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BUDGET

Future of Danish border checks raised in budget negotiations

Border checks on Denmark’s frontier with Germany, which have been in place since early 2016, are not financed in the current form of next year's budget, the Danish People's Party has said.

Future of Danish border checks raised in budget negotiations
File photo: Claus Fisker/Scanpix 2017

The budget, presented by finance minister Kristian Jensen last month, is currently subject to negotiation between the government and the anti-immigration Danish People’s Party (DF), whose votes are required to pass it in parliament.

No money has been earmarked in the budget to fund the continuation of border controls, DF leader Kristian Thulesen Dahl said on Wednesday.

“Unless the Danish People’s Party demands money allocated, border control will disappear at the turn of the year. There is no money for it in the budget negotiation,” Dahl said.

“We naturally can not accept the government’s policy of removing border control at the end of the year. We think that border control is here to stay and should be permanent,” the DF leader added.

Jensen said the government had good reason not to provide for extended border control in the budget.

“Since no decision has been made on whether border control should be extended, no money has been provided for it,” the minister said.

“The budget contains a number of different reserves – for negotiations and other things – so it is possible to prioritise border control,” he said.

Dahl said that his party would oppose any budget that does not take border control into account.

But Jensen said he was certain agreement would be reached between the government and DF.

“After the first meeting with the Danish People’s Party, I remain convinced that we can find common ground and that the political will is present,” he said.

“The topics raised by the Danish People’s Party are not surprising to us and we must now work towards agreement,” he said.

No parties other than the government and DF were invited to the negotiations over the budget.

READ ALSO: Nearly 5,500 turned back at Denmark's border since 2016

ECONOMY

Sweden boosts spending on civil defence in spring budget

Sweden is to channel a further 800 million kronor to local government and other organisations to bolster Sweden's civil defence capabilities, the country's finance minister has announced.

Sweden boosts spending on civil defence in spring budget

The new funding, which will go to municipalities, regional government, and other organisations, was announced of part of the country’s spring budget, announced on Tuesday. 

“This will strengthen our ability to resist in both war and peace,” Sweden’s finance minister, Mikael Damberg, said in a press conference. “If the worst happens, it’s important that there is physical protection for the population.” 

The government is channelling 91m kronor towards renovating Sweden’s 65,000 bomb shelters, and will also fund the repair the country’s network of emergency sirens, known as Hesa Fredrik, or Hoarse Fredrik, many of which are currently out of order. 

A bomb shelter in Stockholm. Sweden’s government is spending 800m kronor in its spring budget to boost civil defence. Photo: Anders Wiklund/ TT

Sweden’s Social Democrats are currently ruling on the alternative budget put together by the right-wing opposition, making this spring budget, which makes changes to the autumn budget, unusually important. 

The budget includes extra spending of some 31.4 billion kronor (€299m), with 500m kronor going to extra spending on healthcare,  and 10.3 billion kronor going towards supporting Ukrainian refugees, of which nine billion will come from the aid budget. 

The spring budget also includes the so called “pension guarantee bonus”, or garantitillägg, which will see four billion kronor (€390m) going to those with the lowest pensions. 

The bonus, which was the price the Left Party demanded for letting Magdalena Andersson take her place as prime minister, risks being voted down by the right-wing parties in the parliament. 

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