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Norway's king and queen set for State visit

category mayo | environment | other press author Saturday September 16, 2006 14:52author by Irish Times Reader Report this post to the editors

Cut and Paste from the Times website - cut and paste as it is a subscription site.
Norway monarchs to visit here early next week.

Norway's king and queen set for State visit
Kathy Sheridan
09/09/2006

The first State visit to Ireland by a Norwegian monarch - excluding an uninvited visit 1,200 years ago - has been announced.
King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway are due to arrive in Dún Laoghaire for the three-day visit on September 17th on a tour that will include meetings with the President and the Taoiseach, as well as visits to the mayors of Dublin and Cork.
Resonances of Norway's seafaring tradition and the king's keen interest in sailing will be evident in their mode of arrival.
The couple will spend their first night in Ireland on board the royal yacht, the white-painted Norge, and the following morning will begin the formal visit by sailing from Dún Laoghaire up the Liffey, arriving in ceremony at North Wall Quay at 11.15am.
The day will include a tree-planting ceremony at Áras an Uachtaráin and a wreath-laying ceremony at the Garden of Remembrance, ending with a State dinner in Dublin Castle hosted by the President, after which the couple will spend the night in Farmleigh House.
On September 19th King Harald will give the opening address at a veterinary conference at UCD on the topic "Functional Genomics: The New Route to Food Quality and Improved Animal Health", where the Norwegian minister of fisheries and coastal affairs, Helga Pederson, will also be a speaker.
Meanwhile, Queen Sonja will be at Trinity College opening seminars on Ibsen and gender issues.
She will also view the Book of Kells before going on to open an exhibition of Ibsen portraits by Haakon Gullvaag at the National Library.
A keen art collector, she is also expected to visit the Yeats exhibition at the National Gallery in the afternoon while the king is at the National Museum.
Later, the queen will give a lecture entitled "Impressions of Norway" at the Four Seasons hotel, followed by a buffet featuring Norwegian food.

Royals to pay a sailing visit
Lorna Siggins, Marine Correspondent
11/09/2006

When the good ship KS Norge drops anchor in Dublin Bay later this week, it will mark the first State visit by a royal yacht since Victorian times to two former royal ports.
The 80 metre vessel is due to berth in both Dún Laoghaire (formerly Kingstown) and Cobh (Queenstown) during the State visit by King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway. The craft is currently en route to Ireland from the Mediterranean, crewed by 34 members of the Norwegian navy.
The royal couple are due to join the yacht next Sunday, and will fulfil a number of official engagements in Dublin on Monday, including meetings with the President, Mary McAleese, and Taoiseach Bertie Ahern.
Weather permitting, the royal couple will travel from Dublin to Cork by sea for a conference on Wednesday, September 20th, on maritime governance in the State's new maritime college at Ringaskiddy.
The Naval Service will handle liaison duties during the three-day visit from September 18th to 20th, but Queen Sonja intends to see a bit more of the Irish coastline after official duties are over. She will remain on the KS Norge and will cruise the south-west coastline as part of a private tour during the rest of that week, and anchorages have already been checked out on the west Cork coastline for this purpose.
The Norwegian royal yacht is one of the last held by European monarchs. It was originally built for Sir Thomas Sopwith in 1836 and was commissioned in 1946 as a regal vessel.

