SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Copenhagen Metro back running after outage, Danish PM condemns Iranian drone attack, new agreement on suicide prevention, and more news from Denmark on Monday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Monday
The entry to the M3 and M4 lines of the Copenhagen Metro. Photo: Ida Marie Odgaard/Ritzau Scanpix

Copenhagen Metro out of service on Monday morning 

All trains on the Copenhagen Metro’s M3 and M4 lines were out of service on Monday morning between 5.30am and 6.45am due to a technical issue, the metro said on its homepage on Monday. By 6.45am, the trains were running to plan. 

Danish vocabulary: efter planen – according to plan

Denmark’s government announces agreement on suicide prevention 

Denmark’s government on Sunday announced that it had struck a deal with all the other parties in parliament over a plan to better prevent suicides. 

Under the agreed plan, the government hopes to reduce the number of people who commit suicide by a third by, among other measures, increasing the capacity of Denmark’s suicide prevention clinics by 40 percent, improving the follow-up and monitoring of people at risk of suicide. 

Currently, around 600 people commit suicide in Denmark a year, a number which has been broadly stable since 2010. 

“Suicide is a terrible tragedy for the individual and for those closest to them who tragically lose a family member or a close friend,”  Sophie Løhde Jacobsen, Denmark’s health minister, said in a press release. “That is why we must do more to prevent suicide and suicide attempts, and with the action plan we are putting in place better help for people in deep crisis.” 

Danish vocabulary: at forebygge – to prevent 

Danish prime minister condemns Iran’s attack on Israel 

Denmark’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, condemned Iran’s drone attack on Israel on Sunday, warning that it would worsen regional conflicts .

“This creates a risk of greater conflict in the Middle East. My thoughts are with the many who have feared for their safety throughout the night,” she said on X. 

Iran launched more than 300 drones and missiles at Israel on Saturday night, an attack it said was a response to Israel’s attack on an Iranian diplomatic building in Damascus on April 1st. The Damascus strike killed a senior member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards, as well as eight other officers.

On Friday evening, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote on its website that there was an increased risk of military escalation and attacks against Israel. The situation was described as “unpredictable”. It is advising against all travel to both Iran and Lebanon.

Danish vocabulary: frarådes – is advised against

Nine out of ten cancer patients ‘treated on time’ 

Over 91 percent of cancer patients in Denmark now receive treatment within the maximum time promised by the country’s regional health authorities, according to new figures. 

According to the data, in 7.2 percent of the cases, treatment is not started before the deadline because of the state of the patients’ health or because they do not want treatment. In a further 1.2 percent of cases they have to wait longer dur to capacity shortages, but are informed about their rights and options, and in only 0.3 percent of cases, are patients’ rights not respected. 

Karin Friis Bach (R), who chairs the Health Committee for Danish Regions, which represents Denmark’s five regions, celebrated the “fantastically good numbers” . 

“That tells me that we have good cancer treatment, fantastically good cancer treatment in Denmark, and it’s really nice to get confirmation of that on the back of the other stories that we’ve recently been hearing,” she told the Ritzau newswire. 

Danish vocabulary: kræftbehandling – cancer treatment

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

King Frederik X praises Norwegian TV series, Bornholm trialing lampposts as car chargers, today could be the first official day of summer, and other news from Denmark on Wednesday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

King Frederik X praises Norwegian TV series Skam on state visit 

Denmark’s King Frederik X has credited the Norwegian TV series Skam, meaning “Shame”, for bringing young peole from Denmark and Norway together, at a speech at the Norwegian Royal Palace in Oslo. 

“Norway is almost the Nordic champion in youth series, and today the majority of Danish youngsters know the meaning of tuller du? [“Are you kidding?”] and serr [“Seriously?”],” he said in the speech.

In Denmark, he continued, the series was so popular that it led to several Norwegian words and expressions working their way into the Danish language.

King Frederik and Queen Mary are on a state tour of Sweden and Norway.  

Danish vocabulary: betydningen – the meaning

Denmark trials using lampposts as car chargers 

The Danish Technical University is working with the municipality and muncipal power company on the island of Bornholm to trial using lampposts in the capital, Rønne, as chargers for electric vehicles. 

The lampposts have been shifted to LED bulbs, so use only a franction of the electrical capacity they were built with, freeing up capacity for the charger.

“We have set up a traditional charging stand in a lamppost, where electricity has already been connected. Because we now have LED fixtures, there is plenty of spare capacity. So you can easily charge an electric car overnight with the charging stand installed here,” said Claus Andersen, from the power company. 

The project has intalled chargers from the Spirii brand, which can charge up at up to 22 kwh.

“It’s a great idea to take a metal stand at the edge of the road which still has electricity in it and put a charger in it,” said Mads Aarup, at the Danish Society of Engineers. “It’s super good. It’s brilliant because it has dual use.” 

Danish vocabulary: genial – brilliant 

New Danish train signalling delayed by three years  

A new signalling system being rolled out across Denmark will not be completed until 2033, three years later than the 2030 target, with the rollout on the tracks between Copenhagen and Helsingör, and between Roskilde and Copenhagen particularly badly delayed, Denmark’s rail operator, Banedanmark, has said. 

This means rail travellers will have to wait even longer to have their routes “future-proofed”. 

The problems are connected to Alstom, which is responsible for the new signalling system, and which had wanted to delay project completion until 2031. 

“Alstom has taken good measures to reassure us, but we have not yet seen it implemented,” Peter Jonasson, from Banedanmark told the Ritzau newswire. “Therefore, we have become sceptical about the timetable and assessed that a buffer of another two years is needed.” 

He acknowledges that during the process there has been an opportunity to change supplier, but it is more complicated than that, it says.

Danish vocabulary: fremtidssikret – future-proofed

Denmark may get first summer day of the year

Today could mark the first day of summer, with the temperature passing 25C at at least one of the official measuring stations run by the Danish Meteorological Institute. 

On Tuesday, Denmark came within a tenth of a degree of meteorological summer when the measuring station in Stauning near Skjern reached 24.9C. 

DMI is predicting 20C by lunchtime in the western parts of Jutland, as well as on Funen, Zealand and the surrounding islands, with the temperatures then creeping up to between 21C and 23C across the West Coast, with temperatures of 24C to 25C close to the German border.

Danish vocabulary: en målestation – a measuring station 

SHOW COMMENTS