Happy Strings: “The Brazilian Tropical violins”

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Brazilian Ambassador, H.E. Ms. Regina Cordeiro Dunlop and violinist Ms. Suray Soren with the Brazilian Tropical violins. Photography by Tomás Sforza.

Tex and pictures by John Dunkelgrün.

In these days when darkness still comes early and most news is bad, the initiative of the Brazilian Ambassador, H.E. Ms. Regina Cordeiro Dunlop, to invite this young string ensemble, was a most welcome relief. On a rainy evening a select group of people were invited to the concert hall of the “Vreedehuis”, the house of peace, which is an anthropological cultural center in the stately Archipel area in The Hague.

H.E. Ms. Regina Cordeiro Dunlop, Ambassador of Brazil.

The musicians, ranging in age from 9 to 34, were trained by the violinist Ms. Suray Soren in her own adaptation of the famous Japanese Suzuki method. Ms. Soren is the initiator, the leader, and the accompanying pianist of the Brazilian Tropical violins. Both the instruments they played and the  music chosen were an amalgam of indigenous, African and European cultures.

Tropical violins by Brazil

They played mainly works by Brazilian composers, but were equally at home with Vivaldi and Piazolla. Most pieces were especially arranged for this ensemble. The musicians were very versatile, playing not just the violin, but an assortment of indigenous and African instruments. The two nine-year olds, Isabel Castro and João Vicente Majeski even danced.

All together it was a charming and uplifting performance that the audience rewarded with a long standing applause. Chapeau to the Brazilian embassy for this lovely idea.

US-Iran tensions: escalation and de-escalation

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By Guido Lanfranchi

The transition to the new year has been marked by rising tensions between the United States and Iran. For a few days, the Middle East has been on the brink of a new potential war, with the two countries adopting a strong rhetoric and conducting military operations against each other. Despite these tense days, Washington and Tehran seem now headed towards de-escalation – although the underlying tensions between them largely remain in place.

January 12th, 2020. New year, new decade, old tensions. The beginning of 2020 has been marked by a dangerous escalation of tensions between the United States and Iran, whose long-simmering rivalry has exploded in one of the most open confrontations since the Iranian revolution in 1979. Strain between the two countries had been forcefully re-emerging since May 2018, when the US administration headed by President Trump decided to withdraw from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Under this multilateral agreement – signed in 2015 and endorsed by the United Nations Security Council – Iran had agreed to temporarily constrain its nuclear research program in exchange for sanctions relief from the international community. 

Arguing that the deal was not being successful in addressing the threats posed by Iran, the United States withdrew from the JCPOA and applied a so-called “maximum pressure campaign” on Tehran, imposing crippling sanctions on the country’s economy. Iran has since replied with what it calls a “maximum resistance campaign”, aimed at maintaining the country’s economy alive and upholding its foreign policy objectives. As the imposition of US sanctions eroded the JCPOA, Iran gradually started to withdraw from its own commitments under the deal. Moreover, a series of attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and on Saudi oil installations – which the US squarely blamed on Iran – further inflamed the tension.

In this tense environment, the spark was finally lit when on December 27th a US contractor got killed in a rocket attack against an Iraqi base in Kirkuk. The US blamed the attack on Kataib Hezbollah, an Iraqi militia aligned with Iran, and it stroke back with an airstrike that reportedly killed 25 of the militia’s fighters. Two days later, militiamen and Iraqi protesters stormed the US embassy compound in Baghdad and burned a reception building – eventually withdrawing after two days under their leaders’ orders. 

The new cycle of violence, however, was already triggered. In the morning of January 3rd, 2020, a US military drone stroke a car at Baghdad International Airport, killing Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, a key figure in Iran’s regional foreign policy, and the Kataib Hezbollah’s commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. The strike generated uproar in Iraq, where people complained about the violation of their country’s sovereignty, as well as in Iran, where Maj. Gen. Soleimani enjoyed vast popularity. Having vowed to avenge the death of the military commander, Iran stroke back four days later, with a barrage of missiles hitting two military installations in Iraq hosting US troops. The strike reportedly caused no casualties – although the price of the escalation was paid by the 176 people who died when a Ukrainian civilian airline got accidentally shot down by Iranian missiles in Tehran on January 7th.

