Tight-lipped Mona Juul back in Tel Aviv
(Aftenposten)
After two days of meetings with her
Foreign Ministry superiors, a tired Mona Juul returned to Israel
yesterday evening. She has been telling senior officials at the
Foreign Ministry about the prize money she received from the Peres
Foundation in Israel in 1999. Concluding the meetings both sides
signed a protocol of dispute in accordance with section 18 of the
Civil Service Act. Section 18 covers the procedures to be used if a
civil servant is to be reprimanded, given the sack or dismissed
without notice. It is now up to Foreign Minister Jan Petersen to
make up his mind. Ambassador Mona Juul yesterday declined to
comment on the substance of her meetings. "I explained my point of
view, which I have previously done in writing, and that is all I
can say on the matter," said Ms Juul to NRK before returning to
Israel.
Stoltenberg defends Juul appointment (Dagsavisen)
Labour deputy leader Jens
Stoltenberg has said he sees nothing wrong in Mona Juul being
appointed Ambassador to Israel during his term as Prime Minister,
despite the fact that she was a State Secretary in the government
which appointed her. Ms Juul’s appointment has recently been
attacked both because a number of Foreign Ministry officials claim
she received the attractive ambassadorship ‘out of turn’, and
because she was part of the same political leadership which
appointed her. In addition, the post was not advertised internally.
Yesterday the Storting’s Scrutiny and Constitutional Affairs
Committee sent a number of questions to the Foreign Ministry
regarding the appointment. The Committee wants to know if the
appointment followed normal procedures.
Petersen: Juul’s job as safe as anyone’s
(Dagsavisen)
"Ambassador Mona Juul is in exactly
the same position as any other ambassador when it comes to job
security," said Foreign Minister Jan Petersen to Dagsavisen. Mr
Petersen is thought to have been incensed by an article in
yesterday’s Aftenposten claiming he was about to ask Ms Juul to
seek another post within the Foreign Ministry. The leaks will be
dealt with internally within the Ministry, whose political
leadership now intends to insist that employees toe the line.
Full investigation into peace process spending
(Dagbladet)
The Storting’s Scrutiny and
Constitutional Affairs Committee has called for a full
investigation into the way Norwegian cash was spent in connection
with the Middle East peace process. This gives Foreign Minister Jan
Petersen a welcome opportunity to dismantle what he has called the
Labour network in Norwegian foreign policy. Former Foreign Minister
Thorbjørn Jagland reacted strongly to Mr Petersen’s comments about
the Labour network during the Conservative Party’s annual
conference, though his public statement on the issue was subdued.
However, Dagbladet has learned that Prime Minister Kjell Magne
Bondevik is backing Mr Petersen’s efforts to ‘clear up’ the
situation. This could mean public hearings involving the
questioning of former Foreign Ministers.
Minimalist manifesto from Stoltenberg and Labour
(Dagsavisen)
When Jens Stoltenberg yesterday
presented Labour’s proposed manifesto ahead of the next local
elections, he underlined the need for it to be as small as
possible. The most important proposals in the party’s manifesto are
as follows: use the Government Petroleum Fund to create a dedicated
pension fund to secure the finances of the state pension scheme;
introduce legislation to ensure that pensions are adjusted in line
with annual wage inflation; use the Norwegian State Housing Bank
for the construction of around 6,000 homes specially aimed at young
people, students, the elderly and the poor; evaluate a merger
between the Norwegian Industrial and Regional Development Fund
(SND), the Industrial Development Corporation of Norway (SIVA) and
the Norwegian Trade Council – with the new organization’s head
offices to be located outside Oslo.
Identity of Orkla investor unknown (Dagens
Næringsliv)
An unidentified investor has in
recent weeks acquired over five per cent of the shares in Orkla,
the industrial, media and investment conglomerate. The shares have
been purchased through SEB Merchant Bank, a Norwegian subsidiary of
Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken. Orka’s chief executive, Finn Jebsen,
has so far not made any move to discover the identity of Orkla’s
new shareholder. But if friends of former boss Jens P. Heyerdahl
are behind the accumulation of shares, it could signal a new battle
for control of the company.
