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NEW YEAR

Swedish singles shun New Year revelry

Swedish singles prefer a quiet night in on New Year's Eve while their Danish neighbours plump for a night on the tiles, a new survey of European attitudes to pleasure has shown.

Swedish singles shun New Year revelry

Swedish singles prefer a quiet night of contemplative reflection on the year that has past while Danes, and European neighbours in Austria, the Netherlands and Switzerland, prefer to celebrate the new year to the sound of champagne corks popping. At least according to a new survey by dating site Parship of how New Year’s Eve celebrations vary according to nationality.

While 35 percent of single Swedish men and 32 percent of single Swedish women responded that they planned a quiet night in, no Danish single men and only 11 percent of Danish women intended to do the same.

The broader purpose of the survey was to chart the connection between nationality and the pursuit of pleasure. Pleasure was defined broadly and extended beyond sex and sinful pursuits.

Food habits and lazy days in bed featured in the survey and here the conscientious Swedes scored poorly in their ability to enjoy the finer things in life.

The results have been interpreted by psychologist Madeleine Gauffin as an indication of the endurance of Sweden’s Lutheran heritage despite the country’s sense of itself as an emphatically secular country, Metro reports.

The survey also gave an indication that within Sweden and between the genders, attitudes can vary greatly. Women in Dalarna, Jönköping and Gotland professed a more indulgent attitude to pleasure than their man folk, while in Södermanland, Uppland and Halland, the men were the more likely bons viveurs.

Singles in Austria, the Netherlands and Switzerland topped the pleasure charts and according to the Parship survey are those most able and willing to live life for its pleasures.

RUSSIA

Russia announces no New Year’s greetings for France, US, Germany

US President Joe Biden, France's Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will not be receiving New Year's greetings from Russian leader Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin said on Friday.

Russia announces no New Year's greetings for France, US, Germany

As the world gears up to ring in the New Year this weekend, Putin sent congratulatory messages to the leaders of Kremlin-friendly countries including Turkey, Syria, Venezuela and China.

But Putin will not wish a happy New Year to the leaders of the United States, France and Germany, countries that have piled unprecedented sanctions on Moscow over Putin’s assault on Ukraine.

“We currently have no contact with them,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“And the president will not congratulate them given the unfriendly actions that they are taking on a continuous basis,” he added.

Putin shocked the world by sending troops to pro-Western Ukraine on February 24.

While Kyiv’s Western allies refused to send troops to Ukraine, they have been supplying the ex-Soviet country with weapons in a show of support that has seen Moscow suffer humiliating setbacks on the battlefield.

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