As snow falls in Bosnia, cold adds to ‘assaulted’ refugees’ woes

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Velika Kladusa, Bosnia – Broken phones and broken bones: these are the risks refugees are running in Bosnia as they attempt to cross over the border into Croatia, the EU’s newest member state.

In a warehouse near the town of Velika Kladusa, close to the Croatian border, most of the 200 people living here are trying to play “the game”, a term many use for the attempt to reach Europe. It is a game with high stakes and risks as a group of Iranian men living here well know. 

Seven men are recovering from a beating, which they say happened the previous night. They say it was at the hands of Croatian police.

They spread out their phones in a line; the screens have all been smashed. One man winces as he pushes himself up to lift up his shirt. “Holy s***,” says Arash, one of the older Iranians who was not with them the night before and is seeing the injuries for the first time.

“They put them in the car one by one and were beating them really hard. They used sticks to beat them. They also kicked and punched them,” Arash says, translating.

Farhad, another Iranian member of the group, adds: “They said, ‘If you come back again I’ll kill you’.”

Locals say minus 10 degrees Celsius in winter is not unusual [Courtesy: No Name Kitchen]

Croatia’s Interior Ministry has dismissed allegations of police brutality.

Representatives from Doctors Without Borders (known by its French initials MSF) were unable to confirm that it was Croatian police who beat those trying to cross the border, but told Al Jazeera that the injuries are consistent with the allegations. 

“We also regularly see patients with injuries varying from soft tissue injuries to sometimes fractures which are allegedly inflicted by Croatian border forces. These injuries are consistent with exposure to force on the specific body part and it is therefore possible that these wounds are inflicted as testified by our patients,” says Julian Koeberer, a humanitarian affairs officer with MSF.

This year, Bosnia has seen a surge of refugees and migrants passing through the country. According to data collected by UNHCR, there were 7,600 arrivals in Bosnia and Herzegovina from the beginning of the year until June, compared to a total of 218 in 2017. 

A short drive from the warehouse, around 200 people are living in a field next to the local dog shelter. 

Stray dogs and puppies roam around the field. Some people say they have sometimes come back to their tent to find a dog inside. 

“It’s because we are like dogs, that’s what they think,” says Dalir, a Pakistani.

Doctors expect to treat severe cases of hypothermia and frostbite [Courtesy: No Name Kitchen]

Most here keep playing “the game” even though they keep losing. 

“Three times we were pushed back by police, they beat us and broke our mobiles and took a little bit of money,” says Hussein who is also from Pakistan. 

The bruises and the beatings will not deter them though, they say they will try again “maybe tomorrow”.

Conditions in the field are poor and MSF, which works in the area, treats people from a mobile clinic. 

Doctors and volunteers say that scabies and lice are common due to poor living conditions. 

But their most pressing concern is the weather. 

Winter is coming, temperatures are already dipping below zero at night and snow has fallen. 

Locals say minus 10 degrees Celsius in winter is not unusual.

Refugees live in cramped and unhygienic conditions in Bosnia [Katy Fallon/Al Jazeera]

“Living conditions for most migrants in Bosnia remain horrific,” says MSF’s Koeberer, “most patients coming to our mobile clinic suffer from skin diseases caused by poor hygiene conditions and from respiratory infections due to cold weather and are unable to recover while remaining outside exposed to harsh weather.

“During the last weeks, our team already treated an increasing number of patients but with temperatures soon falling below five degrees and further at night … we expect severe cases of hypothermia and frostbite, with people’s lives at risk if not provided with safe shelter.”

The arrival of snow is worrying for all those on the ground.

“It’s zero degrees now, you have to rely on others to distribute food. As you can imagine, it’s not good for your mental health,” says Marc who works with No Name Kitchen, an organisation which provides showers for those living in the field in Velika Kladusa. 

He adds that the constant pushback from Croatian police have a significant effect upon those living here. 

“Maybe half of the time they are beaten up, their money is stolen, their phones are broken.”

The Bosnian people are good … but the camp conditions are very bad.

Ali, Pakistani refugee

Near the town of Bihac, also close to the Croatian border, is the previously abandoned Borici dormitory. 

The dormitory was built in the fifties and intended for war orphans; now around 1,000 migrants live here. 

Men cook chapatis outside around a fire. According to the International Organization for Migration, the building is steadily being prepared for winter, but conditions inside are bleak.

