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PRESS EUROPEAN

Denmark

Back to work

COINCIDING with the announcement of plans to celebrate Queen Margrethe of Denmark’s 83rd birthday on April 16, court sources in Copenhagen confirmed that she hoped to resume her constitutional duties that same day, having recuperated from extensive but planned back surgery last February.

The Netherlands

Wildlife death

WK2, a wildcat tagged and monitored via GPS in 2014 and known to be at least 13 years old, died after it was run over on the N281 near Nijswillier (Limburg). This was the third time in five years that a wildcat was killed on this road, the Mammal Association said.

Belgium

Happy event

A RARE Rothschild's giraffe was born at Belgium’s Pairi Daiza zoo in the early hours of March 22. “The little one, whose sex has not yet been determined, weighs about 70 kilos, is 1.5 metres tall and is already eating well,” the zoo management announced in a Facebook post.

Germany

Joint approval

GERMANY is expected to introduce a bill which, if approved, would give the go-ahead to the consumption and sale of cannabis. Health Minister Karl said that after months of talks with Brussels, his plans, which complied with European law, had received “very good feedback” from the European Commission.

France

Roman des-res

ARCHAEOLOGISTS in Rheims unearthed a Roman structure dating back to the Second century AD. The impressive building, which once had more than 20 rooms, its own bath house and a garden, was either the home of a very wealthy person or possibly a public spa, experts said.

Norway

Meltdown

MOST of Norway's glaciers will have disappeared by 2100 even if targets to limit rising temperature are met, experts warned. As the glaciers retreat, there will be more landslides and rockfalls once the ground is no longer frozen and it becomes more unstable, said Oslo University’s Regine Hock.

Finland

Further help

FINLAND will provide an additional €12 million in humanitarian aid to help earthquake survivors in Turkey and Syria. Half will be channelled to Turkey through the Red Cross and Red Crescent organisations and the other half will reach Syria through the Syria CrossBorder Humanitarian Fund (SCHF).

Ireland

Urban forest

VOLUNTEERS in Mulhuddart (Dublin) planted Ireland’s first Tiny Forest, a concept pioneered by Japanese botanist, Akira Miyawaki. Six hundred trees planted on a tennis court-sized plot will mature within 20 or 30 years instead of 200 or 300 thanks to special planting and ground preparation methods.

ITALY No way

ITALY will debate a bill that would criminalise partners who go abroad to have a baby via a surrogate. The proposed law, which would mainly affect same-sex couples, is part of the socially-conservative ideology of prime minister Giorgia Meloni, who has little sympathy for the LGBT community.

Portugal

Custom built

ARCHITECT Tarek Shamma built La Folie, a tower in the seaside town of Melides, for luxury shoe designer Christian Louboutin. Inspired by India’s step wells and the Jantar Mantar Observatory, the unique structure was created solely as somewhere to read, meditate and host friends for drinks and parties.

Ukraine

Match point

UKRAINE took on the UK in a solidarity chess tournament as Ukrainian champion Andrei Volokitin played his British counterpart Michael Adams in the House of Commons. Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle organised the game to champion Parliament’s support for Ukraine.

Sweden

Northern lights

THE Swedish Institute of Space Physics recently created a light show in the night sky, releasing material from a sounding rocket to research the aurora borealis. The experiment was part of research to help scientists improve near-space weather forecasts to protect satellites and critical infrastructures.

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