By royal appointment
15/09/2006

Ahead of next week's State visit by the king and queen of Norway, the royal couple talk to Kathy Sheridan in their Oslo palace
The Vikings return next Monday morning and King Harald V of Norway knows that some delicacy is required. "Hopefully it will be with a bit more friendship and peace than we did the last time," he laughs. Given that the red-hair gene is reckoned to be of Viking origin, they left more than a few city ports behind them after the last big hove-to 1,200 years ago.
"It will be maybe a bit away from the coming of the Vikings. This boat is white," says the king, referring to the Norge, the royal yacht, that will waft the king and Queen Sonja from Dún Laoghaire up the Liffey, before dropping anchor at the North Wall at 11.15am for the start of a three-day State visit.
We are sitting in the queen's (literally) palatial office, on a stifling day in Oslo. The only signs of pomp and circumstance about the modest white palace, perched on open, public space on a hill overlooking the city's main thoroughfare, are the expressionless royal guard, who on some invisible signal, suddenly set off with remarkable precision for a quick march back and forth.
No high walls or fences separate the people from the working palace. Inside, the visitor is led by a pleasant, relaxed press secretary through splendid halls of grey painted floors, beautiful old rugs and magnificent chandeliers, the remarkable murals in the so-called "Bird Room", on to uncluttered offices, furnished with light, carefully-chosen antiques.
The queen, a commoner, who in another life says that she might have been "a teacher, or a sewing woman - I have a diploma from Switzerland - or interior designer maybe," is responsible for the decor. A startling feature of her office wall is an Andy Warhol original portrait of herself. "Yes," she says in precise, rather amused English, "I tried old-fashioned, elderly paintings in here but that didn't work." "I call them normal!" interjects the king.
Sonja, a connoisseur of contemporary art among other things, visited Warhol's New York factory in 1982, where, after some consultation, he smeared her with chalk "or something that made the whole face white", and took a lot of pictures. Warhol produced six portraits in different colours, one of which is in her office. Another hangs in the Norwegian National Gallery of contemporary art, and a third was bought back by the extended family at a New York auction.
HARALD AND SONJA are a team who seem to like one another. They have an easy rapport - she interrupts when she feels like it, he makes supportive asides, they seem to find a lot of things quite funny, and are formal without being stuffy. The monarchy is liked well enough by the people, although opinion polls suggest that their popularity is falling, especially with the young. Nonetheless, reports of royal events, weddings and christenings are a media staple in Norway. The last and only referendum held to determine if the country should have a monarchy was in 1905, but Harald's grandfather consolidated their standing when he stood up to Nazi (and some home-grown) demands to abdicate during the second World War and became a national symbol of resistance.
Through the generations they have melded into normal life. The king was sent to what he calls a "normal school" (although his sisters had a private school at home) and the couple then sent their children to regular schools where they had what the queen calls "normal friends".
Through the latest generations, they have weathered various storms, mainly triggered by marriage to commoners. The first was Harald to Sonja - "that caused quite a big fuss, yes," he says wryly. The second was the very controversial choice by Crown Prince Haakon of the glamorous Mette-Marit, a waitress and a bit of a wild child, whose history included a drug-taking boyfriend, with whom she had a son. But the ex-boyfriend never talked, the marriage went ahead and Norwegians took a "let's see how she behaves from here" attitude. Now at 33, she has supplied an heir, while becoming a hard-working royal and a crowd magnet on State visits abroad.
On living in the eye of the media, Harald comments: "I'm glad to say that - if you excuse my expression - it's not quite as bad as it is in Britain. It's a lot better, but it is developing in the same direction in a way. So we try to shield the small children from that sort of thing."
The queen nods in agreement. "We try to share - and ought to share - every event like weddings and christenings and birthdays, but there is a limit. We are particularly careful about the little space we have left, like when my husband is sailing and I'm walking in the mountains."
She will be 70 next year and is still walking mountains, although "a bit afraid of heights. I do it when I have the chance," she says.
"She's still young you know," insists her supportive husband. Her clear skin and slim figure are a testament to mountain walking.
She has been to Ireland a couple of times before, once in 1995 to open a "Viking Inspiration" jewellery exhibition in Dublin, when she also visited the Long Library in Trinity College. In 2002, she went on what she calls "a garden tour" from Dublin to Cork, and remembers particularly the Helen Dillon garden in Dublin and the one at Castletown Cox, Co Kilkenny, as well as a visit to Newgrange, to which she will not be returning, she says with interesting conviction. She recalls that although they took a helicopter to the Co Meath site, they returned by road, which left quite an impression.
"That road was bad," she stresses.
This time, she will be staying for four or five days after the State component, to take another gardening tour, with a particular eye on a return visit to Ballymaloe Cookery School in Co Cork.
Harald, the keen sailor, says laconically that he's just been around the Fastnet Rock, a couple of times. As the State visit includes a visit to Cork and a look at maritime operations there, he has been well briefed on sailing around Cork and its "oldest yacht club" status.
When she got married, Sonja recalls, she had to choose between sailing or golf. Knowing that she would have to spend much of her life listening to sailing talk from her father-in-law and husband, she decided that "if you can't beat them, join them . . . So I did sailing."
The king looks at her: "And she's very good at it. Yes."
Meanwhile, Harald, whose power is solely ceremonial beyond a veto that has never been deployed, describes the royals as "the glue of the nation".
His annual New Year's Eve address to the nation includes topics such as the environment and immigration, although he takes no credit for being a pioneer.
"We have ethnic minorities in this country and I think my father was the first to mention that now we have to look after them and make them feel at home in our country. We have a fairly large contingent of Pakistanis in this country, who came here in the 1960s and 1970 as economic immigrants. It can be an issue and of course now with everything going on in the world, people get frightened."
His take on the environment is long-term and practical. "We are a very sparsely populated country, a very large country with lots of space, and very few people. You can walk for hours without seeing anybody and this is something that is going to be a fantastic asset in the future. We still have space, moderately clean air and clean water - you can drink the water from the mountains."
Ask about Norway's fabled pro-woman approach at every level, and he is the one who notes that after the arrival of a baby, the father "has to take, has to take, three months of the year a couple is entitled to take between them. She doesn't get more than nine months - that brings her back into circulation while he is getting to know his baby."
The purpose of the forthcoming trip is to "strengthen bonds that are there already", he says. But the true purpose of course, is to do business. "Of course we have a big delegation with us and hope to do some business, attract some tourism, have some seminars . . ."
While we may expect to hear much about common bonds of our two countries - oppression, occupation, recent poverty, emigration - (until, crucially, they struck oil and we didn't) the king will only let it go so far. "It's not quite true about the poverty. For us, that stopped after the second World War. We were doing okay even without the oil. The oil has helped, my goodness yes, but we were doing all right through our shipping. We are a shipping nation."
We may also expect to hear something of Norway's many tourist attractions and Ryanair's new seven-day Oslo service from December, but much more about Norwegian energy in the coming weeks. Norway is the third-largest oil exporter and the eighth-largest oil producer in the world. Not many people know that. Only about 30 per cent of the estimated total resources on the Norwegian continental shelf have been produced. The country is looking around for customers and, according to one Norwegian official, cannot understand why Ireland seems to be looking towards Nigeria for supplies.
Ask the same pragmatic official about the state-owned Statoil's involvement in the Corrib debacle and the answer is?

