Showing posts with label Denmark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denmark. Show all posts

Monday, October 11, 2021

Denmark to ban violent offenders from night-life zones

COPENHAGEN - Police in Copenhagen have set up four "no go" zones aimed at barring violent offenders from popular night-life areas in a bid to reduce violence in a country known for its low crime rates.

Under a new law, Danish courts can exclude people convicted of violent crime from "night life zones" set up by police, effectively controlling after-dark access to whole streets popular with partygoers.

"We have definitely got a new tool, a tool that affects the few, but which helps the many," Copenhagen police inspector Tommy Laursen told Reuters.

In an early application of the new law, a court in Helsingor last week gave a 24-year-old Dane a five-month prison sentence for violent behaviour.

In addition, he was handed a nine-months ban from visiting pubs, restaurants and places that serve alcohol between midnight and 5 a.m. as weall as being excluded from night-life zones.

In Copenhagen, prosecutors will on Monday use the new law in a violent crime case against a 31-year-old man.

Despite having declined in recent years, violence in bars and clubs is a major contributor to Denmark's violent crime statistics.

Many of those convicted of violence in night life venues are repeat offenders, Laursen said.

Violating a ban, which can last up to two years, will initially result in a fine of 10,000 Danish crowns ($1,500). A second offense means 30 days in prison, Laursen said.

-reuters

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Lego goes digital to keep building


BILLUND, Denmark - Danish toy maker Lego will move deeper into the digital world, with more computer games and tie-ups with popular movie franchises, as it battles to grow in a shrinking toy market, its chief executive told Reuters.

Jorgen Vig Knudstorp said on Friday growth in sales of the group's trademark colorful plastic building bricks was likely to slow in the coming years as sluggish economies in its main European market take their toll.

But he was optimistic the world's third-largest manufacturer of play materials would outperform the broader toy market, helped by growing demand in Asia, as well as its drive to combine the worlds of physical and virtual play.

"My aim is to continue to reinvent Lego," Knudstorp said in an interview in his bright corner office, surrounded by Lego boxes, bricks and toys.

"To seize the digital revolution and make it our advantage is vital," he said, adding he personally spends on average two hours a week playing with Lego.

The world toy market fell by around 4 percent in the first half of this year, Lego estimates, hit by a faltering global economy and ever-increasing competition from digital games, whether oncomputers, mobile phones, tablets or games consoles.

Lego has bucked the trend by turning a threat to an advantage, tying up with global movie franchises like Star Wars, Harry Potter and Indiana Jones in deals that span Lego sets and computer games.

The company has also embraced mobile devices with initiatives such as its "Life of George" app, which challenges players to build a Lego construction in a certain amount of time and allows them to compete against their friends.

The key is using the digital world to encourage playing with the real thing, because the one thing that is not negotiable for Knudstorp is Lego's devotion to its core plastic bricks.

"I trust that we can continue to make a physical toy," he said.

Lego, with some 10,000 staff worldwide, grew revenues by 17 percent to 18.7 billion Danish crowns ($3.3 billion) last year, while pretax profit rose 13 percent to 5.54 billion crowns.

The Lego group was founded in 1932 by Ole Kirk Kristiansen and has passed from father to son, and is now owned by Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, a grandchild of the founder. Knudstorp took over as chief executive from Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen in 2004.

Its products cost from about $2 for a box of simple building blocks to about $400 for a box containing 3,152 components to be assembled into a model space ship.

The original Legoland

Located in Billund in southwest Denmark, Lego's presence in the town is unmistakable.

Visitors do not have to search long for a Lego character, logo, shop or the Legoland theme park. And while Billund has just 6,500 inhabitants, Lego employs 3,500 staff, of which about 700 people live in the town.

There is also Billund airport, the country's second biggest after the one in the capital Copenhagen. That has grown from a tiny building in the 1960s with a small propeller aircraft which on some early occasions relied on Billund inhabitants and the front lights of their cars to light up the runway after sunset.

For the children of Billund, what the company calls market research translates as playtime. They are regularly consulted on products, old and new.

Lego, which combines two Danish words that roughly translate as "play well", makes about half of its revenue in Europe, about 40 percent in the Americas and about 10 percent in Asia.

Asia is now its fastest growing market, however, currently growing at around 50 percent per year. As a result, Lego is looking to establish a number of factories in the region to add to its current production in Denmark, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Mexico.

"We use our financial strength to invest in our own development, staff, factories and innovation," Knudstorp said.

Acquisitions, though, are not part of the plan.

"We have never made an acquisition, and have no plans to make one," he said. "We are all about Lego, Lego and Lego."

source: interaksyon.com

Sunday, May 6, 2012

SSS Eyes More OFW Deals

MANILA, Philippines — The Social Security System (SSS) is set to enter into bilateral agreements within the year with three countries in an effort to protect the welfare of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) even after the expiration of their contracts.

