Saturday, September 21, 2024
24 C
Brunei Town

Euro banknote artist fears redesign could revive rivalries

FRANKFURT (AFP) – Twenty years after arriving in Europeans’ wallets, euro banknotes will get a new look with help from the public, a process officials hope will make citizens feel closer to the single currency.

But the Austrian artist behind the original banknotes fears the redesign could spark national rivalries, something he painstakingly tried to avoid with neutral illustrations the first time around.

Now retired, Robert Kalina was working as a graphic designer for the Austrian National Bank when he won a competition in 1996 to create the artwork for the first-ever euro notes.

“It’s incredible to think that the euro is already 20 years old, I hope it stays around for a long time to come,” he told AFP.

Kalina’s designs were initially printed on 14.5 billion banknotes in denominations ranging from five to 500 euros.

The bills in circulation have since almost doubled in volume and found their way into the hands of some 350 million Europeans and many more people around the world.

Euro coins, which are minted by euro members, have a shared image on one side and a country-specific one the other. Ireland for instance opted for a harp, France for a tree.

But euro banknotes are issued by the European Central Bank (ECB), and their designs had to be identical across the euro region and avoid “national bias”.

The challenge for Kalina was coming up with illustrations all Europeans could identify with, without stirring nationalist sentiments or appearing to favour one eurozone nation over another.

“Portraits might have been allowed, but only if the faces were anonymous. I excluded that option right away,” Kalina said.

He decided to focus on architecture.

Drawing on inspiration from existing buildings, Kalina simplified and reworked their depictions with the help of engineering experts, to ensure the structures “were no longer recognisable” but still believable.

His bridge designs, showcasing different historical styles in Europe, symbolise the connection between eurozone citizens, “but also between the European Union (EU) and the rest of the world”.

The windows and doorways on the other side of the notes stand for “openness and a vision of the future”.

Despite the numerous crises that have rocked the currency since its birth, Kalina said the ideals he sought to portray are “still valid”.

But earlier this month, the ECB said the bills were ready for a makeover, announcing a design and consultation process with a decision expected in 2024.

“After 20 years, it’s time to review the look of our banknotes to make them more relatable to Europeans of all ages and backgrounds,” said ECB president Christine Lagarde.

Euro banknotes are “here to stay”, she said, although the ECB is also considering creating a digital euro in step with other central banks around the globe.

The ECB will rely on a 19-person panel of experts for the banknote design – one from each euro nation – and consult the public along the way.

“The question is whether people have come far enough to accept, for example, famous people being represented”, even if they are linked to a particular country, Kalina said.

“Might it perhaps cause jealousy?” he asked, recalling heated debates on the issue in the 1990s.

The world of music might be a good place to look for inspiration for the next generation of notes, Kalina mused, since “great composers like Beethoven or Mozart can’t be reduced to a single country”.

Music “is a language that doesn’t require words and one that everyone can understand,” he said.

Woman gives birth in car hours after hospital told her to go home

THE STAR – A woman had to deliver her baby in the car when she could not reach a public hospital in time – apparently just hours after being sent home from one despite her protests.

According to a post on the PenangKu Viral Facebook page, the woman ended up at a private hospital after giving birth.

The post claimed that the woman’s husband was now upset at having to pay for the “unexpected” hospital bill.

He blamed a public hospital for turning his wife away earlier. The time of the incident was recorded but there was no mention of the day on which it occurred.

The woman, from Sungai Ara, had reportedly checked into the hospital on the mainland at 11am after there were signs that labour was imminent.

At 12.30pm, a doctor came to check on the woman and found that her cervix was only dilated to two centimetres.

Some three hours later, according to the post, the woman was asked to go home as she was told that it would be some time before she could go into labour.

It was then that the woman pleaded with the hospital to let her stay, saying she was living in Sungai Ara, which is far away.

However, her pleas were allegedly ignored.

Shortly after reaching home, the woman told her husband she needed to be rushed to hospital again at about 7pm.

Travel times to public hospitals ranged from 50 minutes to one hour and 20 minutes at that time, owing to peak-hour traffic.

The woman ended up delivering her baby in the car before her husband took her to the nearest private hospital.

A Penang Health Department spokesman said the department would come up with a report after completing its investigation.

He said the report would be forwarded to the Health Ministry.

Omicron under control in Brunei

Fadley Faisal

There is no cause for panic on the spread of Omicron variant in Brunei Darussalam as it is under control.

This was reiterated by Minister of Health Dato Seri Setia Dr Haji Mohd Isham bin Haji Jaafar during the daily press conference yesterday.

The minister added that among the eight Omicron cases in the Sultanate, six show no symptoms after suffering similar symptoms to getting Delta variant for about two or three days.

The other two cases have mild symptoms such as coughs.

Dato Seri Setia Dr Haji Mohd Isham said they are being monitored despite them being under no serious threats.

Omicron under control in Brunei

There is no cause for panic on the spread of Omicron variant in Brunei Darussalam as it is under control. This was reiterated by Minister of Health Dato Seri Setia Dr Haji Mohd Isham bin Haji Jaafar during the daily press conference yesterday. More details in Thursday’s Borneo Bulletin.

Travel Green List revoked

The COVID-19 Steering Committee agreed to temporarily omit all countries from the Travel Green List following the current COVID-19 situation, particularly the rise of cases in several countries and the threat from the Omicron variant.More details in Thursday’s Borneo Bulletin.

Walk down memory lane for Class of ‘64

Eleven members of Class of 1964 of Sultan Omar ‘Ali Saifuddien (SOAS) College walked down memory lane during their Alumni 64 Reunion at the college’s Class of ‘64 Library yesterday. More details in Thursday’s Borneo Bulletin.

Brunei records four new COVID-19 cases

Brunei Darussalam detected four new COVID-19 cases yesterday, with three local and one import case. This brings the national tally of confirmed COVID-19 cases to 15,465.More details in Thursday’s Borneo Bulletin.

Brunei drawn in Group ‘A’ in under-23 meet

The national football team will be expected to make their debut appearance in the upcoming Asean Football Federation (AFF) Under-23 Championship 2022 following an official draw ceremony in Singapore yesterday. More details in Thursday’s Borneo Bulletin.

First giant panda cub Le Le born in Singapore

SINGAPORE (CNA) – The cub born to giant pandas Kai Kai and Jia Jia has been named after the results of a public vote were announced yesterday. More details in Thursday’s Borneo Bulletin.