At that moment, tensions were at the highest point – with the whole world fearing that a broader conflict could suddenly erupt.

However, that was exactly the moment at which the de-escalation started. Iran’s missile attack reportedly produced no casualty among US and Iraqi servicemembers – intentionally so, according to some analysts – and Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif made clear that no further attacks would follow in absence of new US military action. On the other side, US President Trump sought to downplay the damage caused by Iran’s attack, and ordered a retaliation based on sanctions – leaving aside any military option.

As of now, the confrontation between the US and Iran seems back on the “maximum pressure vs. maximum resistance” play. On January 10th, the US State and Treasury Departments announced a new round of sanctions targeting eight Iranian leaders and the country’s metal industry. The aim of this latest round of sanctions is “to hold Iranian regime officials responsible of the attacks against US personnel and interests”, as well as “depriving the regime of the revenue that it needs to conduct its violent and expansionist foreign policy” – said Mr. Brian Hook, US Special Representative for Iran. 

The shift away from military confrontation is a positive step. However, the simmering tensions between the US and Iran – not only over Tehran’s nuclear program, but also over the two countries’ rivalry in the region – largely remain in place. While this latest escalation has seemingly been dampened, policymakers on all sides should be very careful if they want to avoid new, dangerous escalations in the future.


About the author:

Guido Lanfranchi is a student and young professional in the field of international affairs. He has pursued his studies both at Leiden University and Sciences Po Paris, where he is currently enrolled. In parallel, he has been gaining professional experience through internships (first at the Council of the European Union, and currently at Clingendael Institute), as well as by working as reporter and associate editor for Diplomat Magazine The Netherlands. His research and work focus on the Middle East and Africa, and especially on conflict situations in these regions.

Culture for Peace

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Dr. Mayelinne De Lara, Diplomat Magazine’s Publisher and Dr. Sofija Bajrektarevic, Culture for Peace, Program Director, based in Vienna.

On the margins of a major international media conference taking place in a very heart of Europe, metropolitan city of Prague, Dr. Mayelinne De Lara, Publisher of  Diplomat Magazine based in The Hague and Dr. Sofija Bajrektarevic, Culture for Peace, Program Director, based in Vienna, have met and thoroughly talked over topics of their mutual interests.

Dr. Mayelinne De Lara, Diplomat Magazine and Dr. Sofija Bajrektarevic, Culture for Peace.

Dutch partner stated many complementarities in the scope of the Diplomat Magazine actitvites with those of the Culture for Peace.

By the next round of their bilateral talks at that international event, both sides agreed to elevate in cooperation, by signing their respective Memorandum of Understanding.                                                                               (photo above) 

Dr. Mayelinne De Lara, Diplomat Magazine, Mr. Tiberio Graziani, Vision & Global Trends and Dr. Sofija Bajrektarevic, Culture for Peace.

This MoU will enable both parties to enhance their exchanges of information and of best practices, to mutually promote works complementary to each side as well as to effectively plan their joint undertakings in the Netherlands, Austria and elsewhere within the EU.

NRW liaison bureau in Israel

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Dr. Gil Yaron, Picture by Land NRW, Shani Nahmias.

The new office of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia for business, science, education, youth and culture in Israel assumes working functions in January 2020. Dr. Gil Yaron, an expert on Israel, has been recruited to head the NRW office in Tel Aviv as announced by Dr. Mark Speich, State Secretary for Federal and European Affairs and International Affairs, before the Committee for Europe and International Affairs in the NRW State Assembly.

Premier Armin Laschet stated: “No other state maintains such continuous, close and friendly relations with Israel as North Rhine-Westphalia. The new office in Tel Aviv will bundle the numerous activities of our state in Israel, make our state more present on the ground and develop new ideas for cooperation. The office will also become a meeting place for business, education, research and culture. At the same time, the establishment is a clear signal of appreciation to our friends in Israel, because after all it is the first office of North Rhine-Westphalia in another country with such a comprehensive mandate”.

