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CHRISTMAS TREE

Oslo mulled scrapping Trafalgar Christmas tree

Oslo bureaucrats this year proposed ending a nearly 60-year-old tradition of sending a Christmas tree to Trafalgar Square in London before their suggestion was rejected outright by the city's mayor Fabian Stang.

Oslo mulled scrapping Trafalgar Christmas tree
The Trafalgar Square tree on Christmas morning in 2011. Photo: Kevan Davis/Flickr
The tree, first given in 1947 in gratitude to the people of London for Britain's support for occupied Norway in World War II, has come to symbolize the start of Christmas for many Londoners. 
 
But in a policy discussion document on the three Christmas trees the city sends annually to London, Rotterdam and Reykjavik, Oslo's city secretariat included scrapping the tree as one of three options presented to politicians. 
 
"The tradition of the Christmas tree gifts no longer has the same value as in the time after the war, and should be replaced with other forms of international promotion and cooperation," the report argued. 
 
It estimated that scrapping the London tree could save the city as much as 128,000 Norwegian kroner ($21,000) in direct costs. 
 
However Oslo's mayor Fabian Stang rejected the suggestion, in April telling the country's Aftenposten newspaper that the London tree was "a central part of Norway's history and a symbol of friendship with the British that we will do everything in our power to continue."
 
Stang has attended the cutting ceremony in Oslo regularly since becoming mayor in 2007,  although he has never attended the lighting ceremony in London, with governing mayor Stian Berger Rosland going on his behalf since taking office as of September 2009.
 

Stang agreed with city bureaucrats that it would be more efficient if the two other trees, to Reykjavik and Rotterdam, were cut in forests close to the two cities rather than shipped all the way from Norway, sending out letters to this effect to the two city's respective mayors on April 7th.  
 
It would also be possible to source a Christmas tree for London in the UK, but Stang is keen to continue cutting the London tree from the forests around Oslo, given the media coverage usually received by the Lord Mayor of Westminster when he attends the traditional cutting ceremony near Oslo in November. 

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ROME

Rome’s ‘baldy’ Christmas tree destined for museum: report

It was mocked by Romans as being “the world’s saddest Christmas tree”, but the 65ft Norway spruce which captured international attention is destined for a museum as opposed to a rubbish dump, according to a report in Il Messaggero.

Rome's 'baldy' Christmas tree destined for museum: report
Tourists take pictures near the controversial Christmas tree at Piazza Venezia in Rome. Photo: Alberto Pizzoli/AFP

The tree died and lost its needles just two weeks after being erected in Rome’s main Piazza Venezia. Dubbed “Baldy”, it became such a laughing stock that mayor Virginia Raggi ordered an inquiry into what killed off the tree, which had been transported from the Italian Dolomites at a cost of €50,000, so prematurely. An initially report concluded that it had not been properly covered during transit.

There were calls for “baldy” to be removed, but it remained throughout the Christmas period, and has garnered so much affection that Rome’s leaders are reportedly considering preserving what’s left of it in a museum.

“The tree could be moved to another place – a square or more likely indoors, like a museum – where it will be secure. But considering that it’s been over a month since it left the forest in Trentino, in its current state, it won’t last much longer,” Il Messaggero reported.

But a few bureaucratic obstacles need to be overcome before the tree’s fate beyond January 6th can be determined, such as changing the contract conditions with the company hired to bring the tree to Rome and ensuring someone is responsible for ensuring its safe passage to a museum.

The tree's nickname became shorthand for Rome's wretched public services, for which critics have blamed mayor Virginia Raggi of the Five Star Movement. She also came under fire after rubbish piled up on streets in parts of the capital in the days after Christmas due to collections being disrupted by the holidays and bad weather.

And it wasn’t the first time the city’s Christmas tree has been derided, with last year’s being labelled “the ugliest in the world”. But Raggi leapt to its defence, arguing that both the tree and its lights had been donated to the city, allowing the council to put the money saved towards projects to help residents.