SSS Senior Vice President Judy Frances A. See said in an interview they are set to start negotiation with Japan, while it is already about to sign an agreement with Portugal. SSS has also ongoing negotiation with Denmark.

“We’re going to negotiate with Japan by the second semester, so we’re expecting a visit from them in the second half,” See said.

The deal with Japan should benefit more OFWs as the increase in the entry of nurses in Japan is part of the Philippines Japan Economic Partnership Agreement entered by both countries in 2006.

“There is also a clamor from our Filipino community in Denmark because without the agreement, the benefits will not be exportable to that country. If we have an agreement, and if they decide to come home, they will have a fallback,” See said.

Foreign countries are traditionally hesitant about entering into this agreement since bilaterals benefit OFWs more than their foreign nationals considering they usually have fewer nationals in the Philippines. But the government is expecting positive responses for this move since OFWs legitimately contribute to the social security system of these countries along with the payments of their employers.

Among countries, SSS has difficulty seeking negotiations with Middle East countries where there are more than one million OFWs.

To date, SSS has existing bilateral agreements with the United Kingdom, Spain, France, Netherlands, Belgium, Canada, the independent province of Quebec, and Switzerland.

The bilateral agreements should have four provisions. These are equality of treatment — whatever treatment to other foreign workers in a country should be accorded to OFWs; export of benefits — a benefit of a Filipino OFW should be remitted to the Philippines once his contract expires; totalization of benefit or a benefit should be granted to an OFW pro rata for the period of time for which he has rendered service even if he has not completed a pre-agreed period of entitlement; and mutual administrative assistance.

Susie Bugante, SSS vice president, said the pension fund has a plan to introduce a new program for returning OFWs particularly to finance livelihood or entrepreneurial program.

“DOLE (Department of Labor and Employment) has brought up a proposal to finance a program for OFWs like the Sulong program that we have had even before,” said Bugante. “We will have more returning OFWs who are bringing home a set of skills that they have used abroad, and we have to support them.”

Sulong or the SME (Small and Medium Enterprise) Unified Lending Opportunities for National Growth is a financing program of SSS and other government financial institutions for SMEs.

SSS has started promoting membership to OFWs specially those that are just under contract as it considers them the most vulnerable to financial difficulties compared to immigrants.

Recently, SSS awarded raffle prizes to nine OFWs as part of its promotion to get more members. Three prizes were allocated for those working in the Asia Pacific, three for the Middle East, and three for the rest of the world.

SSS is targeting a total OFW membership to 500,000 by end this year from the 200,000 at the start of the year.

source: mb.com.ph


Sunday, April 29, 2012

The World's No.1 Restaurant

MANILA, Philippines — Epicureans around the world have set their eyes and taste buds on this new haven.

No, sir. It is not in Spain or Tokyo or Paris. Say, goodbye, for now to El Bulli, Nuvo, and to the three 3-star restaurants owned by French chef Alain Ducasse.

Then where is this new revered dining place? It is in Copenhagen, Denmark, and it is called Noma. It opened only in 2003.

This Nordic haven is owned by a young Danish chef named Rene Redzepi, and he is only 34 years old.

“The man runs the best restaurant in the world,” commends TIME magazine of March 26, 2012.

In the world of Epicureans, if a restaurant is rated No. 1, it follows that its chef achieves the same ranking.

Top chefs around the world concede Noma is the best and the finest dining enclave on this planet today. And yet only a handful have ever dined there.

The few who have been privileged to sit at a table and savor its imaginative but ingeniously Danish cuisine are the pillars of international dining connoisseurs’ league, and, of course, the moneyed set.

TIME says Noma occupies the top spot on the world’s 50 best restaurants list published every year by the respected international RESTAURANT magazine.

Again, what makes it the hallowed dining establishment in the world today?

The answer is simple: Noma serves only foods that are truly Nordic, which means the raw food, ingredients, and anything else that is goes into the casserole are essentially Danish. The exceptional talent of chef Redzepi seals in the internationally acclaimed cuisine.

Ironically, it was only in 2003 that Danes realized their cuisine is exceptionally delicious and it did not take long for the rest of the world to agree. That year Noma opened for business.

On the trivia side, I was curious what the US news weekly mentioned in its cover story of Noma and Redzepi. Two Nordic dishes are similar to what some regional Filipino restaurants serve.

For example, Noma has Danish ants and cured bear meat; our Pinoy restos offer the breakfast fare beef tapa, while a few – notably, the Cabalen chain – serve the crispy Capangpangan camaru or those chirping ricefield crickets.

Today Noma’s tables are fully booked three months in advance. That means any gourmand anywhere in the world whose pockets are bulging with cash, and desirous of dining at the Copenhagen establishment can start making reservations now for a table in August.

source: mb.com.ph