– That’s why we’ll continue our discussions tonight at 8 pm.
– For the sake of the discussions we are having, I will not go into the content further now, he says.
The Liberal Party’s defense spokesman, Lars Christian Lilleholt, says that he is also optimistic about reaching an agreement.
Last week, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that 40 current and former local employees at the Danish embassy in Kabul as well as four interpreters have applied for help through the interpreting agreement.
The applications have come since the announcement of the US and Denmark’s withdrawal of soldiers from the country.
Since then, the State Department has had additional staff deployed to help clarify the employees’ case. According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, there is a big difference in what work the employees have done.
While the interpreters, for example, have patrolled the front lines with the Danish soldiers, others, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, have, for example, been short-term craftsmen.
Therefore, politicians are also expected to decide whether all employees should be helped in Denmark.
Source: The Nordic Page