It is dark, hard to walk through without tripping up and has the feeling of a squatter camp rather than an official facility. 

“The Bosnian people are good … but the camp conditions are very bad,” says Ali from Pakistan. 

He points to a dark cavern under the dormitory to show where he sleeps at night. 

“They don’t have water to wash their face,” he says of people living there, “it’s very cold here.” 

Most of the men express gratitude towards Bosnians and the Bosnian police who they contrast strongly with their Croatian counterparts across the border. 

But snow and broken bones will not deter most from attempting to seek safety and economic stability.

Faisal, who comes from Pakistan and is living in the dormitory, rubs his hands together and coughs in the cold. 

“I will always try to cross again,” he says.

With snow having already fallen, doctors and aid workers fear for the health of refugees [Courtesy: No Name Kitchen]

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5 things you need to know Friday: Black Friday, ‘The Match,’ federal climate report, Mega mystery

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Editors, USA TODAY
Published 12:58 a.m. ET Nov. 23, 2018 | Updated 5:46 a.m. ET Nov. 23, 2018

The Match: Tiger Woods vs. Phil Mickelson is a must-see event

Watching football is a staple of Thanksgiving weekend, but this year you can add golf to your sports viewing options. Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, two of the greatest golfers of all time, will face off in The Match, a match-play event for a $9 million prize. The mano-a-mano battle starts at 3 p.m. ET Friday at Las Vegas’ beautiful and exclusive Shadow Creek and is available on pay-per-view for $19.99. USA TODAY Sports columnist Christine Brennan is among those who won’t be watching. Too bad. They will be missing something we have never seen before and might not see ever again. 

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Two of the biggest names in golf will square off on Thanksgiving weekend when “The Match” takes place between Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.
Time

Where to get the best Black Friday deals

Today is Black Friday, marking the unofficial start of the holiday shopping blitz. Online retail shopping is expected to approach $125 billion this season, and consumers can expect a massive wave of sales. Despite some great Black Friday deals, buyers should be caution because not all sales are as good as they may appear. Reviewed, part of the USA TODAY Network, is tracking Black Friday sales around the clock to find the best buys. They also have gift recommendations for all the people on your list. Meanwhile, others are marking ”International “Buy Nothing Day,” which falls on the day after Thanksgiving each year. Celebrated since the 1990s, the day is meant to inspire worldwide action against mass consumerism, according to Adbusters.

• Every major retailer having Black Friday and Cyber Monday 2018 sales
• List of major retailers’ hours for Black Friday deals

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Black Friday shopping or Online shopping, we ask the people in NYC which would be the best way to shop?
USA TODAY

Feds to release major climate report, sparking criticism of timing

The federal government will release a major climate change report – Volume II of the National Climate Assessment – on Black Friday. The timing, in the afternoon when many Americans will be traveling or shopping, prompted criticism from environmentalists. “It’s an absolute disgrace to bury the truth about climate impacts in a year that saw hundreds of Americans die during devastating climate-fueled megafires, hurricanes, floods, and algal blooms,” said National Wildlife Federation president Collin O’Mara in a statement. Meteorologist Angela Fritz with the Capital Weather Gang asked: “Is there any way it could be buried more? How about New Years Eve at 9 pm, guys?” President Donald Trump said he planned to withdraw the U.S. from the landmark Paris climate agreement, which requires countries to establish ambitious targets to reduce greenhouse gasses. He once also tweeted that global warming was a “hoax.”

 

Thanksgiving is over. You’re probably ready for a movie

On Thanksgiving weekend there is no safer haven from family dysfunction than soft seats, a darkened room and a movie. In the name of family peace, here’s our weekend movie guide to help make the right choice for every predicament or mood. Movies in their opening weekend include “Creed 2,” with returning boxing hero Rocky Balboa (Sylvester Stallone) as the trainer for the youthful Adonis Creed (Michael B. Jordan); Disney’s “Wreck-It-Ralph” sequel “Ralph Breaks the Internet”; and “Robin Hood,” starring Taron Egerton from the “Kingsman” films. If you’re in the mood for something Christmas-y, there’s “The Grinch,” starring Benedict Cumberbatch.

$1.5 billion Mega Millions jackpot still unclaimed

Friday marks one month since a very lucky someone won the $1.5 billion Mega Millions jackpot, but the prize remains unclaimed. A ticket sold at a KC Mart in Simpsonville, South Carolina, matched all the numbers during the drawing on October 23. The record-breaking jackpot created a frenzy as the biggest lottery prize in U.S. history. The winner has 180 days from the drawing to come forward — but we may never know the winner’s identity. 

