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ROSKILDE FESTIVAL 2014

ROSKILDE FESTIVAL

Pussy Riot activists head to Roskilde Festival

Formerly imprisoned activists Nadya Tolokonnikova and Masha Alyokhina will offer a political break from the weeklong party.

Pussy Riot activists head to Roskilde Festival
Photo: Win McNamee/Scanpix
In addition to its customary offering of music – and this year’s two specially-brewed beers – the Roskilde Festival will also be serving up international politics when it opens its gates next week.
 
Organizers have announced that two previously imprisoned members of the Russian activist group Pussy Riot will participate in this year’s festival.
 
Nadya Tolokonnikova and Masha Alyokhina will speak on Friday July 4th on the Gloria stage.
 
“Pussy Riot was on everyone's lips as several of its members were imprisoned after a punk happening in Moscow's largest church,” the festival said in a statement. “Today the two former members Nadya Tolokonnikova and Masha Alyokhina have been released from prison, and they are campaign[ing] on freedom of speech, prison reform and human rights worldwide. And soon, also in Denmark – at Roskilde Festival.”
 
The non-profit festival also announced that it has donated 300,000 kroner ($55,000) to the Tolokonnikova and Alyokhina’s NGO, Zona Prava (Zone of Rights).
 
The 2014 Roskilde Festival begins on June 29th, with the main line-up of music kicking off on July 3rd. Pussy Riot will be joining acts such as the Rolling Stones, Drake, Stevie Wonder, Arctic Monkeys, Damon Albarn and many more.
 
Tickets for the full festival are sold-out, as are one-day tickets for Thursday, the day the Stones will grace the Orange stage. One-day tickets for Friday, Saturday and Sunday are still available via the festival’s website.

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ROSKILDE FESTIVAL

200 forgotten phones found after Roskilde Festival

The clean-up operation after the Roskilde music festival resulted in 200 cell phones being recovered.

200 forgotten phones found after Roskilde Festival
File photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

Festival guests who are no longer nursing hangovers, but still missing car keys, mobile phones or wristwatches can check whether their items are now in the storage room at Roskilde Police Station.

A van-full of lost property from the festival has now been delivered to police in the city, with around 200 mobile phones as well as jewellery, power banks and up to 50 bunches of keys.

“We hope that many festivalgoers will contact us regarding their lost items so we can return them as quickly as possible,” Central and West Zealand Police communications officer Camilla Schouw Broholm wrote in a press statement.

Due to the time taken to register all of the items, police recommend that people looking for belongings initially contact them by email.

It is a good idea to include specifications and descriptions of the lost items in the email, as well as a photo if possible, police said.

Lost keys and spectacles are an exception to this, with police advising festivalgoers to call in at the station so that lost property can be examined in person.


Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen / Ritzau Scanpix

It could take up to three months for all the lost objects to be sorted and registered.

“We also have a lot of lost items with names on, so with these it’s easier to find the owner. Once these are have been registered, the owner will receive a message in their (secure digital email system) e-boks,” Broholm said to Ritzau.

“That also applies to telephones with IMEI numbers,” she added.

Up to 130,000 people attended last week’s Roskilde Festival, making the event temporarily Denmark’s fourth-largest city.

The festival generates over 2,000 tonnes of waste.

READ ALSO: Denmark's Roskilde Festival creates a city's worth of rubbish. What are organizers and guests doing about it?

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