Reykjavík Grapevine - 08.04.2016, Blaðsíða 18

Reykjavík Grapevine - 08.04.2016, Blaðsíða 18
░░ ▓█▓ ▁▂▃ ▄▅▆ Sigmundur In March, Anna Sigurlaug Pálsdóttir, the wife of outgoing Prime Minis- ter Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson, posted a status update on Facebook that seemed to come out of nowhere. In that post, she went into some detail about a company called Wintris Inc. Located in the British Virgin Islands, this company was owned by her, and was tasked with managing the assets she received as an inheritance. Why she made this post would come to light a couple weeks later, with a remark- able investigative news broadcast that would end up unseating Sigmundur Davíð and, at the time of this writing, possibly dissolving Parliament alto- gether. The news that the Prime Minister's wife had an offshore company was galling to many Icelanders, and not just because of the obvious conflict of interest. Sigmundur Davíð rose to power as a self-appointed crusader for the Icelandic króna. He talked a lot about the importance of staying out of the EU. He called the króna “the stron- gest indexed currency in the world.” He presided over capital controls, tout- ed the importance of keeping busi- ness in Iceland, and railed against the claimants on Iceland's fallen banks as “vultures”≠while neglecting to men- tion that Wintris, his wife's own com- pany, was one of the vultures in ques- tion. This prompted some of the usual: protests planned, a petition in circu- lation calling for his resignation, his assurances that he did nothing wrong. It seemed like just yet another road bump on Highway Sigmundur, and that it might even blow over in a couple days. That all changed on April 3. That evening, thousands of Ice- landers tuned in to public broadcast- ing station RÚV to watch a special edition of the investigative news show ‘Kastljós’. While we knew that the programme was going to concern Sigmundur’s offshore banking activi- ties, no one was prepared for what the show revealed. But what the concerted efforts of German newspaper Sued- deutsche Zeitung, the International Consortium of Investigative Journal- ism (ICIJ) and Reykjavík Media would reveal to the nation—and the world at large—sparked possibly the largest protest demonstration in Icelandic history, and the unraveling of the rul- ing coalition of the Progressive Party and the Independence Party. As I write this, the man who was Prime Minister on Monday is today on his way out of that office, to be re- placed by one of his own. Maybe. We'll get to that later. Investigative jour- nalism, live on TV_ The nation watched as the show re- vealed that some 2 terrabytes of data— the largest leak of its kind in history— from Mossack Fonseca, a Panamanian offshore provider, has implicated pow- erful figures from around the world in the use of tax shelters, letterbox companies and offshore accounts to conceal or obfuscate their financial activities. Amongst these people were at least three Icelandic government ministers, including the PM, at least three former and current members of Reykjavík City Council, and hundreds of other Icelanders. Things came to a dramatic head when footage of an interview the Prime Minister took with Swedish television company SVT was aired. This footage, which has circled the globe, shows the Prime Minister being asked some pointed questions about tax shelters and the people who use them. Once SVT was joined by Icelan- dic journalist Jóhannes Kr. Kristjans- son of Reykjavík Media, Sigmundur's attitude went from wary to outright defensive, accusing the two journal- ists of ambushing him and declaring that he had nothing to hide even as he walked out of the interview. The video went viral. Numerous in- ternational news outlets picked up on it. Even Edward Snowden commented on it. By Monday morning there were few people in the country who hadn't seen it. The rumblings of mass dis- content began. Overnight, thousands more had signed the petition call- ing for his resignation, and hundreds more joined the ranks of those intend- ing to join the day's protests. Now we all knew why Sigmundur's wife had made that Facebook post: a disastrous interview, which his assistants de- manded never be aired, and which he apparently never even mentioned to other members of his own party. This could have been Sigmundur's moment to step aside gracefully, with dignity. Instead, he appeared before the nation on live television to apolo- gise for his behaviour during the in- terview, repeating the mantra that he had done nothing wrong, and that he wasn't even considering resigning. Firing a shotgun in an avalanche zone__ This statement did not have the effect the Prime Minister was probably hop- ing for. Instead of putting himself in a safer position, Sigmundur had effec- tively fired a shotgun in an avalanche zone. Five hours later, some 23,000 peo- ple had converged on Parliament, an Icelandic record, demanding his resig- nation and new elections. Just to give you a sense of scale, bear in mind that Iceland is a country of about 320,000 people. Monday's protests were the equivalent of some 2.3 million people protesting outside the US Congress. In fact, so much debris was hurled at the parliamentary building—eggs, skyr, toilet paper and bananas all went flying—that Members of Parliament reportedly had difficulty seeing the thousands of angry Icelanders outside their windows. The protests even took the police by surprise. They had failed to close off Pósthússtræti, the street which roughly flanks the west side of Par- liament, and cars were trapped in the incoming sea of people. Drivers gave up, abandoning their cars. The crowd swelled, spilling into adjoining streets. Fireworks were set off. This was all starting to look very familiar. As late afternoon became evening, 2009 was very much on everyone's minds. Icelanders speculated, in the bars and cafés around downtown, in their homes and on the streets, wheth- er we had just witnessed the first day of another popular movement—barely seven years after the previous one— that would once again break the rul- ing coalition and force early elections. By all accounts this was a safe bet to make, and still is. But nothing pre- pared us for what would happen on Tuesday. Who the hell is the Prime Minister?____ That morning, the Prime Minis- ter—following in the footsteps of his wife—turned to Facebook to speak to the general public, expressing the desire to dissolve Parliament and get early elections underway. There was much rejoicing. The Prime Minister then went directly to the residence of President Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, who had just come home that morn- ing, having cut short his personal business in the US. After 40 minutes, the Prime Minister emerged, only to quickly duck into his car and get whisked away with barely a word to the press who were waiting outside. That was the first sign that something was amiss in this whole dissolution of Par- liament/early elections thing. The second sign was when the President called for a press confer- ence shortly after the meeting. There, he informed reporters that the Prime Minister had contacted him person- ally, asking for a meeting. He said the Prime Minister brought his dissolu- tion and early elections idea to the ✂ Instead of putting himself in a safer position, has effectively fired a shotgun in an avalanche zone. Feature Story: The Panama Papers & Iceland The Unraveling Of A Government: The Panama Papers And Iceland By Paul Fontaine 18
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