 

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Robert Irwin brings some seriously cute animals on set but Jimmy Fallon isn’t into it

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Invite anyone from the Irwin family over, and you just know you’re going to get some animal action. 

Jimmy Fallon had Animal Planet host Robert Irwin, son of late Steve Irwin, on The Tonight Show, and he brought a lot of furry cuteness on set with him.

Fallon didn’t seem that into the cute baby animals, though. Even the cutest baby otter you’ve ever seen had Fallon visibly uncomfortable.

Seriously though, that baby zebra. 

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Deadly blast hits mosque in Afghanistan’s Khost province

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At least 10 people have been reported killed, and 25 others wounded following a blast inside a mosque in Afghanistan’s eastern Khost province. 

According to reports, the explosion on Friday targeted members of the 2nd regiment of the Afghan national army, as they held their Friday prayers inside a military base. 

Talib Mangal, spokesman of the governor of Khost, confirmed the explosion to Tolo News.

Reuters reported that as many as 50 people were wounded.

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And they’re off! Black Friday, the Super Bowl of shopping, kicks off holiday season

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Walmart’s “Check out with Me,” service brings a personal checker throughout the store to get you out of holiday shopping lines.
Jefferson Graham, USA TODAY

And they’re off.  

The holiday shopping frenzy has officially begun with the five-day stretch that starts on Thanksgiving and crosses the finish line Cyber Monday. And in the age of Amazon, retailers are increasingly turning to tech to make shopping, whether online or in an actual store, as quick and simple as possible.

This year marks the first time Macy’s will have mobile checkout at all of its stores. The Gap, Old Navy, Banana Republic, and Athleta will also are equipping employees at most locations with devices to check out customers on the spot.

And at Walmart, a digital map within the store app will pinpoint the exact location where a customer can find the doll or sweater they’re looking for. The map will be color coded for Black Friday to make the search even simpler. 

Such shortcuts are critical. A survey by consultancy Deloitte found that 27 percent of those polled would tap into alternate checkout options — like using a smartphone to scan and pay for purchase as they shop, or buying online, then picking the gift up at a store — to skip long check out lines.

And while shoppers should check because store hours may vary, those willing to brave the cold can start grabbing doorbusters before the sun comes up Friday.

Bass Pro Shops, Lord & Taylor and Sears are among the retailers opening at 5 a.m., while Home Depot, Kmart, Big Lots and Boscov’s will start welcoming customers an hour later.   

Target and T.J. Maxx will open at 7 a.m., and J.C. Penney, which opened on Thanksgiving Day, will keep the sales going until 10 p.m. Most Walmart stores will be open for 24 hours straight.

There’s a lot of money on the line. Nearly 20 percent of retail sales last year occurred during the holiday season, and it’s expected that shoppers will spend roughly $717 billion to $721 billion this year, an uptick of 4.3 percent to 4.8 percent over 2017, according to the National Retail Federation.  

More Money: What stores are open on Thanksgiving? List of major retailers’ hours for Black Friday deals

More Money: Why you should avoid buying a Christmas tree on Black Friday or Cyber Monday

More Money: It’s the holidays already? Many are still paying off credit card debt racked up last year

Black Friday has waned in recent years, its power dulled as retailers launch holiday sales days or weeks earlier, with many stores opening their doors in the midst of the Thanksgiving Day feast. And since 2014, the Saturday before Christmas, known as “Super Saturday,” has surpassed Black Friday in sales, a trend that the NRF expects to continue this year.

But Black Friday still packs a punch. Of the more than 164 million Americans who intend to shop over Thanksgiving weekend, 71 percent, or 116 million, have said they intend to buy and browse on Black Friday, more than any other day, the NRF says. 

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Just in time for the holidays, FAO Schwarz is back.
USA TODAY

Most sales still happen in actual stores, but online spending continues to grow at a faster clip. Over Thanksgiving weekend, Cyber Monday is expected to be the winner, with online spending forecast to grow 17.6 percent to $7.8 billion, according to software company Adobe Analytics. But Black Friday is projected to not be far behind, with a projected uptick in online sales of 17.2 percent to $5.9 billion.

