Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.05.2011, Side 12

Reykjavík Grapevine - 06.05.2011, Side 12
Heavenly pizzas! Home delivery tel. 578 8555www.gamlasmidjan.is See our menu at www.gamlasmidjan.is Lækjargata 8 12 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 5 — 2011 I've lived in Iceland for nearly 12 years now, and have been a citizen for the last four. Along the way, I've met other foreigners who moved here for various lengths of time, and have always been fascinated by the transformative process people go through as they try and make a life for themselves here. In the course of my studies, I've noticed three distinct stages that foreigners go through after they make Iceland their home. If you're new here, you'll want to keep this article handy. Take notes if you have to. STAGE 1: WONDER You're freshly arrived and can't believe you have finally moved to this golden land. At last, the country that you've only visited on vacations for short visits is all yours. You imagine you'll go to the Blue Lagoon every week now, and take many excursions into the countryside, clad in your lopapeysur while munch- ing on harðfiskur and drinking lýsi like it's Gatorade. You also believe you'll be spending many weekend nights in any of Reykjavík's amazing clubs, dancing to Icelandic music and drinking Víking, partying harder than anyone has ever partied before. You know that the locals, once they see how much you love this country, will welcome you as one of their own and that you'll have loads of friends within a week's time. You can't wait to take photos of yourself to send back to your friends and family, who are unfortu- nately deprived of the blessing you have received to be living here. You avoid other foreigners as if they were smeared in seagull droppings, but Icelanders are just the most darling little dearies. You could just pinch their cheeks! Surely, this is the first day of what will prove to be a rollicking and joyous adventure. Distinguishing characteristics: CD collection includes a mix of everything from Sálin to medieval rímur. Often sighs and smiles dreamily at television com- mercials. Notable quote: “No, really, shark is de- licious!” STAGE 2: DISGUST Turns out moving to a whole other coun- try isn't so easy after all. You haven't been out to the countryside because you're too busy working a shit job for shit pay, i.e., the sort of jobs immigrants do. By the same token, you don't have the money to go out partying every week- end, and when you do manage to get downtown, you're appalled by the be- haviour of Icelanders in the wee hours of the morning. The Icelanders you work with tell jokes about other ethnic groups that would get you fired back home. You've given your number to everyone, but hardly anyone calls you to go out, and when they do, they all speak Icelan- dic with each other and seldom bother to translate the conversation. Now the casual bragging Icelanders make about their country sounds boor- ish and obnoxious rather than endear- ing. Every time you hear someone say “Ha?” you want to break something. When you do meet other foreigners, you can't wait to talk about all the various and sundry ways in which Icelanders suck. You hate this primitive, medieval, backwater, podunk rock in the north At- lantic with every fibre of your being. Distinguishing characteristics: Smirks and shakes their head a lot. Notable quote: “Well that's just typical. Icelanders. Pfft.” STAGE 3: REALISATION As you start to become bored with your own scorn and ridicule for Iceland, you eventually give up and decide to make the best of it, doing your own thing whether these people accept you as one of their own or not. You find yourself discovering little things you like about Iceland that you didn't notice or appre- ciate before, like intermission during a movie, blár Ópal (rest in peace) or this great little café that looks like someone's grandmother's living room. You get more curious about obscure bits of history not covered in travel books. You discover that the oft-used saying, “These people seem very cold at first but once you get to know them they are quite warm” is bullshit—people who start out cold stay that way, but others are warm from the get-go. You start to make real friends among a couple Ice- landers, and find that you have a lot of things in common with them. Soon enough, the next time you hear a foreigner slagging Icelanders off, you feel the urge to defend the country, not because you believe it's a magical elfin paradise but because this is also your home, and you know Icelanders that you personally care for and about. My God, could it be Icelanders are really just or- dinary people, not cute little huldufólk or drunken trolls? Could be! Distinguishing characteristics: Mu- sic collection now includes Ellý Vilhjálms and Ham. Goes to Eurovision parties and has unironic fun. Notable quote: “Æi ég nenn'ess' ekki. Þetta reddast.” By mid March, the case against the Reykjavík Nine (who had been accused of conspiracy to attack Alþingi with the in- tent of compromising its “inde- pendence and sanctity”) finally came to a close when the state prosecutor decided not to appeal the Reykjavík district court ruling in the case. The nine had been acquitted of all the major charges of the prosecution. Not for lack of evidence or because the nine were able to slip through legal