Recently, the city council of Randers approved with the
relative majority of votes from the Liberals and the Danish People’s Party a
decision that makes it mandatory for public institutions to serve pork.
Obviously, this was not prompted by the dietary concerns of the city of
Randers, a town in the Mid-Jutland peninsula with a population of about 60
thousand people. According to the
Randers city council, municipal institutions must provide - by law - that the
daily menu at childcare centers safeguards what is seen as a principle of
Danish food culture and tradition, by compulsory including pork on a daily
basis. The representatives of the Randers municipality hastened to explain that
their decision was not to force anybody to eat anything that ‘goes against
one’s belief or religion’, oh, no, but rather only a necessary motion to
safeguard the cultural heritage of Danish gastronomic cuisine. Danish roasted
pork with parsley sauce has been nominated as Denmark’s official national dish
and was decided in a voting scheme where only 1.15% of Danes participated, and
only 40% of them voted for the pork dish.
The harsher exclusionary migration laws, the worsening of
asylum conditions, the tightening of citizenship rules, the curtailing of
welfare provisions and help to refugees, the implementation of border controls,
are all part of the competition to be the hardest-hitting and toughest on immigration
issues. Migration and asylum politics have thus been taken hostage in the
politics of vote-catching between the Liberals and the Danish People’s Party.
No comments:
Post a Comment