During the full holiday season, more than $1 out of every $6 that is spent will be doled out online, amounting to $124.1 billion, according to Adobe. That’s a 14.8 percent jump over the previous year, and significantly more than the 2.7 percent spending uptick expected offline.

Digital research firm eMarketer has similar figures, saying that e-commerce spending will rise 16.6% to $123.73 billion, making up 12.3% of total holiday retail sales — the largest chunk ever.

For gift ideas and dates on deals, check out gifts.usatoday.com

 

 

 

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15 Black Friday deals on accessories for all of your new Apple products

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Apple released some pretty exciting new products this year — gadgets that you might be eyeing to get for yourself (or your loved ones, if you’re nice) over the holidays. If you’re hoping to snatch up a new Apple Watch, iPhone, or even a MacBook this holiday season, you might also want to invest in a couple of accessories at non-Apple Store prices. 

SEE ALSO: All the best Black Friday 2018 sales, right in one place

We’re offering 15 Black Friday deals on Apple accessories you’ll find hard to say no to. Why? Because on top of the discounts, you can get an additional 20% off just by entering the code BFSAVE20 at checkout.

With the AirPower’s fate pending, Apple users still don’t have an official wireless charger on their hands. But why wait for a device that may or may not come when you can enjoy the convenience of wireless charging right now? This pad can juice up two devices at once — Apple Watch, the new iPhones, and Qi-enabled Android phones — for up to 20% faster than other chargers. It also boasts other useful features like temperature control, surge protection, and short-circuit prevention.

MSRP: $99.99
Black Friday Price: $28.00

As you can probably tell from the name, this bad boy can power up three devices simultaneously. Equipped with Qualcomm 3.0 Quick Charging Technology, it can charge your Qi-enabled iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods all at the same time at blazing speeds — wirelessly.

MSRP: $129.99
Black Friday Price: $34.39

You pay a premium for your Apple gadgets and accessories; you ought to handle them with care, and not just randomly stuffed in your bag’s pockets. The BentoStack can take care of all the organizing for you with its multi-compartment design and secure setup. Styled after a Japanese lunchbox, it has different partitions to store different devices. The bottom stack is designed to house your power bricks, chargers, and Apple Watch bands, while the top section is reserved for charging cables and earphones. The top lid can hold your Apple Pencil or function as a phone stand. It also comes armed with a Qi-certified wireless charger and a 5,000mAh battery which you can use to keep your devices energized when you’re out and about.

MSRP: $99.95
Black Friday Price: $72

With the amount of traveling you’re going to do over the holidays, you’ll be lucky if your phone or tablet can last you the whole trip (unless you’re dozing off the entire flight, of course). Pack enough power for your gadgets with SolarJuice, which delivers a 26,800mAh battery capacity that can recharge a smartphone many times over. It has three high-speed ports built-in — Type-C, USB-C, and QC 3.0 — allowing you to juice up three devices simultaneously. Plus, it’s rain-resistant, dirt-proof, and shock-proof, and comes equipped with solar technology to feed off energy from the sun.

MSRP: $99.99
Black Friday Price: $37.60

At this point, you’re probably well aware that Apple doesn’t produce the sturdiest of charging cables. Save yourself the trouble (and money) of having to purchase a new one every few months with this virtually indestructible wire. Featuring a tinplate interior, a TPE jacket exterior, and wrapped internal wires to prevent friction or fraying, it can hold over 30,000 bends of 90-degree bend tests and up to 275 lbs, making it 30 times tougher than standard cables. It also boasts an 8-Pin connector that delivers fast data transfer, syncing, and charging. 

MSRP: $18.99
Black Friday Price: $8.79

If you want a portable charger that’s sleeker and easier to carry around, the LifePower A3 is your guy. On top of having an impressive 27,000mAh capacity, a USB-C port, and two USB-A ports, it also features an AC outlet to juice up a wider range of devices — including monitors and even apps.

MSRP: $250
Black Friday Price: $172.00

Your MacBook charging cable is a cable, not a jumping rope. It’s not something worth tripping over. If you’re more on the clumsy side and often find yourself stepping on your power cord, give yourself the gift of a magnetic cable to eliminate the case of the flying MacBook. It mimics the convenience of the now-obsolete MagSafe feature, safely disconnecting from your computer whenever you step on it. It’s even rated to charge your laptop faster than standard cables.

