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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. 

A Swedish flag on the Swedish side of the border and a Norwegian one on the Norwegian side.
Read about a drop in cross-border shopping and a record number of Covid-19 related deaths last week. Pictured is A Swedish flag on the Swedish side of the border and a Norwegian one on the Norwegian side. Photo by Petter Bernsten / AFP

Record number of Covid-19 deaths last week

Last week, 45 Covid-19 related deaths were registered in Norway, according to the Norwegian Institute of Public Health’s (NIPH) latest weekly report. This is the highest number of recorded deaths in 2021. 

“The number of deaths in week 46 is the highest registered in 2021 and at almost the same level as during the beginning of the pandemic,” the NIPH wrote in its report

The median age of those who died was 85 years old. In total, 146 new patients were admitted to hospitals with the virus. 

New president of the Storting announced 

Masud Gharahkhani will be the new president of Norway’s parliament after the Labour Party put him forward for the role. 

Vice president Sverre Myril was due to take over but was ousted. Eva Kristin Hansen, the previous president, stepped down last week due to the commuter housing scandal, which has engulfed Norwegian politics since September. 

Since the end of the summer, it has been revealed that several MPs had taken advantage of commuter housing allowances by having the state pay for their housing, despite already having access to their own private accommodation. 

“There are sad circumstances surrounding this election of a new Storting president. The work of the Storting should be about solving people’s everyday challenges, not about clutter or chaos in the representatives’ schemes,” Gharahkhani told the press in parliament yesterday. 

Gharahkhani will become the first president of the Storting born in a country other than Norway, having moved to Norway from Iran in 1987. 

Cross-border shopping well below pre-pandemic level 

Between July and September this year, Norwegians spent 1.3 billion kroner during cross-border shopping trips, according to Statistics Norway

This is well below the record third quarter recorded in 2019 when Norwegians spent five billion kroner on shopping trips abroad. 

READ ALSO: Is the return of cross-border shopping in Norway really a good thing

“Despite the fact that cross-border trade picked up sharply in the third quarter compared with the previous quarter, there is still a long way to go until it is at the same level as before the pandemic,” Boyd Oyier, chief consultant at Statistics Norway, said in the report. 

4,575 new Covid-19 cases in Norway

On Wednesday, 4,575 new Covid-19 cases were recorded. That is 2,097 more than the same day last week. 

However, the high number of cases registered on Wednesday was due to delays which meant too few were recorded on Tuesday when 1,520 infections were announced. 

The reason for too few cases being registered was that the Norwegian Health Network had operation problems. 

Over the last seven days, an average of 2,297 Covid infections have been registered each day. 

A graph showing the total number of Covid-19 cases in Norway.
The total number of Covid-19 cases in Norway. Source: Norwegian Institute of Public Health.

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TODAY IN NORWAY

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

Earthquake near Bergen, perpetrators of Oslo shooting still at large, retail industry strike looms, and other news from Norway on Monday.

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

Mini-earthquake rattles Voss, outside Bergen 

An earthquake with a magnitude of 3.3 on the Richter scale rattled the municipality of Voss early on Monday morning, waking up many residents but appearing to do no actual damage. 

“We first received a message at 4.22am from a man in Vaksdal who had felt the earthquake. He described it as a clear shaking in the house and as a kind of rumbling,” Berit Marie Storheim, senior engineer at the Department of Geosciences at Bergen University, told the NTB newswire, adding that “3.3 is a small earthquake in the global context and it is not unusual in Norway.” 

She said that she and her colleagues did not expect any damage to buildings or other infrastructure but called on anyone who had felt the quake to register it at skelv.no. 

Norwegian vocabulary: jordskjelv – earthquake  

Perpetrators of shooting at Oslo’s Beirut Kebab still at large 

Oslo police said on Sunday that they were still looking for the men who shot and injured a man in his twenties at the Beirut Kebab kebab restaurant in the Grønland district of Oslo on Saturday night.

“We are investigating broadly, looking at several milieu, and we know that there is more than one perpetrator,” Maria Huseby Fossen, a police lawyer, told public broadcaster NRK.

The victim of the shooting has yet to be interviewed as he is till being treated for his injuries, but police have already interviewed several other witnesses and are seeking to obtain footage from security cameras.

Norwegian vocabulary: ingen pågrepet – no one arrested

Dury free shops may close if retail sector employees strike  

Thousands of members of the Handel og Kontor (HK), Parat and Negotia unions may go on strike from Tuesday if mediation launched on Sunday morning with the Federation of Norwegian Enterprise (Virke), one of Norway’s leading employer groups, is not successful.

The union’s deadline for progress in the talks is midnight on Tuesday night, after which they may mount strikes at building materials stores, grocery stores and duty-free shops, as well as shops run by Norgesgruppen and Coop.

Handel og Kontor has claimed that the strike could see duty free shops at Norwegian airports forced to closed, something the shops’ owners, the Travel Retail Norway joint venture, has denied. 

Norwegian vocabulary: mekling – mediation

Norway calls on West to support Arab peace plan in Gaza 

Norway’s foreign minister Espen Barth Eide on Sunday evening called for EU countries and the US to support a Gaza peace plan drawn up by Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries, as representatives from Arab and Western countries meet in Riyadh on the sidelines of the regional meeting of the World Economic Forum. 

“The closest we have to a comprehensive peace plan is the one Arab countries are currently working on. It is important that we support this. It is simply better to have one plan than no plan,” Eide told Norway’s NTB newsire. “Recognition of a Palestinian state is not an end in itself, but a tool we can use once. When a country like Norway uses it, we must know that it can have an effect.” 

EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell, British foreign minister David Cameron, German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock, Egyptian foreign minister Sameh Shoukry, Jordanian foreign minister Umin Safadi and Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas are in in Riyadh for the meeting, along with Eide. 

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in Riyadh, but will not attend the meeting. 

Eide said that the idea that countries such as the US or Norway could somehow lead peace efforts in Israel and Palestine was past. 

“A country from the West cannot travel down and ‘make peace’, as we maybe let ourselves believe. It needs to be anchored in the region,” he told NRK. 

Norwegian vocabulary: forankrast – anchored

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