With the Tel Aviv-based branch of the State Chancellery, the state government intends to deepen bilateral relations in all areas of the country’s competence. The office will operate in close cooperation with the Federal Foreign Office and the German Embassy in Tel Aviv.
 The new office is initially housed in a modern co-working space in Tel Aviv, which is also home to numerous start-up companies. The final location of the office is still to be decided.

The new office will promote North Rhine-Westphalia in Israel and make the advantages of North Rhine-Westphalia as a business location visible to Israeli companies and investors. It will cooperate closely with the German-Israeli Chamber of Industry and Commerce (AHK) in Tel Aviv, which is already active for the state in Israel and will continue its successful activities for North Rhine-Westphalia.

The new head of the Israel office: About the person Dr. Gil Yaron

The office of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia in Tel Aviv will be headed by Dr. Gil Yaron, whose CV embodies the close ties between the two countries. Premier Laschet: “With Gil Yaron, we have been able to win a proven expert on the region to head the office. With his articles, books and lectures in both countries, Gil Yaron has contributed to better understanding between Germans and Israelis for over two decades. He is acquainted to the Jewish state, its environment, its people and its media like no one else and has maintained close ties with North Rhine-Westphalia since his childhood. He also has excellent contacts and a large network in Israel.

Gil Yaron was born in Haifa in 1973 as the son of German-born Israelis. His grandfather came from Hoengen near Aachen, his grandmother from Nordhausen. Both left Germany in 1933 after the National Socialists seized power and fled to the Palestinian Mandate. Yaron’s parents emigrated to Düsseldorf shortly after his birth. He grew up there until he graduated from high school. After a short period of study at the renowned Brown University in the USA, Gil Yaron returned to Israel to study medicine at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Until his doctorate in 2006, he also researched and published in the field of molecular biology.

Even before graduating, Gil Yaron was interested in reporting on the Middle East. He studied Arabic and politics in Givat Haviva and at the Hebrew University and wrote for a variety of Hebrew, German and English speaking media, most recently as Israel correspondent for Die Welt.

Background: North Rhine-Westphalia and Israel

North Rhine-Westphalia and Israel traditionally maintain close relations. Numerous school partnerships, youth meetings and scholarship programs for students reflect this close exchange. Teachers, judges, public prosecutors and prospective police officers can take part in training or study trips to the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial. A partnership links 28 Israeli and North Rhine-Westphalian cities.

In the past, the state of North Rhine-Westphalia has always played a pioneering role in re-establishing ties with Israel. Long before the establishment of formal diplomatic relations.

For further information:
https://www.land.nrw/de/pressemitteilung/buero-des-landes-nordrhein-westfalen-israel-nimmt-seine-arbeit-auf

Slovak Ambassador Jakubócy accredited to Germany

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Marián Jakubócy – Picture by Slovak Embassy to Germany.

Tuesday, 7 January 2020, Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany:  A face familiar to Germany was received at Bellevue Palace by Germany’s Federal President, Dr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier for his accreditation as the highest diplomatic envoy of the Slovak Republic, it was Ambassador Marián Jakubócy, who between 2005 and 2009 served as Deputy Chief of Mission at the Slovak Embassy which he now heads. 

Ambassador Jakubócy is fluent in the German, English, Russian and Bulgarian languages, and was previously the Director General of the Political Section at the Slovak Foreign Ministry (2017-2019). Between 2013 and 2017 he was Slovakia’s Ambassador to Bulgaria. The career diplomat joined the Slovak Foreign Service in 1995. 

Albeit Ambassador Jakubócy originally had a technical education background, he complemented his solid knowledge on international diplomacy at the Bratislava Institute for International Relations, Comenius University as well as further studies at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany. 

For further information Slovak Embassy to Germanyhttps://www.mzv.sk/web/berlin

India’s Mukta Dutta Tomar guest at Bavarian Chancellery

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Premier Dr. Markus Söder and Indian Ambassador Mukta Dutta Tomar.

13 January 2020, Munich, Free State of Bavaria, Germany: HE Ambassador Mukta Dutta Tomar paid a call on Bavaria’s Premier Dr. Markus Söder
Focus for the bilateral meeting were Indo-Bavarian trade and scientific relations.

Bavaria is partner with the south western state of Karnataka (formerly known as Mysore). After the rendezvous Ambassador Tomar was presented with a bronze statuette of ‘Bavaria’, the embodiment of the federal state, which she received from Premier Dr. Söder. 