MSRP: $39.99
Black Friday Price: $20.00

This no-frills charging dock may not look like much, but the convenience it offers easily makes it superior compared to standard chargers. With a thoughtfully-designed suction cup, it can adhere to any surface, so you don’t have to worry about knocking it over, and makes way for effortless one-hand docking and undocking.

MSRP: $29.95
Black Friday Price: $11.96

Your Apple USB-C power adapter is too powerful to be only capable of charging one device. This expansion cube transforms it into a much more versatile power brick by adding a USB-C PD, QC3.0, and two USB charging ports so you can juice up four gadgets at once. That way, you won’t have to bring a ton of chargers and cables when you’re on the go.

MSRP: $44
Black Friday Price: $26.39

You can do away with the now socially-unacceptable selfie sticks and bulky smartphone stands when you have this anti-gravity case. Featuring a tough polycarbonate exterior, TPU sides, and a nano-suction surface area, it allows you to stick your phone to glass, car dashboards, whiteboards, metal, and more. Need to take a group-fie? Stick it to a window. Watching a YouTube video while you do your skincare routine? Stick it to your mirror. Want to record your deadlifts? That’s no problem either. Stick it to gym equipment, and you can shoot your workout hands-free.

MSRP: $19.99
Black Friday Price: $11.20

You probably know by now that your car’s built-in USB port won’t get your phone anywhere — not even a 10% battery bump. For fast charging, use this 2-in-1 charger instead. On top of functioning as a 360-degree phone mount, it’s also a Qi-compatible charger that delivers up to 10 watts of rapid charging power. The 360-degree positioning offers enhanced maneuverability and a better viewing angle for your phone, while the Qi compatibility lets you charge without the need for wires. It also comes equipped with other safety features including over-charging, over-voltage, over temperature, and over-current protection.

MSRP: $40.99
Black Friday Price: $18.39

Whether you want to recharge, connect a 3.5mm jack to your phone, or sync your device to a Thunderbolt 3-enabled Mac, this dongle pack got you covered. It has all the Apple MFi-Certified cables you need for a quarter of the price: Lightning to 3.5mm headphone jack dongle, Lightning to USB-C cable, and a standard Lightning charging cable.

MSRP: $99.99
Black Friday Price: $32.00

The cable to end all cables, this Nomad Lightning cable doesn’t only exist to connect your device to a power source, but it’s also a battery in itself. It comes equipped with a 2,350mAh (enough to fully charge an iPhone 7) portable battery that, when hooked up, will juice up your phone first before refilling its own internal battery. When you head out, you no longer have to carry a bulky and heavy portable power bank. The Nomad is all you need.

Black Friday Price: $31.96

When it comes to traveling, you may pride yourself on quickly adapting to a foreign country, but you can’t say the same for your gadgets. This charging station allows you to do away with having to tote innumerable converters and adapters by letting you charge up to five devices at once — anywhere in the world. All you have to do is attach it to any Apple MacBook power brick, and you’re good to go. It also features a universal AC power outlet built for international travel, and fuse protection to ensure your devices charge safely.

MSRP: $52.99
Black Friday Price: $25.59

Why did Apple suddenly become so selfish with ports? No one really knows. But don’t spend any more time wondering and get yourself this hub instead. Compatible with new USB-C MacBooks, this gadget packs all the ports you need: two additional USB-C, 2 USB-A 3.0, an SD, and a microSD port.

MSRP: $159.99
Black Friday Price: $44.00

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Pakistan: Deadly blast hits market in Orakzai district

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A bomb explosion has ripped through a busy marketplace in Kalaya town in Pakistan‘s northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa killing at least 25 people, officials say.

Abbas Khan, the assistant commissioner of the district, told Reuters on Friday that a suicide bomber drove a motorcycle into a crowd attending a festival and market that attracts people from different religious communities, before detonating his explosives.

“It was a suicide blast at the festival that takes place every Friday,” Khan said, adding that among the 25 dead were three members of the minority Sikh community and two security officials.

Twenty-six of the wounded are being treated at a government hospital in the town of Kohat, about 50km east of the blast site, police official Nasrullah told Al Jazeera by telephone.

Earlier police officials said the deadly blast was caused by “an improvised explosive device hidden in a carton of vegetables” in this remote town in Orakzai district.

No group has claimed responsibility for the blast in Kalaya town, about 60km southwest of the provincial capital Peshawar, police officials told Al Jazeera.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan and his minister for Human Rights, Shireen Mazari, condemned the deadly attack.

