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TODAY IN DENMARK

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Friday

Mink breeders to be barred from own compensation committees, Copenhagen to host major migration conference, job market stabilised and more news from Denmark on Friday.

Today in Denmark: A roundup of the news on Friday
Danish politicians at a debate hosted by Regional authorities on Thrsday. Photo: Mikkel Berg Pedersen/Ritzau Scanpix

Mink breeders thrown out of compensation committees 

Mink fur breeders will no longer participate on committees which decide how much compensation to award other mink breeders, agriculture minister Jacob Jensen confirmed yesterday to broadcaster DR.

The government set aside billions of kroner for compensation to mink breeders after ordering all fur farm minks be destroyed in late 2020, over concerns related to Covid-19 mutations in the animals. The order to destroy the minks was later found to be illegal in a major scandal for the government.

Recent reports have described how the breeders have gained influence over the compensation through their presence on committees.

“We don’t think there should be direct representation on the commissions,” Jensen told DR.

Vocabulary: indflydelse – influence

Denmark to host migration conference

An international migration conference is scheduled to take place in Copenhagen on May 6th.

Policymakers and experts from Europe, the Middle East and Africa will attend the summit at the Eigtveds Pakhus conference facility, the immigration ministry said in a statement.

Denmark’s immigration minister Kaare Dybvad Bek and global partnership and climate minister Dan Jørgensen will be among the Danish representatives.

“The number of irregular migrants arriving in Europe in 2023 was at its highest since the 2015-16 [refugee] crisis. But the existing asylum system has enormous human costs, while human traffickers make huge profits,” Bek said in the statement.

READ ALSO: Border centres and ‘safe’ states: The EU’s major asylum changes explained

Vocabulary: beslutningstager – policymaker

Far fewer people changed job in 2023

A record number of job changes on the Danish labour market in 2022 was followed by a less dramatic period last year, new figures show.

There were 873,635 job changes in total last year, 78,482 fewer than in 2022. That is the largest year-on-year drop since the statistic began in 2009.

“Fewer job changes reflect several factors, including that high inflation depressed the economy and the demand for labour,” Mads Moberg Reumert, chief economist at Danica Pension which provides the statistics, said in a written comment to newswire Ritzau.

Vocabulary: en dæmper – a dampener

City apartments lose value in early months of 2024

A drop in the price of apartments in Copenhagen and stable house price trends were among the features of the Danish property market during the early months of 2024.

House prices for both detached (villaer) and semi-detached or terraced (rækkehus) housing fell by 0.2 percent in terms of the price per square metre in the first quarter of this year, new data from specialist media Boligsiden show.

Effectively, this means house prices were unchanged in the first part of this year compared to the end of 2023, the property media said in a press release.

Stable house prices makes a substantial – if lower than forecast – drop in the cost of apartments in Copenhagen the key takeaway from property market data from the first quarter of this year.

 

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TODAY IN DENMARK

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

Danish King and Queen end Norway visit, 'Take the Money' artist reaches settlement, wild beaver found, and more news from Denmark on Thursday.

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

Danish royal couple ends Norway visit 

Denmark’s King Frederik X and Queen Mary on Wednesday evening ended their two-day state visit to Norway with a farewell party on board the their royal yacht, the Dannebrog. 

During the day, King Frederik took a tour of the new Bjørvika district in central Oslo, visiting a new sauna along with Crown Prince Haakon and Crown Princess Mette-Marit, where they were given a perfomance by a “sauna choir”, wearing striped bathing suits. 

The four royals travelled to Bjørvika on the Oslo Metro, and ended their tour of the area’s urban development and architecture with a visit to the Opera House, where they were given performances by the Copenhagen Boy’s choir and the Opera children’s choir. 

The couple’s next visit will be to the Faroe Islands from June 12th to June 14th, after which they will spend ten days in Greenland. 

Danish vocabulary: bolsjestribede – red and white striped [literally “candy striped”]

‘Take the money and run’ artist paid reaches settlement

The Danish artist Jens Haaning, has reached a settlement with the Kunsten Art gallery in Aalborg before the appeals case over his artwork “Take the Money and Run”, was due to be heard at Denmark’s High Court. 

Haaning caused controversy in 2021 when he asked the museum to lend him half a million kroner which he would then sandwich in banknotes between two glass frames. He then sent two empty frames to the gallery, claiming it was an artwork called “Take the Money and Run”. 

Hanning lost his case in the district court and had to pay back the half million kroner he had been given for the work, but before the appeal could be heard in the high court, the museum in Aalborg reached a settlement. 

“Initially they let me keep the half million that I took by not delivering the painting with the money. In addition, they have bought the two empty frames, which will then be part of their collection,” Haaning said.

“I would not go so far as to say that this has been a good bit of business for me. Quite a lot of work has actually gone into this. But I have been paid, as I am when I otherwise sell works.”

Danish vocabulary: en kunstner – an artist

Wild beaver found in Denmark for first time in 2,500 years

A beaver was spotted running after some children at a kindergarten in Nykøbing Falster on Saturday evening, in what an official at the Danish Environmental Protection Agency believes might be the first time one of the animals has migrated to Denmark in more than two thousand years. 

Ejgil Andersen, from the agency, said that all indications suggest that the beaver swam from Northern Germany. The beaver was first spotted at Gedser Odde two weeks ago and has spent two weeks travelling the 20 kilometres to Nykøbing Falster, where it was picked up and taken to the Aqua animal park in Silkeborg. 

Danish vocabulary: en baever – a beaver 

Faroese parliament votes against liberalising abortion

The Faroese parliament has narrowly voted against giving women the right to abortions up until the 12th week of pregnancy, with 15 of the parliament’s MPs voting in favour and 15 against, meaning the measure will not go through, as it requires a majority.  

Hervør Palsdottir from the Tjodveldisflokkurin party, who is co-founder of Fritt Val, which fights for free abortion, called vote “very unfortunate”. 

“This is a big defeat for the Faroese women, because now they have to wait many years before they can get justice over their own bodies,” she told the magazine Femina. 

Under the islands’ 1956 abortion law, abortion is only legal if the women’s health is in serious danger, if she has been a victim of rape, or if incest is involved.

Danish vocabulary: megaærgerligt – extremely unfortunate

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