News round up

  • New ‘digital task force’ will roll out public sector AI 

    “We want to get right to the front with the use of artificial intelligence in the public sector,” the digitization minister said. Plus, new national energy figures show a big rise in solar production and drop in coal, SIRI has updated its salary standards for residency applicants, and the cost of Dankort transactions has risen by 8.9 percent as use of the card plummets.


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  • Increasing number of doctors have financial ties to Novo Nordisk

    The number has more than doubled in ten years, according to the Danish Medicines Agency. The editor at the Danish Society for General Medicine calls the development worrying and says “in the past, pocketing money from the pharma industry was a total no go.” Plus, Danish chefs win gold at the European Bocuse d’Or, and an east Jylland man is sentenced to prison for defrauding streaming platforms of millions of kroner by playing his own tracks on repeat.


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  • PET warns of heightened terrorism threat in Denmark 

    The threat has intensified in the past year, due “primarily to the conflict between Israel and Hamas and to perceived violations of Islam”, according to the latest national assessment. Plus, 40 climate ministers meet in the Danish port town of Helsingør to set course for COP29, Novo Nordisk goes on an aquisition and partnership spree, and Aarhus Municipality bans its employees from using any form of tobacco at work.


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  • Danish PM: Spend frozen Russian assets on military aid for Ukraine

    As the Russian invasion of Ukraine drags into its third year, EU and G7 countries are once again discussing using frozen Russian assets to help fund the Ukrainian resistance. Plus, a local bank manager is reported to the police for stealing from customer accounts, Denmark and Switzerland partner on quantum research, and school pupils in Nordjylland attend biodiversity classes in green education pilot project.


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  • Danish government loses its majority

    The government has lost its parliamentary majority after a member of Venstre has left the party in protest against a CO2 tax and the party’s participation in the government. The Minister of the Environment will not meet Copenhagen’s wish for more fossil-free zones, and Novo Nordisk is a step behind Eli Lilly in the fight over obesity medicine in the US


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  • The future of Copenhagen: More residents and no fossil-fuel cars

    The transition towards a green capital and the opportunity to live close to the water are characterizing Copenhagen, these years. Right now, the housing market is falling due to high interest rates and new tax rules.


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  • Public Koran burnings have almost stopped under new law

    Five incidents have been reported since the ban came into force on 14 December – a stark contrast to the preceding period, when 554 burnings, often in front of Muslim countries’ embassies, were reported in just five months. Plus, Folketinget is opening an underground visitor centre, the uptake of vocational training amongst young people is stagnating, and Barack Obama comes to Næstved.


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  • Local hunter shoots raccoon in West Jutland

    Top stories in Denmark today:

    • Local hunter shoots raccoon in West Jutland
    • The date is set – Pusher Street will be dug up on April 6
    • Bornholmers flock to crisis preparation course as “What If?” campaign begins

    Local hunter shoots raccoon in West Jutland
    A local hunter shot a raccoon on Tuesday morning at Kildebjerg Sø a little northwest of Skærbæk and just behind the dyke towards the Wadden Sea, according to DR.

    The raccoon is an invasive species in Denmark. 

    “The raccoon population is on the rise in Germany, and we can expect more and more raccoons here in the future,” says Jørn Bøgen, coordinator of the Wadden Sea National Park’s predation project, which aims to regulate unwanted predators in the national park.

    The date is set – Pusher Street will be dug up on April 6
    The cobble-paved Pusher Street in Christiania will be dug up on April 6, according to Hulda Mader from Christiania’s press group.

    Christianites and craftsmen will dig up the street, and the rest of the world is invited to help and can take a cobblestone with them as a souvenir, says the press release.

    “April 6 is the start of our week of action, where we will begin a physical renovation of Pusher Street to transform it into an area where everyone wants to come. As it is today, people do not really want to come there,” says Mader.

    Bornholmers flock to crisis preparation course as “What If?” campaign begins
    Following the Danish government’s announcement of its plan to distribute a war and crisis-preparedness leaflet called “What If?” to 14,539 households on Bornholm, a lecture on the subject took place on the island last night.

    Just over 20 Bornholmers attended the lecture “Emergency preparedness – prepare yourself for three days”, organised by the Emergency Association, while 80 more are on a waiting list.

    “I have come because I do not want to be taken in my bed. I want to be prepared if a crisis strikes,” attendee Conny Hedegaard told DR.

    Before the corona pandemic, the Association for Emergency Response often cancelled courses on Bornholm due to lack of interest, but now the demand is so high that the association has had to organise more courses than expected.


  • Prime Minister makes strongest call yet for ceasefire in Gaza

    “Today I strongly call for a humanitarian ceasefire, as Denmark has voted for in the UN,” said PM Mette Frederiksen, following a dire new report on conditions in Gaza from WHO. Plus, Danish astronaut Andreas Mogensen has landed safely back on earth after six months in space with a smile and a thumbs up, Danish dairies beat the Greek in the feta category of the World Cheese Championship, and the government announces a multi-million investment to end hash sales and renovate Pusher Street for good.


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  • New version of MobilePay goes live with big changes

    New changes include functions for splitting bills with others, chatting with those you send money to, and a requirement that you register under your real identity. Plus, the fate of Palads Cinema is postponed as a single committee member goes against majority vote for demolition, Novo Nordisk foresees a limit to growth in Denmark, and pharmacies issue a stark warning against counterfeit black-market slimming drugs.


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  • 1.4 million visits to annual tax statement website since Friday

    Waiting times to log in to TastSelv ran into several hours over the weekend, ahead of the official opening of the tax statement website on Monday. Plus, Europe has doubled its arms imports in the past four years, Denmark’s plans to set up its own weapons factory will be more costly than expected, and the high-profile trial of the British hedge-fund trader accused of defrauding the Danish state of DKK 12.7 billion begins today.


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  • Culture Minister: Erect more statues of women in Danish cities

    Just 31 out of 321 statues and busts in Denmark are of women. Plus, CPH Pride has apologised to its partners in an internal email for asking them to take a stance on Israel, Novo Nordisk’s stock market value reaches its highest level ever, and data shows that almost all Danish drinking-water sources contain pesticides.


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