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CURRENCY

Germans learn to love euro and let go of D-Mark

Almost 70 percent of Germans now favour the euro, and only 27 percent would prefer to ditch the common currency and return to the once-beloved deutschmark, a survey published on Tuesday found.

Germans learn to love euro and let go of D-Mark
Photo: DPA

Despite the lingering eurozone debt crisis, German support for the euro had reached a new record, a year after only half of respondents said they backed it, said the Forsa institute poll for the Handelsblatt business daily.

“Many Germans are scared about the difficult-to-comprehend eurozone crisis. But this is no longer affecting their attitude toward the euro as the common currency,” Forsa chief Manfred Güllner was quoted as saying by the daily.

The survey found 69 percent support for the euro, about 11 years after it replaced the deutschmark, which Germans had long treasured as a guarantor of stability and a symbol of their post-war economic success.

The poll found that support for the euro was strongest among higher-income earners and among Greens party voters, of whom 88 percent backed the common currency now being used by 17 EU member-states.

When the euro was introduced, Germany was dubbed the “sick man of Europe,” with low growth rates and high unemployment, but it is now enjoying a relatively low jobless rate of 7.2 percent and has escaped recession unlike much of the eurozone.

AFP/jcw

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FOOTBALL

‘I’m fine — under the circumstances’: Collapsed Danish striker tweets from hospital

Christian Eriksen, the Danish football player who collapsed on the pitch in his country's opening Euro 2020 game, said that he was doing "fine" in an Instagram post from hospital on Tuesday.

'I’m fine — under the circumstances': Collapsed Danish striker tweets from hospital
Danish striker Christian Eriksen tweeted a picture of himself in hospital. Photo: DBU

“I’m fine — under the circumstances, I still have to go through some examinations at the hospital, but I feel okay,” he wrote in a post accompanying a photo of him smiling and giving a thumbs-up while lying in bed.

In a scene that shocked the sporting world and beyond, the 29-year-old Inter Milan midfielder suddenly collapsed on the field in the 43rd minute of Denmark’s Group B game on Saturday against Finland in Copenhagen.

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Medical personnel administered CPR as he lay motionless on the field for about 15 minutes before being carried off the pitch and rushed to hospital. He was later confirmed to have suffered cardiac arrest.

“Big thanks for your sweet and amazing greetings and messages from all around the world. It means a lot to me and my family,” he wrote in Tuesday’s post. “Now, I will cheer on the boys on the Denmark team in the next matches. Play for all of Denmark.”

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