"Do Irish people want gas or not?"

Norway fact file
• Population: around four and half million
• Has the sixth-largest surface area in Europe, with a 1,000 mile coastline, yet only six per cent are involved in farming, forestry and fishing.
• A US oil company once tried to buy its energy reserves for $100,000. Forty years on, petroleum is the country's largest industry, and the sector employs 80,000. Net cash flow from the sector stands at around €200 billion, which is ring-fenced for the Government Pension Fund. Nearly all its own energy consumption is from hydrogen.
• Norway has discovered a way of re-injecting CO2 under the seabed, which may be vital in resolving climate challenges.
• Norway has rejected EU membership in two referenda, but manages to be the Union's fifth-biggest net contributor.
• Famous Norwegians include playwright Henrik Ibsen, composer Edvard Grieg, painter Edvard Munch, writer Jostein Gaarder and explorer Roald Amundsen.

author by PCBpublication date Sat Sep 16, 2006 23:04author address author phone Report this post to the editors

There should be no toleration of these parasites. It is also high time that the European Union stopped issueing coinage with the images of "royals" on them. It is time they were thrown out.

http://www.throneout.com

author by Paddy M.publication date Sun Sep 17, 2006 03:14author address author phone Report this post to the editors

What a complete surprise, the first comment is from the Bolshie faction

author by darkpoolpublication date Sun Sep 17, 2006 03:28author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Ireland has allways celebrated it's invaders.

author by Royal Watcherpublication date Sun Sep 17, 2006 13:47author address author phone Report this post to the editors

They are the heads of state in Denmark - until the people of Denmark decide otherwise just as the Germans once voted for Hitler and the Palestinians voted for Hamas.

author by iosaf the noble.publication date Sun Sep 17, 2006 14:28author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Norway isn't in the EU so its royalty don't get on the euro coins. And the last commentator said they were Danish.

Leave it to me to champion the cause of Norwegian Republicanism.
Hmmmmm. or start such a belief pattern for that matter. As the norskie tell us on their very own wikipedia http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konstitusjonelt_monarki their land is a constitutional monarchy & there only 16 such individuals on the planet. Our neighbour Elizabeth Windsor gets about a lot. But I suppose for intensive purposes these monarchs are just like anyother. They have a problem with honour killing & prefer horses or bikes to holding their own umbrella. I believe we have close links between Irish & Norwegian indymedia groups and readers. I and another contributor (from the Irish republicans indeed who was hairier in those days) having spammed them in broken norwegian over the years till Statoil left Rossport. Let's team up again! We'll get flyers together and a demonstration in Oslo whilst the monarchs are in Ireland and declare a Norwegian republic & then (the winning move) we'll persuade michael Mc Dowell to do our bidding again & offer the norwegian royals exile in Eire. The "reclaim the republic" people ought send their peers in Scandinavia the poster now!

but sadly none of this will happen. They are oddly secure those 16 constitutional monarchs - all with grandchildren now & stable thrones & heirs with an average age of 30/35. & with the exception of the Brits (whose last honourkilling did it for their moral reputation)
all of them on presenting their childrens' marriages to "ordinary people" & the subsequent kids have managed to avoid any serious constitutional debates. I think that's what I meant when I uploaded this comment :- http://indymedia.ie/article/73787#comment134580 with obvious implications in it's exact location.

.-)

the young republican movement of Oslo ready & willing to seize their opportunity & throw off the yoke of tyrannical constitutional monarchy.
the young republican movement of Oslo ready & willing to seize their opportunity & throw off the yoke of tyrannical constitutional monarchy.

author by RJWpublication date Sun Sep 17, 2006 23:59author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Was delighted to see the Royal vessel 'Norge' at Dun Laoghaire this evening. A bit of excitement to a Sunday evening. Why are people so bitter towards visiting people whether the be royals or not. I think we should welcome any visitors as we would like the Norweigian citizens to welcome an Irish state member or tourist!!

author by ErikRaudepublication date Tue Nov 07, 2006 21:37author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Eh, what have Norway ever done to Ireland to deserve to be thrown out? Well, spreading their Norse genes and founding of dublin 1000 years ago might be one, but we should rather thank them for that I guess? or?

author by cool jpublication date Wed Nov 08, 2006 03:59author address author phone Report this post to the editors

No doubt they'll thank Bertie for signing over billions of euros worth of free irish gas to the Norwegian tax-payer via statoil.

PS - Lets hope they don't mention the Norwegian Whaling industry - Thank god for EU environmental law otherwise Irish Sea mammals would have to be very wary, they could be sold out too ;)!!!!!!!

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