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Sami flag. Radio Sweden.
Today Sami people in Sweden, Norway, Finland and Russia celebrate the Sami National Day. Feted every year on February 6, the date marks the first Sami Congress, which was held in Trondheim, Norway in 1917. It has been recognized as the Sami National Day since 1993.

In Stockholm a small group gathered in the bitter cold early morning air in front of City Hall to sing the Sami national anthem and watch the flag-raising ceremony.

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Picture taken with permission from the homepage of The Happy Friends of Cold and Darkness. Radio Sweden.
Competitors from around the world braved outdoor temperatures of -34 degrees celsius at the weekend to take part in Sweden's first ever national winter outdoors swimming competition in the northern town of Skellefteå.

Although popular in Russia and Finland where swimmers enjoy the endorphin rush of wading through icy waters, Sweden has never before staged a national competition.

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James Anaya, the UN special reporter on the human rights of indigenous people. Photo: Radio Sweden
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A United Nations report on the human rights situation of Sweden's indigenous Sami population, stretching over northern Norway, Sweden and Finland has sharply criticised the country for not respecting Sami rights.

James Anaya, the UN special reporter on the human rights of indigenous people, said more needed to be done to ensure the Sami's - and particularly reindeer herders - have more say over land use when large windfarm projects are being decided. He also said the Sami Parliament in Kiruna should be granted greater powers and that more attention needed to be paid to recruiting Sami speaking teachers.


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Britta Marakatt Labba. Photo: Hans-Olof Utsi.

"The climate is constantly topical; right now it's all about remarkable winds, melting ice, and drowning reindeer," says artist Britta Marakatt Labba.

There is a different kind of art exhibition currently on show at the Kramfors art gallery in northern Sweden. Britta Marakatt Labba expresses how she views climate change with sculptures, tapestries, and even church vestments. Her special techniques are embroidering with thin wool, linen, and silk yarns in combination with screen printing and collage.


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The season for hunting bear started in Sweden last week and in some counties it has gone surprisingly fast to shoot the number of bears allowed. In Dalarna, northern Sweden, the hunters are allowed to shoot 35 bears until the end of October but since the start of the season half of that number has already been shot, according to local newspaper Dala-Demokraten.

When the Swedish government in February made a controversial decision to allow 27 wolves to be shot it stirred up a heated debate in the country. On one side were the animal right activists and conservationists and on the other were hunters and many people living in places where wolf exists.