
Woman Charged in Shocking Murder as Femicides Double
A 30-year-old woman faces murder charges after a 42-year-old was fatally stabbed near Gjern in December 2024, highlighting Denmark’s alarming femicide crisis with 15-20 women killed in 2025 alone.

A 30-year-old woman faces murder charges after a 42-year-old was fatally stabbed near Gjern in December 2024, highlighting Denmark’s alarming femicide crisis with 15-20 women killed in 2025 alone.

The EU’s ambitious 2026 Quantum Act aims to transform Europe into a quantum industrial powerhouse, but leaked documents contradict this priority, raising doubts about genuine commitment despite massive infrastructure investments.

New research reveals people with dark personality traits like narcissism and manipulativeness avoid social careers such as teaching and nursing. The University of Copenhagen study spanning 8,000 participants shows personality significantly influences career choices.

Denmark’s Social Democrats propose capping class sizes at 14 students for grades zero to three, requiring Aarhus alone to build 326 classrooms and hire hundreds of teachers at enormous cost.

A Danish town’s fight against pig farm expansion has ignited a national debate, making animal welfare a defining issue in the 2026 election as parties clash over rural livelihoods.

Denmark’s retirement age reform architect says moderate adjustments are economically viable, but freezing it at 70 would severely damage fiscal sustainability, dropping it from 1.2% GDP surplus to minus 1%.

Four left-wing parties accuse Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen of breaking her 2022 pesticide ban promise. They now demand comprehensive action to protect Denmark’s contaminated groundwater as a condition for forming government after 2026 elections.

Danish food banks see record 50% surge in demand as rising costs, frozen benefits, and stagnant pensions force more pensioners and families to rely on free surplus food to survive.

Greenland’s two Danish Parliament seats could shift to the conservative bloc for the first time in 25 years, potentially deciding who becomes prime minister in a tight election race.

Four young medical students who taught dissection at the University of Copenhagen developed cancer before 35, prompting experts to demand investigation into formaldehyde exposure links despite earlier dismissals.