Mazari tweeted that the death toll could rise.

“As the US fails in Afghanistan, [Pakistan should] be prepared for [a] fallout and we must ensure greater security for our tribal areas especially protection of our [people],” she tweeted.

The area is a remote part of the Orakzai tribal district, which was recently merged with the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, after being governed directly by Islamabad for decades.

The blast occurred around the same time as three attackers attempted to storm the Chinese consulate in the southern port city of Karachi in an unrelated incident in which two police officials were killed.

The Karachi attack was claimed by the Baloch Liberation Army separatist group.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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1 teen dead, 2 others injured after Alabama mall shooting

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1 teen dead, 2 others injured after Alabama mall shooting

Police say a fight between two teens, including an 18-year-old, resulted in a gunfire exchange. One teen fled but was confronted by two Hoover police officers and shot dead.

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HOOVER, Ala. – One teen is dead and two others have been injured following a shooting at an Alabama mall prior to Black Friday shopping.

Authorities say the shooting happened about 9:30 p.m. Thursday at the Riverchase Galleria in Hoover, a nearby suburb of Birmingham.

Police say a fight between two teens, including an 18-year-old, resulted in a gunfire exchange. One teen fled but was confronted by two Hoover police officers.

Captain Gregg Rector said at a news conference that a Hoover officer “did engage that individual, shot him and he is dead on the scene.”

The second teen was hospitalized in serious condition. Rector said a 12-year-old girl also struck by gunfire was hospitalized. Her condition was not immediately known.

The Riverchase Galleria said the mall is closed until further notice.

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Your hygge-obsession is weird and misunderstood, please stop

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Being Scandinavian has become a rather weird experience. In the span of just a couple of years, we’ve gone from being a relatively unknown group of shy people from a tiny, cold, dark corner of the world to being hyper-visible and feeling like our culture is being fetishised.

I’m Danish, born and bread, but am now living in London, where I’ve witnessed this curiosity firsthand. 

Over here, we Scandis are the object of much envy. But not for the obvious reasons — like our high quality of life, our equality or even the fact that we’ve supplied like a third of the cast of Game of Thrones at this point. No, it’s for small aspects of our culture that a group of advertising executives somewhere saw fit to export and aggressively market as something that’s frankly not really true to who we are. 

I’m talking about the obsession with (and, more importantly, the misunderstanding of) hygge.  Hygge, a Danish word defined as “a quality of cosiness and comfortable conviviality that engenders a feeling of contentment or well-being,” has been practically weaponised in recent years in an effort to sell candles, socks, and blankets. Hygge was never a lifestyle, but it’s certainly marketed as one over here by people wishing to cash in on the Scandi-zeitgeist.

“Hygge, to me, has never been something you could buy.” 

What ends up on the shelves in your stores is barely recognisable to us. As a Dane, I’m dumbfounded. And I’m not the only one.

Comedian and co-host of the Secret Dinosaur Cult podcast Sofie Hagen, another Danish expat in the UK, is just as confused as me. She has a habit of calling out nonsensical marketing revolving around Scandinavian lifestyle on social media. 

“It’s incredibly strange finding a hygge blanket that costs £85 and promises to make you feel hygge,” Hagen tells Mashable. “I found a scented candle called hygge that cost £35 which I had to buy because I was desperate to find out how on earth they thought hygge smelled. I think it was cinnamon.”

Danish comedian Sofie Hagen.

Danish comedian Sofie Hagen.

To Hagen, actual hygge can be anything from a cup of coffee on a Monday morning to going out with friends. It’s a feeling closely tied to being relaxed or chilled out. “The weirdest thing is that it is suddenly for sale,” Hagen says. “Hygge, to me, has never been something you could buy.” 

I feel the same way. For me, hygge is comfort. It exists only in the complete absence of stress and nuisance and feeds off feelings of happiness and relaxation. It’s not an aesthetic or a trend. Hygge, like love though far less elusive, cannot be bought. 

Some misuses of the word hygge are innocent and even funny – an article by The New Statesman called The hygge of Oasis (yes, the rock band) is particularly snickered-at by Scandinavians. But as soon as hygge is being used to sell you stuff you don’t need, it loses its meaning.

So, how did hygge end up on the shelves of your stores? 

The road to hygge was paved with good television

It’s not exactly hard to figure out what happened. It started with the excellent Nordic noir thrillers (The Killing, anyone?), which gave the world a glimpse of our beautiful Scandinavian capitals; dark, rainy, and filled with pale Nordeners dressed in gorgeous knitwear. 

