Norway Daily No. 88/03
Historical archive
Published under: Bondevik's 2nd Government
Publisher: Ministry of Foreign Affairs
News story | Date: 12/05/2003 | Last updated: 21/10/2006
The Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
Oslo
Press Division – Editor: Benedicte Tresselt Koren
Norway Daily No. 88/03
Date: 12 May 2003
Brende to ride environmental shotgun for Kofi Annan (Aftenposten/Sunday)
Late on Friday night in New York, Norway’s Environment
Minister Børge Brende (Con) was chosen to lead the UN’s Commission
on Sustainable Development. The EU countries and the G-77 (the
group of developing countries) had asked Mr Brende to stand as a
candidate. Both Mr Brende and Norway’s Development Assistance
Minister Hilde Frafjord Johnson made a strong impression during the
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg last
autumn. Among other things, the two ensured that environmental
regulations would not be considered of secondary importance to the
rules governing free-trade issued by the WTO. Mr Brende is taking
on no small task. His mandate is to ensure that the many
resolutions adopted at Johannesburg are actually being put into
effect. However, Mr Brende has promised that Norwegian
environmental and conservation issues will not suffer, even if he
has to spend a great deal of time on the UN commission.
New Christian Democrat deputy leader says no to Labour (Verdens Gang/Sunday)
"I cannot envisage the Christian Democrats sharing power with
the Labour Party, either in the short or medium term. And I do not
want to speculate about such a thing, while the coalition we are
already a part of is working so well. Nevertheless, we will
undoubtedly continue to cooperate with the Labour Party on an
ad-hoc basis," said Knut Arild Hareide, newly elected deputy leader
of the Christian Democratic Party. At its annual conference this
weekend, Mr Hareide was described as ‘the new Bondevik’, and tipped
as the party’s next leader. Mr Hareide himself is more modest. "Mr
Bondevik has a unique position within the party. I was elected as
deputy leader not the ‘next leader’. The Christian Democratic Party
has had many good deputy leaders that never became party leader,
such as my political role-model, Jon Lilletun," said Mr
Hareide.
Learn from Gro Harlem Brundtland! (Verdens Gang/Sunday)
Jens Stoltenberg and Carl I. Hagen have both called on Prime
Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik to pull himself together and learn
from the way legendary Labour leader Gro Harlem Brundtland managed
the job of being prime minister. Mr Stoltenberg and Mr Hagen are,
each for their different reasons, sick of what they describe as the
whingeing and whining coming from the PM and other leading
government ministers. The two claim that Mr Bondevik has a lot to
learn from Ms Harlem Brundtland, who sought cooperation and
solutions rather than confrontation and constant threats. Mr
Stoltenberg also pointed out that Mr Bondevik or other members of
his cabinet have threatened to resign over a total of four
different issues since the start of the year.
Call for Bondevik to explain his position (Dagens Næringsliv/Saturday)
Gerd-Liv Valla, president of the Norwegian Confederation of
Trade Unions (LO), is demanding that Prime Minister Kjell Magne
Bondevik make it clear whether the Government has a deliberate
policy of removing LO representatives from the boards of directors
of state-owned companies. "In conversations with us, Mr Bondevik
has said that he and his government have absolutely no intention of
excluding LO representatives from company boards. I want
clarification of whether the Government has changed its position on
this matter," said Ms Valla. DN reported yesterday that the
Government intends to sack LO vice president Roar Flåthen from the
board of Kongsberg Gruppen. Since the Bondevik government took
over, the LO has lost representation on the boards of directors of
four companies in which the state has a major shareholding. The LO
is now not represented on any such companies’ boards.
Bondevik to sell whale meat to Japan (Aftenposten)
Norway’s whalers trust Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik to
boost sales of whale meat to Japan. At the end of May, Mr Bondevik
will visit Japan, and whale meat exports are among the issues he
will be discussing with his Japanese counterpart. "Exports to Japan
have not got started. They are continually making new demands with
regard to quality and labelling," said Johan Williams, director
general of the Ministry of Fisheries, in an interview with the
radio station, P4. The Norwegian authorities have relaxed the
self-imposed restrictions banning exports of whale products. Some
exports now go to the Faroe Islands and Iceland, but it is the
Japanese market that offers the greatest opportunities.
Hafslund under investigation (Dagbladet/Sunday)
The Banking, Insurance and Securities Commission is
investigating the energy company Hafslund for suspected violations
of the Securities Trading Act. The commission suspects that someone
in the company may have leaked sensitive information to Dagbladet.
The commission was prompted into action by an article in last
Monday’s edition of the newspaper. The article reported financial
figures for Hafslund, which is listed on the stock exchange, that
had not been publicly released. The figures were later shown to be
correct, and the commission has therefore initiated a hunt for the
source of Dagbladet’s information. "This kind of information is
supposed to be published via the Oslo Stock Exchange. When
financial results appear in the newspapers before they are supposed
to, it could be a violation of section 2.2 of the Securities
Trading Act," said Jarle Johansen, a senior consultant at the
Banking, Insurance and Securities Commission.