Ambassador Tomar has headed India’s Embassy to Germany since April 2017. She is a career diplomat and graduate from Kolkata University. 

For further information:
Embassy of India to Germany: https://www.indianembassyberlin.gov.in

Bavarian State Chancellery: https://www.bayern.de/service/fotoreihen/?frid=in121576&fbclid=IwAR159IvlX0ZtsFV471Y8rikJ_IZB-BB69E4JSKekZFUCCGqGBScQGt6Y7jc

Photography by Joerg Koch
joerg@joergkochfoto.de
+49-175-1815173;

Dear Rachel

‘Dear Rachel’ in race for title Best Book of The Hague 2019

Reporter and the most known diplomatic editor in the Netherlands, Leo van der Velde not only writes about diplomatic and society news but also a weekly letter in AD Haagsche Courant to granddaughter Rachel (8) about The Hague then and now. On the launch of Lieve Rachel, his new book, last November in Pagan Bookshop, Rachel van der Velde received the first copy from grandpa Leo.

This month Paagman bookstore have made a selection of 12 of the best books published in 2019. ‘Dear Rachel’ is on this shortlist now in third place. You can still vote until January 30 at paagman.nl/besteboekdenhaag2019.

Well-known writers such as Geert Mak, Oek de Jong and Peter Buwalda are on the list. But also three other Hague writers and an illustrator compete for the prize. Similarly, the books Indorock by Vanja van der Leeden and Blonde Dolly by Tomas Ross have also been nominated. 

Leo van der Velde and Rachel during the launch of Dear Rachel

Leo’s successful column have been bundled by AD Haagsche Courant’s publisher, together with previously unpublished stories and photos, in the book ‘Dear Rachel’. In the columns of Dear Rachel a world that we don’t longer know comes to life. Leo talks to Rachel about the post-war years, in which most people initially only have a radio and later when the first television broadcasts start. The good old days when the youth went on dance lessons and students went to the Cineac cinema to skip class.

His uncles smelled of aftershave like Old Spice and Tabac. The big fire at K&W, Senfs Flea Market in the Houtrusthallen, the Pasar Malam there and performances by the Rolling Stones in The Hague come along in 52 episodes.

Eduardus Slootweg, from the European Parliament waiting for Rachel and Leo to sign his book.

In an every ‘popular historical’ story, he takes his granddaughter by the hand to tell her about the past and also to listen to her daily experiences.

“I still write a full-page letter every week on friday to Rachel, in which I take her to The Hague from my younger years,” says van der Velde. “Wandering through the city with her and her little sister Chlöe is the best thing I have ever have done.” According to colleagues, his section is among the best read and highly appreciated among readers of the newspaper. 

Dear Rachel with grandpa Leo.

In short, a wonderful book about the unique atmosphere of The Hague, Leo van Der Velde and Rachel discovering, for all mothers and fathers, grandfathers and grandmothers, children and grandchildren. Van der Velde has previously written paperbacks for Fuiven & Kuiven and Happen & Stappen.

Live Rachel Price € 21.95, 228 pages, ISBN 9789082495133.
For information about the book and shipment: John Nieuwenhuizen, mail to john@hncom.nl or call 06-17110758. 

Lieve Rachel a Bestseller: paagman.nl/besteboekdenhaag2019

Photographers Frank Jansen (bookcover) and Pascale van Reijn (PAS7875 and PAS 8053).

Diplomatic and consular reception in Saxony-Anhalt

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Ambassador Péter Györkös – Staatskanzlei Sachsen-Anhalt, Viktoria Kühne.

Wednesday, 8 January 2020, Magdeburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany: Together with other members of the state government, Premier Dr. Reiner Haseloff welcomed representatives from over 40 states to the traditional New Year’s reception for the Diplomatic and Consular Corps in Magdeburg.

In his speech, Premier Dr. Haseloff expressed his hope that international cooperation would bring the idea of peace and good cooperation between peoples and nations to the world. He emphasised that 2019 had been a successful year for Saxony-Anhalt, referring to numerous investments, also from abroad. But there had also been events such as the attack in Halle (Saale), which is still affecting people and must lead to more efforts against hatred and violence.

