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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday

Aarhus bans public sector staff from snus, Danish chefs win prestigious championships, government to pursue Nordic Waste sister company for landslide costs and more news from Denmark on Thursday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Thursday
Denmark's team came first in the Bocuse d'Or Europe in Trondheim. Photo: Gorm Kallestad/NTB/Ritzau Scanpix

Aarhus Municipality bans staff from using tobacco during work hours 

Employees of Aarhus municipality will no longer be able to place snus, the little nicotine bag, under their gums during work time.

A decision to ban snus was made by a majority in the city council, and means that the Aarhus Municipality policy on smoking has now been broadened to include all nicotine products including the little snus pouches.

Some 28,000 municipal staff including social care sector, childcare and school employees will be affected by the rule, which takes effect on May 1st.

“Aarhus Municipality has a big responsibility to lead the way and signal that nicotine products, just like cigarettes, are not part of the culture as an employee of Aarhus Municipality,” health councillor Christian Budde told newswire Ritzau in a written comment.

Vocabulary: rygepolitik – smoking policy

Denmark wins prestigious chef championship

A Danish team led by Sebastian Holberg Svendsgaard, a former chef at three-star Michelin restaurant Geranium, yesterday won first prize in the prestigious European Bocuse d’Or gastronomic competition.

The Danish team presented their dishes after five and a half hours in the kitchen, newswire Ritzau writes.

This included a “Nordic mythology-inspired” dish of fish with a black wavy edge on top that had been roasted and fried. Inside the fish was the Danish Vesterhavsost cheese with herbs.

The Danish win means the duo get to compete in the world championship version of the event next year.

Vocabulary: kokkehold – team of chefs

Nordic Waste sister company can be held liable over landslide

DSH Recycling, a company with the same owners as Nordic Waste, can be held liable for costs resulting from the landslide at Nordic Waste’s soil treatment plant in December last year, the government’s legal advisor Kammeradvokaten has concluded.

The local authority, Randers Municipality, is currently bearing the financial weight of operations to prevent environmental damage after Nordic Waste declared itself bankrupt in the aftermath of the landslip.

READ ALSO: Danish village no longer under threat from Nordic Waste landslide

The government will now pursue DSH Recycling for costs.

“The legal investigation showed that responsibility for the landslide is not limited to Nordic Waste A/S, which ran the operation, but also includes DSH Recycling A/S, a part of the same corporation,” Environment Minister Magnus Heunicke said in a statement.

Vocabulary: koncern – corporation

Denmark ‘closer’ to Finland but still second in 2024 World Happiness Report

Denmark’s reputation as the ‘world’s second-happiest country’ has been bolstered by the latest edition of the UN’s World Happiness Report, which again ranks the Scandinavian nation second behind Finland.

The UN’s World Happiness Report, published on Wednesday, puts Denmark second on its national happiness ranking.

Finland takes the title of world’s happiest nation, once closely associated with Denmark, for the seventh year in a row.

The Danish second place is the same as its 2022 and 2023 rankings and one spot better than in 2021.

The United States fell out of the top 20 for the first time since the report began in 2012, getting a ranking of 23. The United Kingdom was 20th, Australia 10th and Ireland 17th.

Nordic neighbours Sweden and Norway were 4th and 7th respectively.

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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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