Steroids are an accepted part of many Danish gyms
Did Jesus really die upon that cross?
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6 -11 April 2013 | Vol 16 Issue 14
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After weeks of warning, the teacher lockout is on
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Denmark’s only English-language newspaper | cphpost.dk PRIVATE PHOTO
NEWS
As search for missing Dane in Switzerland turns up no leads, police suspect suicide
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NEWS
Injection room works Copenhagen’s first legal drug injection room saves 30 lives in its first six months of operation
7 SPORT
Colliding cultures Part II of our series: The ups and downs of when Danes and non-Danes marry A new rugby union youth initiative could see the country become super-competitive in the 2020s
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BUSINESS
With the government’s investments in infrastructure, there are concerns about the lack of skilled labour
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Report contradicts Defence Ministry on Afghan interpreters PETER STANNERS
Not enough workers?
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Defence minister offers help to eight Afghan interpreters, but new information raises questions over whether Denmark should offer help to far more
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HE DEFENCE Ministry did not relay accurate information to parliament about the safety of the Afghan interpreters who assisted Danish forces, according to Information newspaper. The inaccuracies were exposed in a report prepared by the military’s chief of defence, Peter Bartam, which was delivered to parliament’s Defence Committee on Tuesday. The report revealed that the Defence Ministry knew that five interpret-
ers had been killed and 12 others had been injured while working with Danish forces. In January, the defence minister, Nick Hækkerup (Socialdemokraterne), told Jyllands-Posten newspaper that he did not know of any killed or injured interpreters. Hækkerup later attempted to clarify that he knew that interpreters had been killed, but not that they were working for Danish forces, because that information had not been relayed to him. The Danish military’s lack of accurate information on interpreters was blamed on the fact that Denmark does not directly employ its interpreters, but instead leases them from the US and British forces. The report states that “[the Defence Command] has been largely dependent upon information made available by
foreign partners, and the Defence Command therefore only has a limited ability to validate the information.” The report was commissioned in March by the Defence Ministry following revelations that the Danish forces had used interpreters drawn from their local communities, contradicting repeated statements Hækkerup made to the contrary. The revelations sparked a debate about Denmark’s responsibility for the safety of interpreters after the NATOled ISAF forces withdraw from Afghanistan, with many arguing that the interpreters ought to be offered the chance to seek asylum in Denmark. Hækkerup has previously argued that Denmark has no responsibility to take care of the interpreters. He said that Denmark did not employ them directly
and that the interpreters were not drawn from the local communities where they worked, thus making them less susceptible to reprisal attacks from Taleban forces. Following evidence that at least eight of the 195 interpreters Denmark used were drawn from their local communities, Hækkerup announced on Tuesday that those individual interpreters would be offered help. “We need to take all the interpreters into consideration, but these eight are particularly threatened because they have to return to the same local region where they have worked as interpreters,” Hækkerup told Politiken newspaper. Hækkerup added that the details had yet be agreed upon, but they could involve paying interpreters and their families to relocate to less dangerous areas of the country.
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