A satirical drawing in the British daily the Guardian, which shows PM Lars Løkke Rasmussen in Nazi-like attire, is causing concern among the Danish business community.
“The Mohammed Crisis really hurt us,” Niels Due Jensen – the chairman of the Poul Due Jensen Foundation, which owns 88 percent of the shares in Grundfos – told Børsen.
“We are afraid the same sort of thing could happen again.”
Damaged reputation
On Tuesday, Parliament adopted the controversial law that makes it possible to take valuables from refugees when they arrive in Denmark.
The international media have been closely covering developments, and according to Grundfos and other major companies, this has seriously damaged Denmark’s reputation.