Population growth expensive for local authorities
(Nationen)
Changes in the population will cost
local authorities at least NOK 1.2 billion next year. This is twice
as much as the figure by which the Government intends to increase
the sector’s non-ear marked funds. As a result a number of local
councils may be forced to cut services. Local Government and
Regional Affairs Minister Erna Solberg will today present the
Government’s proposal for transfers to the local government sector
in 2003.
1.1.1 Worth Noting
- Progress Party chairman Carl I. Hagen has launched a fierce
attack on Foreign Minister Jan Petersen for his handling of the
‘peace prize affair’. "In my opinion Mr Petersen has handled this
matter badly and will find his reputation tarnished as a result."
(Dagavisen)
- Ambassador Mona Juul does not need to pay the prize money back
to the Peres Centre or hand it over to the Foreign Ministry,
regardless of the final outcome of the affair. The Foreign
Ministry’s legal advisers have reached this conclusion after
considering whether Mona Juul should be required to repay the NOK
450,000 she received from the Peres Centre in 1999. (Verdens
Gang)
- The two sides in the on-going hotel strike have decided to take
a break from negotiations until 18 May. Hotel workers have been on
strike for over a month and will be stepping up their action even
further on Wednesday morning. (NTB)
- The Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions (LO) has attacked
the Trade and Industry Minister’s report to the Storting on
state-ownership, which the unions claim only focuses on state
sell-offs. The LO is demanding a new evaluation of how the state
should manage its shareholdings in Norwegian businesses.
(Aftenposten)
- Society could save almost NOK 500 million by giving methadone
or Subutex to the country’s hard-core drug users. This is the
conclusion of a project in which 50 drug users participated.
Because they needed less help, stole less and spent less time in
prison, the authorities saved NOK 360,000 per person.
(Aftenposten)
- The Transport Ministry is considering whether to introduce a
zero-limit for the use of narcotic substances when driving. Today
drivers in Norway who are caught with just a small amount of
narcotics in their blood get off with an on-the-spot optional fine.
This means they are fined only for using narcotics, not for being
under the influence of a narcotic substance when driving.
(Aftenposten)
- The Labour Party led by Jens Stoltenberg have come out in
favour of proposals to transform the Government Petroleum Fund into
a pension fund. The idea now has the support of a parliamentary
majority, but what such a pension fund would actually look like
remains a matter for conjecture. (Dagens Næringsliv)
- For decades they were the subject of illegal surveillance by
intelligence officers. Now the Organization Against Political
Surveillance is stepping up its demands for the Government to make
a public apology for the injustice and suffering they were
subjected to. (Dagsavisen)
- The Government will today propose legislation to put private
and local authority-run day care on an equal footing. "We must
ensure that more private nurseries do not go to the wall," said
Children and Family Affairs Minister Laila Dåvøy. She also strongly
supports the Labour Party’s proposal to cap nursery fees at NOK
1,500 per month. (Vårt Land)
1.1.2 Today’s comment from Dagbladet
The Labour Party yesterday
presented its plans for pre-school day care. The introduction of a
maximum fee, the creation of more nursery places and the
introduction of a legal right to day care for pre-school children
formed the main planks in the party’s policy. The Government has
followed up by proposing that private nurseries should receive
larger state grants. These are good proposals. But the most
important thing is that they should form the basis for a broad
cross-party agreement in the Storting. There is hardly any other
area in which politicians’ promises have been broken more often
than this. To ensure voters are spared any more broken promises a
parliamentary majority which supports a robust public day care
policy must be mobilized. The Socialist Left Party should therefore
abandon its deal with the Progress Party as quickly as possible and
instead join the Government and the Labour Party in a long-term
drive to improve the provision of pre-school day care.
1.1.3 Sport
Norway 3-0 Japan