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FEATURE

When can you expect to get the Covid-19 vaccine in Norway?

In what order does Norway plan to vaccinate its population, and when can foreign residents expect to be offered the jab?

When can you expect to get the Covid-19 vaccine in Norway?

One and a half months have passed since the first jab of a Covid-19 vaccine was administered in Norway. Since then, data from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH) shows that nearly 240,000 people have received the first dose of the vaccine, while nearly 74,000 have received the second dose.

Norway has chosen to pursue a strategy where elderly people and some selected health care workers have been given the vaccine first. And health authorities believe this is the reason why Norway is now seeing fewer Covid-19 related deaths and hospital admissions.

But when can other groups expect to receive their first jab of the vaccine and what rules apply for foreign nationals?

All residents in Norway, regardless of whether they are foreign nationals, are included in the government’s coronavirus vaccination strategy, according to NIPH.

The vaccine is free and voluntary for everyone who lives in Norway.

Municipalities have the responsibility for vaccinating their populations, including temporary residents. Information about vaccinations should be available on your municipality’s website.

The government’s strategy is based on five goals for the vaccine programme, ordered by level of importance:

  1. Reducing risk of death,
  2. Reducing risk of severe illness,
  3. Ensuring continued operation of essential services and crucial infrastructure,
  4. Protecting the labour force and economy,
  5. Easing restrictions and opening society.

After the oldest residents, the government has therefore chosen to prioritise people with other medical conditions that make them vulnerable to severe illness and death.

This is the current order of Norway’s vaccine queue:

  1. Care home residents and some health care workers,
  2. People over 85 years old and some health care workers,
  3. People between 75 and 84 years old,
  4. People between 65 and 74 years old and people between 18 and 64 years old with severe medical conditions that make them vulnerable to serious illness,
  5. People between 55 and 64 years old with underlying medical conditions,
  6. People between 45 and 54 years old with underlying medical conditions,
  7. People between 18 and 44 years old with underlying medical conditions,
  8. People between 55 and 64 years old,
  9. People between 45 and 54 years old,
  10. Rest of adult population.

NIPH has published several scenarios for when they believe the population will be offered the vaccine. In their moderate scenario, they expect the majority of the population to have been vaccinated by late summer.

READ ALSO: Three scenarios: When will life return to normal in Norway?

Care home residents, the elderly and people with underlying medical conditions, however, can expect to be vaccinated during spring. Healthy people between the ages of 18 and 64, meanwhile, may have to wait until the autumn.

But the situation remains uncertain and the rate of vaccinations depend on a number of factors, including how quickly Norway receives vaccine doses. Vaccine producer Moderna last week announced that its delivery to Norway was delayed by a week, and that the number of doses was halved from 43,000 to 21,600.

“I think we have to get use to the fact that vaccine deliveries will be unpredictable during the next few months,” Assistant Director Espen Rostrup Nakstad at the Norwegian Directorate of Health told newspaper Dagbladet.

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FEATURE

Greenland foreign minister axed over independence remarks

Greenland's pro-independence foreign minister Pele Broberg was demoted on Monday after saying that only Inuits should vote in a referendum on whether the Arctic territory should break away from Denmark.

Greenland foreign minister axed over independence remarks
Greenland's pro-independence minister Pele Broberg (far R) with Prime Minister Mute Egede (2nd R), Danish foreign minister Jeppe Kofod and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (2nd R) at a press briefing in Greenland in May 2021. Photo: Ólafur Steinar Rye Gestsson/Ritzau Scanpix

Prime Minister Mute Egede, who favours autonomy but not independence, said the ruling coalition had agreed to a reshuffle after a controversial interview by the minister of the autonomous Arctic territory.

Broberg was named business and trade minister and Egede will take on the foreign affairs portfolio.

The prime minister, who took power in April after a snap election, underscored that “all citizens in Greenland have equal rights” in a swipe at Broberg.

Broberg in an interview to Danish newspaper Berlingske said he wanted to reserve voting in any future referendum on independence to Inuits, who comprise more than 90 percent of Greenland’s 56,000 habitants.

“The idea is not to allow those who colonised the country to decide whether they can remain or not,” he had said.

In the same interview he said he was opposed to the term the “Community of the Kingdom” which officially designates Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Greenland, saying his country had “little to do” with Denmark.

Greenland was a Danish colony until 1953 and became a semi-autonomous territory in 1979.

The Arctic territory is still very dependent on Copenhagen’s subsidies of around 526 million euros ($638 million), accounting for about a third of its budget.

But its geostrategic location and massive mineral reserves have raised international interest in recent years, as evidenced by former US president Donald Trump’s swiftly rebuffed offer to buy it in 2019.

READ ALSO: US no longer wants to buy Greenland, Secretary of State confirms

Though Mute Egede won the election in April by campaigning against a controversial uranium mining project, Greenland plans to expand its economy by developing its fishing, mining and tourism sectors, as well as agriculture in the southern part of the island which is ice-free year-round.

READ ALSO: Danish, Swiss researchers discover world’s ‘northernmost’ island

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