The caped crusader is coming to the city
Wall Street protests make their way to DK
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Fix on wheels
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Denmark’s only English-language newspaper | cphpost.dk
14 - 20 October 2011 | Vol 14 Issue 41
SCANPIX
NEWS
Police under fire for snooping into private lives of COP15 arrestees
3 Dual nationality proposal greeted warmly by many
Watch out, Europe! Danes qualify for Euro 2012 after beating Portugal
14
Danes living abroad and longtime foreign residents of Denmark would benefit from change
NEWS | 5
CULTURE
The Danish film ‘Drive’ has been a hit, but one movie-goer disagrees and is taking her complaint to court
18 Dirty war The redcoats’ firebombing of Copenhagen 204 years ago left 2,000 citizens dead and destroyed nearly a third of its buildings
HISTORY | 19
9 771398 100009
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EU minister buries controversial border control JENNIFER BULEY New government knocks down ’permanent border control’ and begins work to repair damaged EU trust
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ENMARK’S new minister for European affairs, the Social Democrats’ Nicolai Wammen, took the occasion of his first EU ministerial meeting in Luxembourg on Monday to underscore that Denmark’s new government fully supports the Schengen Agreement and wants to repair relationships damaged by the previous government’s ‘permanent border control’ agreement. “We were certainly against the agree-
ment that the last government made with the Danish People’s Party (DF). We think it’s the wrong way to use our money,” Wammen told Politiken newspaper. “At the same time, the border control agreement between the last government and the DF also hurt Denmark’s reputation in the EU.” In May, Lars Løkke Rasmussen’s centre-right government enacted the permanent border control agreement at the demand of the DF and in exchange for the DF’s support of early retirement reforms. The agreement set off an international firestorm, with Germany leading the fight. Critics, including top German politicians and members of the Europe-
an Commission, claimed that Denmark was violating the Schengen Agreement and other EU treaties guaranteeing the free movement of people and goods. The Danish Confederation of Businesses (DI) complained that the government and the DF were damaging Denmark’s reputation internationally, making it difficult to do business. Meanwhile, Denmark earned the dubious honour of inspiring France’s right-wing nationalist party, Front National, to call for controls like Denmark’s. However, the whole border control debate took a sharp U-turn when the Social Democrat-Social Liberal-Socialist People’s Party (S-R-SF) coalition government took office this month.
Macaroons and French pastry, in a modern enviroment
Free access to 65 museums and attractions in the entire metropolitan area
Brasserie Degas re-open its doors in a new location, proposing again to all its customers, the famous club sandwich and Foie Gras salat. Brasserie Degas / Le macaron by Degas - Trommesalen 5, 1614 Copenhagen V - www.brasseriedegas.dk - Tlf.: +45 33 22 28 26
A paragraph of the S-R-SF government’s common policy, released earlier this month, emphasises Denmark’s commitment to the Schengen Agreement and to co-operating with other EU countries on border controls according to common EU treaties and rules. The paragraph ends by stating that “the plans from May 2011 to erect new control systems at the Danish borders will not be implemented.” “I am very happy that we have made the decision to reverse the old government’s decision. It means we can use Danish taxes more sensibly,” Wammen said. “At the same time, it’s clearly an advantage in terms of having a good cooperation with the other EU countries, including Germany.”
See more at copenhagencard.com