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In The News

Mass Karabakh Exodus, Iraq Wedding Fire Kills 100, 16-Hour Work Day

Refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh reach the village of Kornidzor in Armenia.

Refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh reach the village of Kornidzor in Armenia. Over the past week, an estimated 42,500 ethnic Armenians have fled the separatist region that Azerbaijan seized last week.

Emma Albright and Valeria Berghinz

👋 Inuugujoq kutaa!*

Welcome to Wednesday, where an estimated 42,500 ethnic Armenians have now fled conflict-torn Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan, a fire at a wedding in northern Iraq kills at least 100, and Spain fines major consultancy firms over “marathon working days.” Meanwhile, Katarzyna Skiba looks into new evidence that Gen Z is drinking less than previous generations.

[*Greenlandic]

🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• More than 40,000 refugees have fled to Armenia: Some 42,500 ethnic Armenians have now fled Nagorno-Karabakh, more than a third of the population of the enclave that Azerbaijan seized last week. Azerbaijan says residents will be safe, but Armenia's prime minister says “ethnic cleansing” has started. Nagorno-Karabakh, recognized as part of Azerbaijan, had been run by ethnic Armenians for three decades.

• North Korea to deport U.S. soldier who crossed the border: North Korea says it will deport U.S. soldier Travis King who ran across the border from South Korea during a tour in July. Pyongyang would deport him after finishing its investigation into King's “illegal” entry, state news agency KCNA said. KCNA did not specify how, when or to where King would be expelled.

• More than 100 killed in wedding fire in northern Iraq: At least 100 people have died after a fire broke out at a wedding in Iraq's Nineveh province. At around 10:30 p.m., during a slow dance, a firework hit the roof of the venue setting it on fire. The Iraqi prime minister has declared three days of national mourning.

• Russia claims Black Sea Fleet commander alive: Russia's defense ministry has released a video showing the Black Sea Fleet's commander at a conference, despite Ukraine claiming to have killed him. Ukraine special forces had said on Monday that Admiral Viktor Sokolov and 33 other officers died in a missile strike on the fleet's HQ in Sevastopol in occupied Crimea. Kyiv has expressed doubts over the footage and says it is trying to verify whether he is alive or dead.

• Trump found liable for fraud in New York civil case: A New York judge has ruled that Donald Trump committed fraud by repeatedly misrepresenting his wealth by hundreds of millions of dollars. The ruling, part of a civil case brought against the former president and his family business, said he defrauded banks and insurers for years. The verdict will likely hinder Trump’s ability to do business in the state, and comes as the former U.S. President awaits trials in four criminal cases and leads polls to again be the Republican nominee for the White House.

Canada parliament speaker steps down after honoring Nazi: Anthony Rota, the speaker of Canada’s Parliament, has stepped down, days after he honored a man who fought in a Nazi unit during World War II as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the House of Commons last week. Addressing Canadian lawmakers in Ottawa on Tuesday afternoon, Rota said he was resigning “with a heavy heart.”

• Hollywood writers agree to officially end five-month strike: Hollywood writers ended their strike at midnight on Wednesday, after nearly five months. The Writers Guild of America (WGA) said in a statement that union leaders “voted unanimously to lift the restraining order and end the strike.” Its 11,500 members will then vote on whether to approve a three-year deal that offers pay raises and protections around use of artificial intelligence.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

U.S. daily The Detroit News lends its front page to U.S. President Joe Biden, who on Tuesday joined in walking the picket line with striking Michigan autoworkers. Biden spoke to the strikers through a bullhorn, supporting their demands for pay raises by stating that “they should be able to bargain” for a 40% increase. Read this Worldcrunch article from last year about COVID’s impact on the labor movement, with Sweden as a possible model for the future.

#️⃣ BY THE NUMBERS

16 hours

Spain’s Labour Ministry has announced it would slap the so-called “Big Four” consulting firms (Deloitte, PwC, EY and KPMG) with a 1.4 million-euro fine for normalizing “marathon working days.” A year-long investigation has shown that employees of the consultancies were working longer hours than their records showed. In some cases, workers complained about spending 16 hours per day at the office.