Seeing detectives run around the dark streets of rainy Copenhagen, the world also got a glimpse of how we Scandis cope with living in a part of the world that is dark for most of the year. We do that by relaxing indoors, snuggling under a blanket with a mug of something hot and lit candles all around: hygge. 

A central element to a quaint, Nordic culture. A hard-to-pronounce word with no direct translation. Brits became obsessed – even at Mashable, the hygge-craze led one Mashable writer to inexplicably play guitar on the floor alone in front of a lit candle.

Guardian journalist Charlotte Higgins writes that the version of hygge marketed in the UK was, in fact, invented by London booksellers, after The Killing became massively popular. “Hygge seemed like a perfect distillation of popular lifestyle obsessions,” Higgins writes. According to her piece, entitled ‘The hygge conspiracy,’ booksellers started looking for authors to translate the concept of hygge into a successful lifestyle book. 

One of these authors is Dane Meik Wiking, who wrote The Little Book of Hygge, a New York Times bestseller on “the Danish way to live well.” Wiking, who runs the Copenhagen-based think tank Happiness Research Institute, says that “hygge-washing,” as he calls it, is just big business doing what it always does: turning something that has always been free into something marketable. 

“I think what is happening is what happened with yoga and mindfulness,” Wiking tells Mashable. “You can get $200 yoga pants, but that is not what yoga is about. You can get a ‘mindfulness plate’ – but what the hell is a mindfulness plate, I ask. In the same way you will get companies that try and ‘Hygge-wash’ their products.”

“Hygge is increasingly in risk of being hijacked by commercial interests”

Hygge, Wiking explains, is not about things. Since his book was published and hygge was made trendy, Wiking, too, has noted how the concept has slowly been corrupted. Hygge, which is ultimately just a feeling, has been commercialised, he says. “Hygge is increasingly at risk of being hijacked by commercial interests – and this worries me as hygge, in its original shape, is free.”

While he insists that the original meaning of the word hygge is important to preserve and protect, Wiking also makes the argument that Danes actually don’t have any authority about what hygge is. 

“Some fill things into the term that Danes would not necessarily agree is hygge” explains Wiking, before adding: “Denmark does not have a monopoly on hygge. It happens everywhere.”  

A sign of the (political) times

Another popular Scandi hygge author is Norwegian anthropologist and chef Signe Johanson, who wrote How to Hygge. When she wrote her hygge manual, she had little idea the western world was heading for a boom in hygge. 

“I had no idea there would be so many other books published about hygge, or that it would become a marketing term for companies to flog every blanket, candle, and fluffy slipper,” Johanson tells Mashable. There are indeed many other books on hygge – a quick Amazon search brings up 12 titles.

According to Johanson, the success story of hygge has less to do with clever marketing than with the fact that 2016 (the boom year of hygge) was the year of Brexit and Trump. “It may seem odd to people in Scandinavia that hygge became such a big trend in recent years,” Johanson tells Mashable. “But understanding the context in which it occurred helps us grasp why people became so captivated by all things hygge.” 

“The clamour for hygge isn’t just because people are being duped by clever marketeers.”

Johanson says that she receives lots of emails from readers in the UK and North America who find the idea of hygge to be a soothing element in times of upheaval, and who are genuinely interested in why and how Scandinavia has achieved such a high quality of life. 

“You and I may not necessarily recognise the aggressively marketed version of hygge we see outside of Scandinavia,” Johanson says. “But, what we can do is try to understand that the clamour for hygge isn’t just because people are being duped by clever marketeers.”

“I don’t necessarily recognise or identify with the aspirational side of hygge,” Johanson continues. “But I reckon if shining a light on one small aspect of Scandinavian living brings people joy in troubled times then I can live with the myriad of unexpected ways in which hygge has become appropriated across the globe.”

Johanson, who notes in a tongue-in-cheek way that Denmark is actually guilty of appropriating the term hygge from Norway (a fair point – the origin of the word is the 16th century Norwegian word hugga,) says that she doesn’t necessarily agree that the meaning of the term hygge has been diluted of meaning by over-eager advertisers. “It depends whether you find yourself irritated by the shift in meaning when a word is adopted by another culture,” she says. 

