilaista pakolaista on tullut rajan yli vuoden 2003 jälkeen, ja lähes kaikki ovat 12 leirillä maan itäosassa. Translate to English English:

answer:About 250,000 people from Sudan have come across the border since 2003, and almost all of them are in 12 camps in the eastern part of the country. In simple words: Many people left their home in Sudan after 2003 and went to a new place. There, they live in 12 big areas called camps, which are in the east side of this new place.

question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Norwich City 0-0 Cardiff City Norwich City's Jonny Howson, left, and Kim Bo-Kyung of Cardiff City in the Premier League match at Carrow Road. Photograph: Jamie Mcdonald/Getty Images The Cardiff manager, Malky Mackay, criticised Norwich's Leroy Fer for poor sportsmanship following this stalemate. The visitors' goalkeeper, David Marshall, who had kept his side in the game with a string of saves, was at the centre of the key incident as Fer found the Cardiff net in stoppage time, only for the referee, Mike Jones, to chalk the goal off. Marshall had thrown the ball out due to an injury to the Norwich midfielder Alex Tettey, and Ricky van Wolfswinkel's throw-in went to Fer, who tucked a shot into the bottom corner as Marshall awaited a return pass, sparking a fracas. Initially, Mackay thought Fer's actions were not intentional, but heard afterwards that the Holland forward had meant to score. The Cardiff manager praised the official for the decision. Mackay said: "Common sense prevailed and sometimes common sense has to take over from rules when you're talking about sportsmanship and the reputation of our league, which is top class. "Mick certainly did that. Whether that was the exact ruling or whether he should have given the goal and let us walk up and put the ball in the net, which would've been a complete mockery. I don't think that's something that anybody in the stadium would've wanted, maybe with the exception of Leroy Fer." Hughton and his assistant Colin Calderwood told Mackay they would have allowed Cardiff to score had the goal stood. "Immediately Colin and Chris came up and said, 'If Mick Jones gives it, we'll let you walk it into our net'," Mackay added. "There was complete calmness from both benches. The boys were a little bit heated, but I think common sense prevailed." Hughton, who declined to say what his side would have done had the goal been allowed to stand, felt that Fer's intentions were not to score. "I would think he's playing the ball back to the goalkeeper," Hughton said. "It happened very quickly and I didn't see all of it. What I did see was a throw-in for us, the ball going to Leroy and Leroy giving the ball back to them. "I don't know if the pace of the ball took it in the net or if the goalkeeper left it." Hughton believed, by the letter of the law, the goal should have stood. "My initial thinking is that it should've been [allowed]," he said. "But I don't know the reasons why. I've only just heard that the referee said that he didn't whistle for play to commence. "I wouldn't think that you have to (for a throw in), but I haven't seen him. It's not a way that you want to win a game. You want to win a game in the way that we should've won it today and that's by taking some of the chances that we had." Norwich were dominant throughout but found Marshall in supreme form. They might also have had a penalty, but again luck was against them. A Gary Hooper shot hit Steven Caulker on the arm after bouncing off the Cardiff captain's boot early in the second half, but Jones waved appeals away. Hooper had numerous opportunities to open his Premier League account but failed to do so and Hughton's decision to substitute the former Celtic striker 18 minutes from time was met with cries of "You don't know what you're doing". If Hughton were to depart, Norwich fans would no doubt be in favour of a move for Malky Mackay, who made more than 200 appearances in six years at Carrow Road and whose status at Cardiff is best described as complicated. Cardiff had chances as Norwich pressed forward. Steven Caulker headed wide from a Peter Whittingham corner when unmarked before Peter Odemwingie found Fraizer Campbell and the striker centred to Mutch. Mutch scored at Fulham and Chelsea but was denied from six yards as Ruddy spread himself and somehow turned the ball over. There was another deluge of Norwich attacks as Caulker blocked from Hooper following Fer's direct run, Marshall saved well from Jonny Howson and then Whittingham cleared off the line as Fer hooked a Robert Snodgrass corner towards goal. Marshall then had to be alert to save Hooper's early shot from 25 yards. Ruddy saved a Kim Bo-kyung effort which deflected off Sébastien Bassong before another flurry from Norwich. Howson was denied by Marshall, Russell Martin headed over from a Snodgrass cross and then the Cardiff goalkeeper pulled off a remarkable save to keep his side level at the interval. Snodgrass's cross deflected off Mutch and Marshall instinctively turned it on to the post before saving the rebound from Hooper. Norwich had scored six Premier League goals entering the contest and there was a familiar unease for the locals at half-time after their team failed to add to the total. The referee Jones waved away penalty appeals when Hooper shot on the turn and the ball bounced off Caulker's boot and on to his arm. Hooper headed a corner over soon after and then attempted to play provider after squirming by Caulker, only for Marshall to turn the striker's cross away from Pilkington. The Norwich bombardment continued as Ricky van Wolfswinkel was introduced three minutes from time and Bassong joined him up front. Marshall again saved in stunning fashion from a Fer header and Cardiff scrambled clear before Fer was embroiled in last-minute controversy in the final meaningful action of the game. What are the most important parts of this text?

answer:In a soccer game between Norwich City and Cardiff City, the final score was 0-0. There was a moment when Leroy Fer from Norwich City scored a goal, but the referee did not count it because of a sportsmanship issue. Both teams had chances to score but the goalkeepers made very good saves. At the end, neither team could score a goal, so the game finished as a draw.

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