📰 STORY OF THE DAY

Europeans are the world’s heaviest drinkers — is Gen Z finally breaking the habit?

Young people across Europe are drinking less, which is driving a boom in non-alcoholic alternatives, and the emergence of new, more complex markets.

🍸🚫 From Irish whisky to French wine to German beer, Europe has long been known for alcohol consumption. But that may be starting to change, especially among Gen Z Europeans, who are increasingly drinking less or opting out entirely, out of concern for their health or problematic alcohol use. The alcohol-free trend is propping up new markets for low- or zero-alcoholic beverages, including in one of Europe’s beer capitals: Germany.

🍺 In Germany, which has the world's seventh-highest consumption of beer per capita, non-alcoholic beer has exploded in popularity among those looking to live a healthier lifestyle. Though the land of Oktoberfest and Biergartens remains one of the highest consumers of alcohol worldwide, Germans’ average consumption of beer has drastically decreased. In 2022, Germans drank an average of 87.2 liters of beer per year, compared to nearly 100 liters 10 years earlier, according to statistics from the German government.

📈 Brewers have responded to the changing market, and are developing a wider variety of non-alcoholic beverages than ever before. Since 2007, the production of non-alcoholic beers, which can contain at most 0.5% alcohol, has doubled, according to Les Echos. In Germany, the beverages account for 7% of the beer market, and are expected to take off in the years to come.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

“How could we not be scared?”

— Fifteen-year-old André Oliveira, one of the six young Portuguese taking 32 European countries to court on the basis of their climate in-action, discusses how what’s called “eco-anxiety” has hindered his personal life and ability to do schoolwork. The landmark case accuses European countries of failing to reduce greenhouse emissions in accordance with the Paris agreement, thereby affecting the young people’s fundamental human rights. The trial will begin on Wednesday, and if the courts rule in favor of the Portuguese youth, the accused countries would be legally binded to accelerate their efforts towards limiting emissions. Read about how the ecological crisis is pushing France back into the mining industry — not for coal, but for the rare earths essential for renewable energy.

✍️ Newsletter by Emma Albright, Valeria Berghinz and Anne-Sophie Goninet


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Society

The Giulia Cecchetin Murder: Italy's Textbook Case Of Modern Femicide

Cecchettin was allegedly stabbed to death by her ex-boyfriend in northern Italy, a murder case that has quickly turned into a political movement. The supposed motive is chilling in what it says about the current state of male-dominated society.

Protestors in Turin yell and hold signs in memory of 22 year-old Giulia Cecchettin.

November 21, 2023, Turin: A moment of the march in the streets of Turin after the feminicide of 22 years-old Giulia Cecchettin.

Matteo Secci/ZUMA
Annalisa Camilli

Updated Nov. 24, 2023 at 5:40 p.m.

-Analysis-

ROME — On November 11, Giulia Cecchettin and her ex-boyfriend Filippo Turetta went missing after meeting for dinner. For a week, Italians followed the case in hopes that the story would end with two lovers returning home after going on an adventure — but women knew better.

As the days went by, more details of their relationship started to come to light. Filippo had been a jealous, possessive boyfriend, he had not dealt with Giulia's decision to break up very well, and he constantly hounded her to get back together.

For the latest news & views from every corner of the world, Worldcrunch Today is the only truly international newsletter. Sign up here.

When Giulia's body was found at the bottom of a lake in the northern region of Veneto, with 20 stab wounds, Italians were not surprised, but they were fed up. Vigils, demonstrations and protests spread throughout the country: Giulia Cecchettin's death, Italy's 105th case of femicide for the year 2023, finally opened a breach of pain and anger into public opinion. But why this case, why now?

It was Elena Cecchettin, Giulia's sister, who played a vital role. At the end of a torchlight procession, the 24-year-old university student took the floor and did something people weren't expecting: she turned private grief into a political movement. Elena distanced herself from the role of the victim and took on the responsibility for a future change.

"Filippo is not a monster; a monster is an exception, someone external to society, someone society should not take responsibility for. But here that responsibility exists," she said confidently, leaving everyone breathless.

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