Dr. Kheswar Jankee (Mauritius), Mukta Dutta Tomar (India), and Premier Dr. Reiner Haseloff – Picture by Viktoria Kühne, Stk Sachsen-Anhalt.

The head of government made it clear that Saxony-Anhalt was striving to further strengthen international contacts. He wished the diplomats present and the states represented by them a good, successful and peaceful year 2020.

Afterwards the Ambassador of Hungary,  Dr. Péter Györkös, conveyed the greetings of the Diplomatic and Consular Corps. In doing so, he referred to the numerous international contacts that the state of Saxony-Anhalt maintains and to important historical milestones that gained European and worldwide significance from today’s Saxony-Anhalt, such as the Magdeburg Town Charter, the Reformation and the Bauhaus, where famous Magyars also created artworks.

Dr. Reiner Haseloff, Elmer Schialer (Perú), Denis Sidorenko (Belarus), Image by Stk Sachsen-Anhalt, Viktoria Kühne.

On behalf of the Diplomatic and Consular Corps, Ambassador Dr. Györkös wished the State of Saxony-Anhalt and its inhabitants all the best and success for the New Year.

Dr. Kheswar Jankee (Mauritius), Mukta Dutta Tomar (India), and Dr. Bum Goo Jong (Korea) – Picture by Viktoria Kühne, Stk Sachsen-Anhalt.

For further information:
https://europa.sachsen-anhalt.de/internationales/aktuelles-international-2020/neujahrsempfang-2020/

Soleimani’s Assassination Triggers US–Iran Standoff

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By Malik Ayub Sumbal.

Amidst an environment of a tense standoff between Iran and the US since the last couple of months, the United States assassinated high-ranking Iranian military and intelligence official Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike at Baghdad International Airport on Friday morning along with several other Iran-backed officials operating in Iraq. The assassination of Qasem Soleimani is being anticipated as the most aggressive action, which could trigger the US and Iran towards a possible state of war by exposing the region to alarming tragedy.

Both sides are making vengeful statements with objectives to undermine each other with severe consequences. Iran warned of the severe avenge of the killing of a senior commander of the IRGC’s Quds Forces Major General Qasem Soleimani. Being the commander of Iran’s elite Quds Force, Qasem Suleimani was considered as the architect of the nation’s military, intelligence operations, and a close confidant of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. On other side, the US used to tag Qasem Suleimani as a terrorist and one of the world’s most dangerous men, aiding Syrian President Bashar Al-Asad in the Syrian Civil war and causing the deaths of hundreds of Americans during the Iraq war.

Andrey Kortunov:
Soleimani’s Assassination Is More than a Crime

US engagements in the region during the last two decades witnessed the fact that US administration including Donald Trump and his predecessors are experts in solving one problem by creating another big mess in the region. In this scenario, statements from the US president following the assassination of Qasem Suleimani that the targeted action against Qasem Soleimani was initiated “to stop a war, not to start one” seems hilarious.

Donald Trump has pushed the US towards an unending rivalry and conflict by Killing Qasem Soleimani by opening a new Pandora box in the region. The International strategists and analysts are seeing the decision of strike of US Administration as a plethora to divert attention from the internal crisis faced by Trump and his administration.

The killing of Qasem Soleimani became international headlines in the global media for the last two days. Donald Trump played Iran card for his elections and to get rid of its impeachment crisis but this Iran card leads the US towards a major watershed.

Donald Trump old tweets about using Iran cards for Obama haunted him and widely discussed and shared on social media. Following the assassination of Qasem Suleimani, some elements in the US are praising Donald Trump for the death of Soleimani, while some others are condemning the action for escalating already fraught tensions. It is too early to gauge the intensity of possible consequences and implications of the assassination of Qasem Suleimani; however, the US administration has to come out with more solid justifications this time for its actions.

Donald Trump does not need enemies while making such kind of decisions. The warmongering rhetoric of Donald Trump has multiplied the intensity of tension between the US and Iran. Donald Trump has made several tweets by justifying his stance on Qasem Soleimani’s killing. His repeated tweets gestured that he is well aware of any expected reaction from Iran. Trump is trying hard to downplay the killing of Qasem Soleimani that does not seem possible in a country like Iran.

