Morning Briefing – Tuesday, June 18

The Copenhagen Post’s daily digest of what the Danish press is reporting

Nurse-in

Hundreds of breastfeeding women gathered on Rådhuspladsen square in Copenhagen yesterday to show what they feel is their right to breastfeed in a public space. The debate of public breastfeeding has intensified in recent weeks after the equality commission ruled that a café owner was within his rights to ask a woman to leave because she was breastfeeding. – Kristeligt Dagblad

Substitute teachers under qualified

By the time the average student finishes school, substitutes will have accounted for almost one year of their total education. Over half of those substitutes have no teaching education, according to a new report. The report, compiled by the Education Ministry, showed that substitute teachers accounted for eight percent of total teaching in 2011. – Politiken

The course of young love often blocked by parents

Nearly one third of young minority women believe that their parents would not allow them to have a boyfriend. According to a new study by the Social and Integration Ministry, 28 percent of young women and 12 percent of young men with non-western backgrounds experience that they are not permitted a girlfriend/boyfriend before marriage. – Jyllands-Posten

DI overstated climate costs

When industry advocates Dansk Industri (DI) and its European partners convinced a narrow majority of the EU parliament to vote against EU climate commissioner Connie Hedegaard’s (Konservative) climate plans, they may have fudged the numbers. Some now refute DI's claims that jobs would be lost due to the climate plan's estimated 300-million kroner increase of expenses for businesses. – Berlingske

Rapist avoids deportation

The 18-year-old Somali man who raped a ten-year-old girl in November 2011 had his deportation sentence reduced to a suspended sentence yesterday. The young man, who committed a number of sex crimes in Herning, Jutland will serve his six-year-prison sentence but can remain in the country if he doesn’t commit a crime within two years of his release. – Ekstra Bladet

Pesticide ban leads to use of more pesticides

Farmers will likely increase their use of other pesticides when the bee-killing neonikotinoid pesticides are banned on December 1. Instead of the neonikotinoids, farmers are expected to turn to insecticides called pyrethroides which function as a nerve poison and are highly poisonous to organisms living in the waterways. – Ingeniøren

Tomasson secures first head coaching position

Former national team striker Jon Dahl Tomasson has secured his first head coaching job at the Dutch club Excelsior. Tomasson, 36, accepted a two-year contract with the club where he had been assistant coach last season. Excelsior finished in a disappointing 16th place last year in the second-tier Jupiler League. – Tipsbladet




  • Chinese wind turbine companies sign pact to end race-to-the-bottom price war

    Chinese wind turbine companies sign pact to end race-to-the-bottom price war

    China’s 12 leading wind turbine makers have signed a pact to end a domestic price war that has seen turbines sold at below cost price in a race to corner the market and which has compromised quality and earnings in the sector.

  • Watch Novo Nordisk’s billion-kroner musical TV ad for Wegovy

    Watch Novo Nordisk’s billion-kroner musical TV ad for Wegovy

    Novo Nordisk’s TV commercial for the slimming drug Wegovy has been shown roughly 32,000 times and reached 8.8 billion US viewers since June.

  • Retention is the new attraction

    Retention is the new attraction

    Many people every year choose to move to Denmark and Denmark in turn spends a lot of money to attract and retain this international talent. Are they staying though? If they leave, do they go home or elsewhere? Looking at raw figures, we can see that Denmark is gradually becoming more international but not everyone is staying. 

  • Defence Minister: Great international interest in Danish military technology

    Defence Minister: Great international interest in Danish military technology

    Denmark’s Defence Minister Troels Lund Poulsen attended the Association of the Unites States Army’s annual expo in Washington DC from 14 to 16 October, together with some 20 Danish leading defence companies, where he says Danish drone technology attracted significant attention.

  • Doctors request opioids in smaller packs as over-prescription wakes abuse concerns

    Doctors request opioids in smaller packs as over-prescription wakes abuse concerns

    Doctors, pharmacies and politicians have voiced concern that the pharmaceutical industry’s inability to supply opioid prescriptions in smaller packets, and the resulting over-prescription of addictive morphine pills, could spur levels of opioid abuse in Denmark.

  • Housing in Copenhagen – it runs in the family

    Housing in Copenhagen – it runs in the family

    Residents of cooperative housing associations in Copenhagen and in Frederiksberg distribute vacant housing to their own family members to a large extent. More than one in six residents have either parents, siblings, adult children or other close family living in the same cooperative housing association.


  • Come and join us at Citizens Days!

    Come and join us at Citizens Days!

    On Friday 27 and Saturday 28 of September, The Copenhagen Post will be at International Citizen Days in Øksnehallen on Vesterbro, Copenhagen. Admission is free and thousands of internationals are expected to attend

  • Diversifying the Nordics: How a Nigerian economist became a beacon for inclusivity in Scandinavia

    Diversifying the Nordics: How a Nigerian economist became a beacon for inclusivity in Scandinavia

    Chisom Udeze, the founder of Diversify – a global organization that works at the intersection of inclusion, democracy, freedom, climate sustainability, justice, and belonging – shares how struggling to find a community in Norway motivated her to build a Nordic-wide professional network. We also hear from Dr. Poornima Luthra, Associate Professor at CBS, about how to address bias in the workplace.

  • Lolland Municipality launches support package for accompanying spouses

    Lolland Municipality launches support package for accompanying spouses

    Lolland Municipality, home to Denmark’s largest infrastructure project – the Fehmarnbelt tunnel connection to Germany – has launched a new jobseeker support package for the accompanying partners of international employees in the area. The job-to-partner package offers free tailored sessions on finding a job and starting a personal business.