loopholes. No, the court found that there was absolutely no evidence to support the case of the prosecution; that there was absolutely nothing that indicated the group had ever intended to do anything but exercise its constitutional right to protest peacefully in a public space. The court did, however, find four protesters guilty of relatively minor offences: dis- obeying police orders and obstructing public officials performing their duties. So, why are Icelandic activists and campaigners for civil liberties not jump- ing with joy? For one, the verdict veri- fies a dangerous precedent the courts appear to follow, namely that protesters must obey police orders, no matter how unjustified they may seem. The prosecution failed to produce any evidence to justify the decisions of the guards or police to contain and eject the protesters—which means that guards and police violated the protesters’ con- stitutional rights. Instead, four protesters were convicted of not submitting to arbi- trary police orders. The ruling also proves that the au- thorities can, with impunity, drag pro- testers to court on flimsy charges and keep them captive in the legal system for months. Any sensible person who looked at the case saw that there was no connec- tion between the charges and the evi- dence. And it is hard to believe that the prosecution did not realise it had no case. So, why did the prosecution go forward if it had no evidence? Well, because the prosecutor was following political orders. It has been revealed that the decision to prosecute under the 100th paragraph was only taken after someone from the offices of the Speaker of Parliament and the bu- reau Chief of Parliament had intervened. The intent of the intervention was either to have innocent people thrown in jail for protesting, or to have them dragged through the justice system to teach them a lesson. Either way, one would think Alþingi and its chief officers owe the Reykjavík Nine an apology. But, no. Its officials con- tinue to aggressively push the idea that the Reykjavík Nine are a bunch of dan- gerous violent criminals. Case in point: On February 28 , shortly after the verdict in the case was handed down, Parliamentary chief of staff Karl M. Kristjánsson published an op-ed in news- paper Fréttablaðið, wherein he recycled and exaggerated every charge that the courts had just dismissed. In the missive, Karl stated as a proven fact that the nine had conspired to “attack Parliament” and that they had “violently attacked parlia- mentary guards”. He then complained that the media had been too favourable to the nine, especially Icelandic State TV, which he claimed had edited the footage from the security cameras, thus distort- ing the picture of what “really” happened (in fact: during the trial it was revealed that parliamentary officials had deleted most of the footage before handing it over to the police) Karl then expressed his outrage that these criminals were owed an apology from parliament: “It seems that many responsible com- mentators want the parliamentary guards to apologise for having been beaten up.” This is interesting. Especially the part about parliamentary guards having been “beaten up”. There was absolutely no- body beaten up! The Reykjavík district court found: “There is no indication that the ac- cused ever threatened either police or parliamentary guards with violence.” And: “As previously stated, there is no evi- dence whatsoever, that the accused ever intended to do anything but reach the public gallery to protest the social and political conditions at the time. It is im- possible to see how their actions could be construed as having been aimed at forcefully subverting the will of parlia- ment, or to see them as an attack which threatened parliament’s independence and sanctity.” So. Let’s recap. The police and other state officials can forcefully deny people their constitutional rights to protest in public places—and then have people sen- tenced in a court of law for disobeying these unjust orders. The state can level outrageous charges against protesters to keep them captive in the legal system. The office of the speaker of Parlia- ment can instruct the state prosecution to press the most serious charges avail- able in the book against innocent people, then proceed to delete relevant evidence and—even after a court has dismissed all charges of attack and violence—the top civil servants of parliament will continue to push the false charges in the media. The 17th century Swedish statesman Axel Oxenstierna was the greatest po- litical mind of his time. He once remarked that one should not underestimate the lack of wisdom with which the world is ruled. I would add that neither should one underestimate the shameless, brazen ar- rogance and cynicism of its rulers. RVK9: WHAT DID WE LEARN? What, if anything, did we learn from the case of the Reykjavík Nine? The Three Stages of Integration -adapting to Icelandic society PAUL FONTAINE JELENA JóHANNSSON Opinion | Immigration Justice | Magnús Sveinn Helgason “The prosecution failed to produce any evidence to justify the decisions of the guards or police to contain and eject the protesters” A lot of our Facebook-commenters seem to be in the throes of 'STAGE TWO'. This is fairly amusing. Are you currently integrating? WHERE ARE YOU AT?

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