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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Tuesday

Germany extends controls on Denmark’s border, Denmark revives cultural institute in Cairo, Moderates to keep probe internal and more news on Tuesday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Tuesday
Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen in Cairo on Monday. Photo: Bo Amstrup/Ritzau Scanpix

Germany extends border controls to curb irregular migration

Germany on Monday moved to tighten border controls and curb irregular migrant inflows after several suspected Islamist attacks sparked public anger and piled pressure on the government.

Temporary controls would be extended to Germany’s land borders with all nine of its EU neighbours, the interior ministry said in a statement. That includes the border between South Jutland and the German state of Schleswig-Holstein.

The controls would limit migration and “protect against the acute dangers posed by Islamist terrorism and serious crime”, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser told a press conference.

The extended border controls, which will come into force on September 16th for an initial six months, were notified to the European Commission on Monday, the ministry said.

Vocabulary: grænse (Danish) – Grenze (German) – border

Denmark opens cultural centre and cooking school in Cairo

A branch of the Danish Cultural Institute in Damascus was yesterday officially opened in Egyptian capital Cairo, newswire Ritzau reports. 

Activities at the branch, which is linked to Denmark’s closed cultural centre in the Syrian capital, were suspended 12 years ago due to the war.

Denmark is also opening a cooking school aimed at helping and educating young people in Egypt, so they can find jobs in the restaurant industry.

The institute seeks to strengthen ties between Egypt and Denmark by allowing researchers, artists, and others to come and stay at the centre while working on projects, Ritzau writes.

Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen is currently visiting Egypt, where he is presenting the government’s recently-announced Africa strategy.

Rasmussen also announced during the visit a 100-million kroner donation from Denmark to Egypt aimed at strengthening Egyptian control over irregular migration to Europe via the Mediterranean.

Vocabulary: indstillet – closed/suspended/stopped

Moderate party says it won’t release results of internal probe

An investigation into the work environment within the Moderate party will be kept internal, party leader Lars Løkke Rasmussen said during a briefing in Cairo yesterday.

Former and current employees of the Moderates recently filed a report with the Danish work health and safety authority Arbejdstilsynet, in which they described bullying and sexism within the party.

The Moderates then invited Arbejdstilsynet to conduct an inspection, which was completed on Friday. The results have not been made public.

Rasmussen was asked in Cairo whether his party would be transparent about the results of the inspection.

He initially stated that this was “not today’s topic,” but said he would provide a response before declining further follow-up questions.

“I want to say that the process we are conducting is aimed at ensuring a proper working environment. I know you may not like hearing this, but I don’t believe it’s a top priority for you to contribute to a good working environment within the Moderates,” he told journalists.

“So this is a process we are handling internally,” he added.

Copenhagen announces Olympic ambition with spending on potential bid

Copenhagen’s city government has allocated half a million kroner to explore the possibility of hosting the Olympic Games.

Presenting the 2025 budget on Monday, the city government said that next year’s financial plan includes half a million kroner allocated for a preliminary study which will explore the possibility of bringing the Olympics to Copenhagen.

The Danish capital also confirmed it will submit an official bid to host the Youth Olympic Games.

“My vision is for us to have the smallest and most sustainable Olympics ever,” Mia Nyegaard, the city’s elected official for Culture and Leisure, said in a press release accompanying the budget.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) requires a financial guarantee from the central government before it considers a bid – something Copenhagen is not certain to be given.

More on this story here.

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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday

Danske Bank agrees to large fine in France, car stopped on way to Sweden with hand grenade, mouse forces SAS flight to land and more news from Denmark this Thursday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday

Danske Bank to pay 6.3 million Euro fine in France in laundering probe

Denmark’s largest bank Danske Bank has agreed to pay 6.3 million euros to end legal pursuits in France linked to alleged money laundering in its Estonian subsidiary that resulted in heavy US penalties, news agency AFP reports.

The fine was agreed on August 27th with France’s national financial crime prosecutors and validated by a court Wednesday. The agreement does not involve any admission of guilt.

The bank’s Estonian unit allegedly laundering some 200 billion euros through some 15,000 accounts from 2007 to 2015, according to an independent auditor’s report published in 2018.

Danske Bank last December pleaded guilty in the United States and paid a $2 billion fine.

Hand grenade found in car travelling from Denmark to Sweden

Bomb disposal experts were called to the Øresund Bridge yesterday evening to assist Swedish authorities after customs officers discovered a hand grenade in a car travelling from Denmark to Sweden, Swedish broadcaster SVT reported.

A police spokesperson said that there was no danger to motorists.

“Where we are located is not on the bridge or near where the cars are driving,” he told SVT.

The Øresund Bridge remained open to traffic, according to the traffic status on the bridge’s website.

The incident comes at the same time as a 19-year-old Swede is on trial in Copenhagen for detonating a hand grenade at a jewellers in Frederiksberg in June this year.

Prosecutors are demanding a 5-and-a-half year prison sentence for the teenager in the case, which is the first related to this year’s spate of gang-related violence involving Swedish youths in Denmark.

A strong sentence in that case will act as a deterrent to others, the prosecution has argued.

READ ALSO: Denmark and Sweden announce joint response to gang crime escalation

SAS flight makes emergency landing in Copenhagen after discovery of mouse on board

A SAS flight en route from Oslo to Malaga made an emergency landing in Copenhagen yesterday after a mouse was found onboard.

Norwegian broadcaster NRK, which spoke to one of the passengers, reports that a mouse jumped out when a woman opened her in-flight meal.

Passengers were then informed that the rodent posed a safety risk and that the flight, in German airspace at the time, had been instructed to turn around and land in Copenhagen.

SAS head of media relations Øystein Schmidt confirmed to Norwegian newspaper Fædrelandsvennen that a mouse had been found during the flight.

Schmidt stated that it is standard procedure for a plane to land if pests are found onboard, as the aircraft needs to be inspected.

The passengers from Oslo eventually arrived in Malaga about two and a half hours late, according to NRK.

Danish incomes rise faster than any time in the last 30 years

The average income earned in Denmark shot up by 6.3 percent in 2023, the largest annual rise in earnings recorded since the early 1990s.

The average pre-tax income in Denmark rose to 395,500 kroner in 2023, a 6.3 percent rise on the average in 2022, and the highest year-on-year percentage rise in real incomes seen in the country in 30 years.

The sharp rise was driven primarily by income from investments, with shares and funds which performed poorly in 2022 bouncing back strongly in 2023, leading to a near-doubling in the earnings booked by many Danes. 

More on that story here.

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