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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Wednesday

One in four Danish companies reliant on foreign labour, defence minister mulls new Ukraine donations, Denmark is world's least corrupt country, and speed camera app to be switched off: here's the latest news from Denmark.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Wednesday
Workers at a Vestas turbine factory in Esbjerg, Denmark back in 2013. One in four Danish managers have told Lederne that their company could not operate without foreign labour. Photo: Thomas Lekfeldt/Ritzau Scanpix

One in four Danish companies reliant on foreign labour: survey

More than half Danish companies employ foreign labour and one in four say they could not run their company without them, according to a member survey of 1,255 company managers by the Lederne management union. 

Of the 1,255 who replied to the survey 759 said they employed foreign workers and 354 said that these workers were essential to their business. 

“This tells us that we cannot run Denmark without foreign labour, so it is not a discussion whether we need foreign labor or not. We have it, and we need more of it,” Bodil Nordestgaard Ismiris, the union’s managing director, told the Politiken newspaper. 

“That’s why the message from us is that we must do away with all these bogus rules which mean that today in Denmark we actually expel many well-functioning, well-integrated people because of some very strange arguments. We have to understand in Denmark that every time we do that, we shoot ourselves in the foot.” 

The new SVM government has announced that it will lower the minimum salary threshold for work permits, so long as unemployment is low. The bill is due to in February.

Danish vocab: gakkede – weird, odd, nonsensical

Denmark ‘considering’ new military donations to Ukraine

Danish Minister of Defence Jakob Ellemann-Jensen has not ruled out additional donations of military equipment to Ukraine after the Nordic country recently agreed to send artillery pieces to Kyiv.

Ellemann-Jensen said in an email to news wire Ritzau that further donations could come into play following a visit to Black Sea city Mykolaiv earlier this week.

“Denmark has just made a large donation to Ukraine in the form of all of the army’s artillery. Something the Ukrainians themselves requested, and that we can be proud of,” Ellemann-Jensen wrote.

“Having said that, there is no doubt there will be a need for more Danish support for Ukraine,” he said. 

Danish vocab: at understøtte – to support 

Denmark rated world’s least corrupt country in index

Denmark has been named the least corrupt country in the world for the fifth time in an annual index – but that does not mean the Nordic country is corruption free, according to a representative from the organisation behind the ranking.

Global anti-corruption agency Transparency International has placed Denmark as the country with the best record in its analysis of the perceived level of corruption in the public sector in a range of countries.

In the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) ranking, countries are given a score from 0 to 100 with a higher number representing a better ranking. Denmark was given 90, two points better than last year’s total of 88.

In a statement on its website, the organisation said Denmark had risen in the index because people had reported less experience of bribery around import/export permits, public services, tax, public contracts and contact with the courts. 

Danish vocab: bestikkelse – bribery

Danish speed camera warning app to be switched off

The Fartkontrol.nu app, which warns motorists about upcoming speed checks on roads, is to be switched off at the end of January.

A message appeared in the app confirming that it will no longer work from next month, media Avisen Danmark reported.

“It is with great regret that we are unable to continue running the app due to technical challenges and new requirements from Google Maps that we are unable to meet,” the message states.

Fartkontrol.nu warns users about speed checks as well as accidents and other traffic disruptions on Danish roads.

Danish vocab: trafikale forstyrrelser – traffic disruptions

Danish supermarket chains to get shared names in rebranding

Danish supermarkets Kvickly, SuperBrugsen and Irma will operate under a shared name after parent company Coop decided to merge the three brands together.

Coop said in a statement on Tuesday that the largest of its Kvickly, SuperBrugsen and Irma stores will all be renamed “Coop”.

Remaining, smaller stores will, along with existing Dagli’ Brugsen stores, all be called “Brugsen” under the rebranding. 

Danish vocab: en kæde – a chain

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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

Mystery of shark on cycle path solved, Danish tax agency strikes deal with Sanjay Shah partners, companies cut ties with Copenhagen Pride over Gaza and more news from Denmark on Wednesday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the latest news on Wednesday

Police solve mystery of shark on cycle path 

Police in Jutland have solved the mystery behind the metre-and-a-half long shark that appeared on a cycle path last week in Rindum, near Ringkøbing. 

Tip-offs from helpful locals helped local investigators trackdown the perpetrator, police wrote on Facebook on Tuesday. 

“The man had come into possession of the dead shark in the harbor in connection with some by-catch or fish waste. He took it with him and then put it on the cycle path to have a bit of fun,” police wrote.

The man will be fined, but the exact amount has yet to be determined.  

Last week, the radio host Anders Lund Madsen offered to provide a three-course menu at the upmarket Restaurant Sandgaarden in Søndervig to anyone who could solve the mystery.

Danish vocabulary: haj-mysterium – shark mystery

Denmark’s tax authorities strike deal with Sanjay Shah partners

Denmark’s tax agency has reportedly struck a deal worth hundreds of millions of kroner to recover wrongly awarded dividend refunds it paid out under the allegdly fraudulent Cum-Ex trading scheme.

According to DR, the Danish Tax Agency has reached a settlement with four of the closest employees and business partners of Sanjay Shah, the hedge fund trader who was the mastermind behind the scheme, which will see several hundred milion kroner paid back to the Danish treasury. 

The agency told DR tht it had entered into a total of 25 settlements in relation to the dividend case, amounting to a total of 2.4 billion kroner (including interest), of which the agency has currently received 1.3 billion kroner.

Danish vocabulary: et forlig – a settlement/binding agreement 

Danish companies cut ties with Copenhagen Pride after Gaza statement 

The bank Nykredit on Wednesday withdrew its sponsorship for Copenhagen Pride, the Copenhagen chapter of the international gay rights organisation, adding to the long list who have cut ties over the organisation’s stance on Israel’s attack on Gaza. 

“Unfortunately, the recent months’ debate in and around Copenhagen Pride has created doubts for us about where Copenhagen Pride has its focus and what kind of attitudes we as a company help to support,” Trine Ahrenkiel, HR and Communications Director at the bank said in a written comment to TV 2.

The list of organisations who have cut support include Mærsk, Novo Nordisk and Dansk Industri.

On February 14th, Copenhagen Pride said that it “stands in solidarity with the Palestinian people”, a position criticised as taking sides in the conflict.

The discount supermarket chain Netto is sticking to its collaboration with Copenhagen Pride, it announced last week.

Danish vocabulary: desværre – unfortunately  

Students hold pro-Gaza demonstration at Copenhagen University

Students at the pro-Gaza tent encampment at Copenhagen University held a manifestation on Tuesday afternoon at which they reiterated calls that the university provide full transparency over its investments in companies linked to Israel, and sell shares in any companies that profit from or are complicit in the occupation of Palestinian territories. 

Emil Nielsen from theorganisation Students Against the Occupation told Ritzau that the organization had gained access to the university’s investments, complaining that it had investments, though Nordea and Nykredit in companies such as Booking.com, Airbnb and eDreams, which he said had ended up on the UN’s so-called black list of companies that do not live up to the UN conventions the university had committed to uphold. 

Danish vocabulary: sorte liste – black list 

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