Lögberg-Heimskringla - 19.04.1991, Blaðsíða 3
Lögberg-Heimskringla • Föstudagur 19. apríl 1991 • 3
“Icelanders have fought many
cod wars, and now we are engaged
in another — a financial cod war.
Neither the British nor any others
were able to keep their fishing ships
in our jurisdiction under protection
of warships, and we cannot allow
these parties to succeed now in
efforts to get a hold on our common
national resource by letting Ice-
landers harvest fish which is then
exported and processed abroad,”
said Icelandic Freezing Plants Cor-
poration (IFPC) managing director
Friðrik Pálsson at a recent conference
on the future of the domestic fish
processing industry held by the Union
of Fisheries Technicians.
Reported in fisheries publication
Fiskifréttir, the conference expressed
its concern over possible large-
scale unemployment in the sector
in 5-10 years, citing what it feels to be
unfair control of fish resources by
vessel operators and economic
pressure by the EC aimed at
acquiring unprocessed Icelandic
fish.
EC subsidies and grants to home
fishing and fish processing sectors —
which domestic processors claim give
their European counterparts an unfair
advantage in bidding on raw material
for processing, among others — were
the subject of heated discussion at the
conference. According to National
Economic Institute economist Asgeir
Daníelsson, the 18% tariffleviedby the
EC on fillets processed in Iceland
amounted to taxation of the Icelandic
processing industry which was sub-
sequentlymitigated somewhatby. high
prices to fishermen for unprocessed
catches.
Export levies on unprocessed Ice-
landic fish would be a natural way of
putting the domestic processing indus-
try on equal footing with processors in
EC countries, said Danielsson, with
Palsson supporting the economist’s
view and adding that such levies would
have to be 42% to counterbalance the
deleterious effect of the 18% imposed
by the EC.
The number of workers employed
in domestic processing has declined
Th« Poct's Corner
The Gulf War Is Over
by Gus Sigurdson
The war in the Gulf has ended
Eut the mopping up takes years
With broken hearts unmended
And with always some other fears.
The war in the Gulf is finished
Give thanks to George Bush’s plan
With Saddam Hussein diminished
To a bitter and beaten man.
He never in fact was ever
Much of a man indeed,
But on level with the devil —
A louse of Hitler freed!
Give thanks to all allied sources
Who offered their lives once more
To battle Iraqi forces
In order to win this war.
The war in the Gulf is over
Give thanks to the Lord above
The world feels now in clover —
Make room for His lasting love.
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from 12,000 to 9,000 over the pastfew
years, it was reported, with the con-
traction due in part to streamlining
efforts and reduced catches. At the
same time, the conference placed
major emphasis on the formulation of
a comprehensive marine resources
policy which takes into account the
needs of both processors and fisher-
men, while seeking to eliminate the
current unfair competitive stance en-
joyed by EC processors.
Courtesy of News From Iceland
Letter to the Editor
Dear Editor:
I have been receiving Lögberg-
Heimskringla since November 1990,
and look forward to each edition. I
have leamed many interesting things
about Iceland and activities of the
Icelandic-Canadians. Many of the
articles are points of discussions
when we Icelandic descendants
gather. I have been to Iceland on two
occasions, own an Icelandic Costume,
manage the Icelandic Booth during
NORSK HOSTFEST (where we
feature such foods as Kleinur,
Vínarterta, and Pönnukökur), and
represent Iceland on the Board of
Directors for the Scandinavian
Heritage Association. The more
information about Iceland I gather,
the more effective I can be as the Ice-
landic representative. A highlight of
this past summer was a visit to Gimli
for the íslendingadagur, visit to Hecla,
and the Scandinivian Pavilion during
the Winnipeg Folklorama.
Thank you,
Doralyn Brown
Minot, North Dakota
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