SAS ignores Gabrielsen (Dagsavisen/Saturday)
SAS’s management has not been intimidated by the warnings
issued last week by Norwegian Trade and Industry Minister Ansgar
Gabrielsen. They are putting financial considerations ahead of the
need to share out jobs between Norway, Sweden and Denmark. SAS’s
management believes the agreement to share out jobs is of minor
interest when the company’s financial position is under threat. The
company simply cannot afford to take national interests into
consideration, as demanded by Mr Gabrielsen. "SAS will continue to
be a Scandinavian company, but the enormous financial challenges
facing us mean that other things are more important than national
considerations," said Simen Revold, SAS’s head of corporate
communications, in an interview with Dagsavisen. According to the
consortium agreement on which SAS is built, there must be a
reasonable distribution of jobs between Sweden, Denmark and
Norway.
Iceland only dissenter on Norwegian herring (Aftenposten)’
According to the Norwegian Foreign Ministry, there is no
doubt about Norway’s sovereign right to regulate fishing activity
in the Svalbard zone. However, Iceland is threatening to bring
Norway before the International Court of Justice in the Hague if
the Norwegian Coast Guard arrests Icelandic fishing boats operating
within the protection zone. Karsten Klepsvik, a spokesman for the
Norwegian Foreign Ministry, is unworried by the threat. This year
Norway and Iceland have not managed to reach agreement on herring
catches, and Iceland is threatening drastic measures if any of its
trawlers are detained by the Norwegian Coast Guard.
Worth Noting
- Christian Democratic Party chairwoman Valgerd Svarstad Haugland
could have got herself two new young deputy leaders, but refused to
allow Einar Steensnæs to leave the party leadership. The party’s
annual conference must therefore choose between Dagrun Eriksen and
Knut Arild Hareide as second deputy leader, while Mr Steensnæs
continues as first deputy leader. Together the two candidates are
as old as Mr Steensnæs.
(Verdens Gang/Saturday) - One in five of those who voted Christian Democrat at the
general election in 2001 now say they would vote for the Progress
Party, according to a analysis specially commissioned by the
political parties.
(Dagens Næringsliv/Saturday) - Law professor Carl August Fleischer has just published a report
savaging the Norwegian Bar Association’s treatment of attorney
Thor-Erik Johansen. The association’s chairman Helge Aarseth, in
particular, is the subject of withering criticism.
(Dagbladet) - According to the industrial sector facing international
competition, high transport costs are a bigger problem than the
level of direct and indirect taxes. The wood processing industry
has now called for transport policy to be transferred to the
Ministry of Trade and Industry.
(Nationen) - 26,000 car-owners have still not paid their annual motor
vehicle licence fee for 2002. The State Agency for the Recovery of
Fines, Damages and Costs will now ensure that 18,000 of them will
have the licence fee deducted straight from their salaries. Private
creditors are only very rarely allowed to use the same method to
recover their debts.
(Nationen) - A Christian Democratic Party working group wants beer taken off
the supermarket shelves and transferred to the Vinmonopol, the
state-owned retail monopoly for wines and spirits. "If the sale of
beer is switched to the Vinmonopol, the volume sold will fall. For
the breweries, the proposal is dramatic," said Jan Bodd, chief
executive of Ringnes, Norway’s largest beer brand. He is predicting
brewery closures and job losses if the Christian Democrats’
proposal is adopted,.
(Klassekampen)
Today’s comment from Dagens Næringsliv
The Christian Democratic Party has held its annual
conference, and has made it clear, by a substantial majority vote,
that it likes being in power in partnership with the Conservatives,
even though some party activists think the opposite. Unless the
Labour Party and Progress Party force Mr Bondevik to resign, the
coalition government will continue to rub along together for the
foreseeable future. The foreseeable future being the next two
years. The battle for the Christian Democratic Party’s soul will be
fought out in 2005. Opinion polls seem to have come to rest at a
stable majority in favour of Norway joining the EU. If the ruling
coalition parties are to ask the voters for a renewal of their
joint mandate in 2005, the Christian Democratic Party will have to
change its views on EU membership. It will not be easy, even if the
party did give itself a young and dynamic supporter of EU
membership when it voted Knut Arild Hareide in as deputy leader.
The EEA Agreement is creaking at the seams. The EU has screwed up
the price, and a substantial majority of the population wants full
membership. If the Christian Democrats say yes to EU membership in
two years’ time, the party risks modernizing itself away from its
voters. If it says no, the party risks following the Centre Party
down the road to parliamentary oblivion – as the mouthpiece of a
constantly shrinking minority interest group.