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UPDATE: Denmark drops push to get citizens to report coronavirus suspects

The Danish Patient Safety Authority on Tuesday removed a secure email it had set up where Danes could report on those they suspected of coronavirus infections, following a media outcry.

UPDATE: Denmark drops push to get citizens to report coronavirus suspects
Danish chief of police Thorkild Fogde has said that police will enforce the health authorities' orders. Photo: Philip Davale/Scanpix
Health Minister Magnus Heunicke said that the reporting system, which was first reported about on Tuesday, was too much of an infringement of human rights. 
 
“I became aware of this this morning,” he said at a press conference on Tuesday afternoon. “It was an initiative of [Patient Safety] Authority. We had told the authority that they should do everything they can. But here they went too far in relation to the freedom of citizens.” 
 
The reporting system was set up as part of the new enforcement powers granted to health authorities under the emergency law rushed through the Danish parliament on March 12. 
 
On the front page of the website of the Danish Patient Safety Authority, there was a section, now removed, which asked citizens: “Are you worried about the behaviour of an individual believed or presumed infected with Covid-19?”. 
 
Those who clicked on the banner were taken to another page where it told Danes how to report fellow citizens to the authority. 
 
“If an injunction is not followed, the Danish Patient Safety Authority can, if necessary, call on police assistance to enforce the injunction,” the text explains. 
 
The website then contained a link to a secure mailbox where citizens could send reports through their borger.dk, virk.dk or e-Boks accounts.  “This ensures that unauthorised persons cannot read the content,” the website reads. 
 
Under the March 12 law, the Danish Patient Safety Authority can order anyone to stay home in self-isolation, to go to hospital, or to take a test, even if they do not wish to do so. 
 
Anyone showing coronavirus symptoms, who has been in contact with someone who shows coronavirus symptoms, or who has even been in an area where the virus is at large, can be reported, and then issued an injunction if the authority deems it necessary. 

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POLICE

Denmark convicts man over bomb joke at airport

A Danish court on Thursday gave a two-month suspended prison sentence to a 31-year-old Swede for making a joke about a bomb at Copenhagen's airport this summer.

Denmark convicts man over bomb joke at airport

In late July, Pontus Wiklund, a handball coach who was accompanying his team to an international competition, said when asked by an airport agent that
a bag of balls he was checking in contained a bomb.

“We think you must have realised that it is more than likely that if you say the word ‘bomb’ in response to what you have in your bag, it will be perceived as a threat,” the judge told Wiklund, according to broadcaster TV2, which was present at the hearing.

The airport terminal was temporarily evacuated, and the coach arrested. He later apologised on his club’s website.

“I completely lost my judgement for a short time and made a joke about something you really shouldn’t joke about, especially in that place,” he said in a statement.

According to the public prosecutor, the fact that Wiklund was joking, as his lawyer noted, did not constitute a mitigating circumstance.

“This is not something we regard with humour in the Danish legal system,” prosecutor Christian Brynning Petersen told the court.

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