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POLITICS

KEY POINTS: What did Norway’s PM say in the New Year’s speech?

In his first New Year's address as Norway's PM, Jonas Gahr Støre had a few things to say about the present and the future.

Pictured is Norway's PM, Jonas Gahr Støre.
Jonas Gahr Støre (pictured) used the speech as an opportunity to pledge to combat inequality in the country. Photo by Arbeidpartiet on Flickr.

Covid-19 featured heavily on the agenda in Jonas Gahr Støre’s first New Year’s speech as Norway’s Prime Minister, with the Labour Party leader also lamenting inequality caused by the pandemic. 

“The corona times have made our society more unfair,” Støre said in the annual New Year’s Day speech given to the nation by the country’s sitting PM.

“Some have saved money, had a cabin office, extra quality time with the family. Others have lost their jobs and income and are now experiencing a new tough winter,” he added.

Støre pledged to combat said inequality through taxation, improving the welfare state and reinforcing workers rights.

READ ALSO: What changes about life in Norway in 2022? 

In the speech, centred heavily around the impact of Covid, Støre also praised the public for their efforts throughout the pandemic.

“We have fought against coronavirus by standing together and following advice, even the most intrusive measures. We have fought against coronavirus with the best and strongest (weapons) we have; community and unity,” he said.

The PM also said that Norway’s issues, not just the pandemic, couldn’t be tackled without a collective effort.

“The climate crisis cannot be solved by individuals or the market alone. Elderly care isn’t improved by a few people buying themselves better care, and no one is safe in a pandemic until everyone is safe,” Støre said.

He summed up the previous year by confessing that he and many others had hoped that 2021 would see the end.

In addition to urging the public to be better at listening to and emphasising with one another, Støre also said the pandemic has highlighted how the country’s healthcare system needed to be strengthened by training more health care professionals.

“I think everyone has seen the value of a strong health service. The pandemic has also revealed weaknesses in our health service,” Støre said.

He also appealed to members of the public yet to receive a Covid-19 vaccine to get jabbed.

READ MORE: Norway Prime Minister plunges into icy waters on New Year’s Eve

“Make it a New Year’s resolution, take the vaccine,” he urged.

The address was well-received by experts, with one comparing the PM’s rhetoric to a Volvo.

“If the speech were a car, it’d be a Volvo. It was safe, had a suitable structure and was suitably well designed. It used balanced linguistic tools, and it was not loud, but adapted to the situation,” Kjell Terje Ringdal, associate professor at Kristiana University College, said to newspaper VG of the PM’s speech.

On New Year’s Eve, King Harald also addressed the nation in a speech. The King thanked the health service for their efforts throughout the pandemic, and similar to the PM, asked the public to show one another empathy heading into the New Year.

King Harald also expressed his sadness that the most disadvantaged had been hit hardest by the pandemic.

“Unfortunately, the most disadvantaged have been particularly hard hit: drug addicts, the mentally ill, the elderly, children and young people,” King Harald said during the New Year’s Eve speech.

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UKRAINE

Norway accelerating Ukraine aid

Norway's Prime Minister said Tuesday his country would accelerate its military and civilian aid for Ukraine for this year by seven billion kroner to a total of 22 billion kroner (£2 billion).

Norway accelerating Ukraine aid

The additional funds will be brought forward from a 75 billion kroner package the Scandinavian country has pledged to Ukraine covering 2023 to 2027 for military and civilian aid, which remains unchanged.

“It’s a matter of life and death for the people of Ukraine”, Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store told a press conference.

“It is also a question of security and stability in Europe, and therefore also for Norway”, he said following a meeting with opposition leaders to secure a broad consensus on the aid.

Of the seven billion brought forward, six will go military aid, primarily anti-air defence and ammunition — which are desperately needed by Ukraine as it faces a Russian offensive in the east.

Norway will contribute to the financing of German and Czech initiatives in these two areas, Store said, while stressing that Russia was deliberately bombing “hospitals, residential areas and power stations”.

Of the 75 billion package dedicated to Ukraine, Norway will have used some 39.5 billion kroner by the end of 2024.

Norway — a major oil and gas producer that has benefited greatly from surging prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — is one of the main contributors to Ukraine, according to a ranking by the Kiel Institute.

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