Image: Getty Images/Westend61

You already know how to hygge

What all of we Scandis in this article are getting at— Sofie Hagen, Meik Wiking, Signe Johansen and myself included — is ultimately this: hygge is just a feeling. It costs absolutely nothing. And the thing is, if you’re even thinking too much about it – if you’re forcing it – you’re missing the point. 

Hygge is effortless comfort; it has no element of performance. It is absence of all pretence and worry. The word itself may defy direct translation, but you are very familiar with the concept – trust me. Had a nice dinner with a loved one in a cosy setting? Congratulations, you just had hygge. Enjoying yourself relaxing with a good book? Hygge!

Besides, if you absolutely want to fetishise Scandinavian culture, there are other places to start. 

I ask Sofie Hagen to point readers in the direction of under-the-radar Scandinavian concepts that the world would benefit from adopting as their own. “We pay 30-50 percent in taxes and I have never, personally, heard anyone complain,” Hagen says. “Because in exchange we get free education with a monthly salary for even attending school!”

My own bid for the next Scandi word the world should start celebrating is a little less weighty, but significant none the less. 

“Haps” is a great Danish word. It is used when you rapidly and unexpectedly take something (typically a treat) from another person. Haps! Brilliant word, brilliant concept. You’re welcome.

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Buried? Feds to release major climate report day after Thanksgiving

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The United Nations has released a new report warning that the world may be on a path toward catastrophic climate change. Veuer’s Chandra Lanier has the story.
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The federal government will release a major climate change report – Volume II of the National Climate Assessment – on Black Friday, typically one of the slowest news days of the year.

“It’s an absolute disgrace to bury the truth about climate impacts in a year that saw hundreds of Americans die during devastating climate-fueled megafires, hurricanes, floods, and algal blooms,” said National Wildlife Federation president Collin O’Mara in a statement.

Volume II is expected to detail a range of current and future climate change impacts and again warn that the Earth is warming, humans are the cause, and the already serious impacts – such as the current California wildfires – are only going to get worse, Climate Central said. 

The new report should also have more of a regional focus, as demand rises for more local  information on risks and consequences, said Bernadette Woods Placky, chief meteorologist at Climate Central.

The report is also slated to contain a new chapter focusing exclusively on the U.S. Caribbean territories such as Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

President Donald Trump, a repeated skeptic of climate change, took to Twitter on Wednesday night to again express his doubts, using the especially cold Thanksgiving forecast as an example.

“Brutal and Extended Cold Blast could shatter ALL RECORDS – Whatever happened to Global Warming?” the president tweeted.

Volume I of the report was released a year ago. It outlined the current understanding of the science behind climate change and was described as the largest, most comprehensive U.S.-focused report ever produced about our warming world.

As first mandated by Congress in the late 1980s, the assessment is prepared every four years by the nation’s top scientists from 13 agencies. It’s meant as a reference for the president, Congress and the public. 

The World Resources Institute said it “will be an invaluable tool for leaders who want to protect their citizens.” 

Why release it on what’s practically a national holiday? Perhaps it because “we know climate change is not a priority for this administration,” Placky said. In 2017, President Donald Trump said he planned to withdraw the U.S. from the landmark Paris climate agreement, which requires countries to establish ambitious targets to reduce the greenhouse gasses that cause global warming. 

He once also tweeted that global warming was a “hoax.”

Placky also recalled that the previous assessment, in 2014, was released by President Barack Obama with a huge rollout at the White House. 

O’Mara of the wildlife federation said that “releasing the National Climate Assessment on Black Friday won’t obscure the fact that authorities are still identifying bodies in California’s unprecedented megafires, Florida is still dealing with toxic algae outbreaks fueled by warmer water, and Americans are still picking up the pieces from Hurricanes Florence and Michael and Typhoon Yutu that were worsened by climate change.”

Meteorologist Angela Fritz with the Capital Weather Gang asked: “Is there any way it could be buried more? How about New Years Eve at 9 pm, guys?”  

NOAA research meteorologist Harold Brooks also chimed in, tweeting, “Other than Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve, could there be a worse day of the year to release it?”

The Thanksgiving-holiday release comes more than two weeks earlier than the original planned release at the American Geophysical Union annual conference in December, according to Climate Nexus.

Another possible reason for releasing a report about global warming this Friday could be because the weather will be near-record cold in the heavily populated and media-saturated northeastern U.S. 

The report will be released at 2 p.m. EST Friday.

 

 

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