Ivan Timofeev:
US Withdrawal From the JCPOA and Anti-Iranian Sanctions: Pros and Cons

Iran has made up its mind to react following the assassination of powerful men of Iran in a drone strike at Baghdad International Airport. Iran has categorically warned for retaliation to avenge the murder of Soleimani by pointing out that time and the target will be told by the time.

Iran Foreign Minister Javed Zarif started meeting with his various counterparts for their future strategy on Qasem Soleimani. There has been huge curiosity around the world that what kind of reaction is being expected from Iran in the aftermath of Qasem Soleimani killing by the US.

Donald Trump put the US into the worst snare by jeopardizing US national security by killing Qasem Soleimani. Donald Trump has negated all his previous policies and strategies on the Middle East for he used to criticize Obama and his administration.

The killing of Qasem Soleimani will prove to be a major setback for Trump’s elections as thousands of Americans have also come to roads in New York against war hysteria of Trump administration.

Iran’s strategic partners will support Iran at this stage when they engineered a new battlefield for the US to engage it for more skirmishes to weak US defense sector and waste its more capital in the region.

On the other side, millions of people moved to roads to attend funeral prayers for Qasem Soleimani in Iraq and Iran and to honor Commander Qasem Soleimani, which hinted at the fact that the situation is not as rosy as depicted by US administration. The consequences are going to be exposed with Iranian rhetoric that Iran has made up its mind to avenge the assassination of Qasem Soleimani and in this connection, till filing of this report, the missile was reportedly fired at base camp in Iraq housing US soldiers with confirmation of news regarding injuries of US troops.

About the author:

Malik Ayub Sumbal is a Geopolitical Analyst and Commentator

This article has been published in RIAC Russian International Affairs Council on January 8th, 2020. https://russiancouncil.ru/en/malik-ayub-sumbal/

100 years since Dano-German borders were drawn

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Queen Margrethe II, Premier Daniel Günther and wife Anke Günther – Picture by Staatskanzlei Schleswig-Holstein.

10 January 2020, Copenhagen, Kingdom of Denmark: Schleswig-Holstein’s Premier Daniel Günther paid a call on the Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen at Christiansborg Castle, the seat of Denmark’s government and parliament. Behind the meeting is the year-long ‘Dano-German Year of Friendship 2020’, and the commemoration of the drawing of borders between the two countries. 

Both sides agreed to stress the importance of cross-border cooperation in the upcoming negotiations on the European Financial Framework. “In concrete terms, we have agreed on a joint ministerial declaration on projects that affect Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein jointly” said Premier Günther as per statement below.

Both governments intend to coordinate the concrete contents of such a declaration with each other. Following talks with the Danish Prime Minister, Günther was received by the Danish monarch, HM Queen Margrethe II at Amalienborg Castle for a private audience.

Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Premier Daniel Günther – Picture by Staatskanzlei Schleswig-Holstein.

In the evening, the heads of government of Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein, the Speaker of the Danish Parliament Klaus Schlie, Cabinet members of Schleswig-Holstein; Minister of Justice, European Affairs Dr. Sabine Sütterlin-Waack, Minister of Finance, Monika Heinold, Minister of the Interior, Hans-Joachim Grote, State Secretary, Dirk Schrödter and the Commissioner for Minorities, Johannes Callsen partook in a festive gala at the invitation of the Danish Prime Minister in the Royal Theatre. Queen Margrethe II and her sister Princess Benedikte, The Princess Dowager of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg were also in attendance. 

A further meeting was held with the Secretariat of the Association of German North Silesians, whereafter Premier Günther attended the festive religious service held in Copenhagen Cathedral on Sunday, 12 January at 10.00 a.m. 

For further information:
The Danish Monarchy: http://kongehuset.dk/foto-video/hm-dronningen-modtog-slesvig-holstens-ministerpraesident-0

Chancellery of Schleswig-Holstein: https://www.schleswig-holstein.de/DE/Landesregierung/I/Presse/PI/2020/MP/200110_MP_Kopenhagen.html

Dano-German Year of Friendship 2020: https://ddkultur2020.dk