-Release Critical Bugs (RCB) are the bugs of severity « critical »,
-« grave » and « important ». Those bugs can delay
-the Debian release and/or can justify the removal of a package at freeze
-time. That's why those bugs needs to be corrected as fast as possible.
-You must be aware that some developers who are part of the <url
-id="&url-debian-qa;" name="Debian Quality Assurance"> effort are following
-those bugs and try to help you each time they can. But if you can't
-fix such bugs within 2 weeks, you should either ask for help by sending a
-mail to the Quality Assurance (QA) group (&email-debian-qa;) or
-justify yourself and gives your plan to fix it by sending a mail to the
-concerned bug report. Otherwise people from the QA group may want to do a
-Non Maintainer Upload (NMU) after trying to contact you (they might wait
-not as long as usually before they do their NMU if they have seen no
-recent activity from you on the BTS).
+Release Critical Bugs (RCB) are the bugs of severity
+« critical », « grave » and
+« important ». Those bugs can delay the Debian release
+and/or can justify the removal of a package at freeze time. That's why
+those bugs needs to be corrected as fast as possible. You must be
+aware that some developers who are part of the <url
+id="&url-debian-qa;" name="Debian Quality Assurance"> effort are
+following those bugs and try to help you each time they can. But if
+you can't fix such bugs within 2 weeks, you should either ask for help
+by sending a mail to the Quality Assurance (QA) group
+(&email-debian-qa;) or justify yourself and present your plan to fix
+it by sending a mail to the bug concerned report. Otherwise people
+from the QA group may want to do a Non Maintainer Upload (NMU) after
+trying to contact you (they might not wait as long as usual before
+they do their NMU if they have seen no recent activity from you on the
+BTS).