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TODAY IN NORWAY

Today in Norway: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday 

Find out what’s going on in Norway on Thursday with The Local’s short roundup of important news.

Today in Norway: A roundup of the latest news on Thursday 
Trollstigen, Norway's most famous road. Photo by Anthony Tan on Unsplash

Norway marks the tenth anniversary of July 22nd terror attacks 

Norway will mark the tenth anniversary of the July 22nd terror attacks, in which 77 people lost their lives, with memorial events, wreath-laying and church services throughout the day. 

At 9am Prime Minister Erna Solberg will speak at a memorial service at the government quarter, which was the target of a bomb attack by right-wing extremist Anders Behring Brevik. There will also be a wreath-laying, and Crown Prince Haakon and Crown Princess Mette-Marit will also be in attendance. 

Then at 11am, there will be a church service in Oslo Cathedral. Former prime minister and current NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg will also be at the event. 

The afternoon will see a service at the Hole Church with a number of other places of worship holding events and sermons around the country at 1pm. 

At 3pm there will be a memorial service on Utøya Island, where 69 people lost their lives in a mass shooting. Survivors of the attack will speak, and wreaths will be laid. Crown Prince Haakon will also speak. 

In the evening, 7pm, the bells at town hall will be rung 77 times, once for each person who lost their life in the attacks, and all public transport will be stopped for a minute. Then at 7:55pm, the bells will ring again, and the national memorial service, which will be broadcast on NRK1, will begin. King Harald will be among several speakers. 

NIPH expects Covid-19 infections to increase

Head of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH), Camilla Stoltenberg, believes that there will be an increase in coronavirus infections in Norway. 

Part of this is due to the Delta Covid-19 variant, first identified in India, now being the dominant form of Covid-19 in Norway. 

“We believe that there will be an increase in infection, and the Delta variant will play a role. In addition, the fact the society is more mobile, and people have more social contact and more and more are travelling both out of Norway and domestically,” Stoltenberg told news agency NTB. 

The director of the NIPH has said she is currently unsure what this means for the country’s reopening strategy. 

Increase in hate crimes in Norway over the past five years 

The last five years have seen an increase in the number of hate crimes in Norway. 

Last year, 744 hate crimes were recorded, an increase of 53 percent from 2016. However, despite the increase in incidents reported, there has not been a corresponding rise in people convicted. 

The Anti-Racism Centre said this is because the threshold to be convicted of a hate crime in Norway is too high. 

READ ALSO: Memorial of Norwegian teen killed in 2001 racist attack vandalised

“We fail to prosecute some of the worst and most serious of statements,” Rune Berlund Steen, general manager of the Anti-Racism Centre, told state broadcaster NRK.

189 new Covid-19 infections in Norway 

On Wednesday, 189 new cases of infection with the Coronavirus were registered in Norway. This is a rise of 13 cases compared to the seven-day average. 

In Oslo, 22 new cases of Covid-19 have been recorded. The number the day before was 29. 

Total number of Covid-19 cases in Norway. Source: NIPH

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For members

TODAY IN NORWAY

Today in Norway: A roundup of the latest news on Tuesday 

Find out what’s going on in Norway on Tuesday with The Local’s short roundup of important news. 

Pictured is Holmenkollen in Oslo.
Read about the interval between doses two and three being shortened and the death of Kåre Willoch in today's roundup of important news. Pictured is Holmenkollen in Oslo. Photo by Michael Ankes on Unsplash

Tributes paid to Kåre Willoch 

The former prime minister and Conservative Party leader Kåre Willoch passed away yesterday aged 93. King Harold, prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre and former PM Erna Solberg were among those to pay tribute to Willoch. 

“He was a very gracious and nice person who was concerned with people and political issues,” Solberg said. 

The former PM pointed to Willoch’s modernisation reform in Norway as his most significant political legacy. 

“The most important thing he did was the modernisation of Norway,” she said. 

Health minister to decide on new Covid-19 measures

New coronavirus measures are on their way in Norway, with the health minister, Ingvild Kjerkol, set to decide on new restrictions following a rise in infections, outbreaks of the Omicron variant and parts of the health service nearing capacity. 

“There will be measures we will notice in our everyday lives,” Kjerkol said to public broadcaster NRK

“The situation is demanding, and that is the reason why we are now looking at new measures. We have a health service that is in full swing, and our goal is to have control of the pandemic, in the form that the municipalities and hospitals are able to provide proper health care,” Kjerkol explained.

READ ALSO: How could Norway’s Covid-19 restrictions be tightened this week?

The minister didn’t reveal any details on what could be announced but said that decisions would be made on Tuesday. 

Coronavirus booster vaccine interval shortened 

The interval between vaccine doses two and three for those aged between 64 and 45 will be shortened by a month, Norway’s health ministry has announced

The interval will now be five months when it was previously six. All adults with serious underlying conditions and those working in the health and care sectors will also have the interval cut. 

One in three think Covid-19 measures are too relaxed

A third of Norwegians feel that the current Covid measures in place in Norway are insufficient and need tightening, according to a survey conducted by Norstat for public broadcaster NRK.

Ten percent said the measures were too comprehensive, and just under 50 percent said that the current level of action was appropriate. 

4,117 new Covid-19 cases in Norway

On Monday, 4,117 new Covid-19 cases were registered in Norway. That is 1,240 more cases than the same day last week. 

As of yesterday, 295 people were hospitalised with Covid-19. 

A graph showing the number of weekly cases in Norway.
The total number of weekly cases in Norway throughout the pandemic. Source: Norwegian Institute of Public Health.
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