Iceland review - 2015, Side 62

Iceland review - 2015, Side 62
60 ICELAND REVIEW trouble facing the Icelandic banks and surely changed the view of many investors in a more positive direction. Only much later did it become known that the bank had lent the full amount, most of which had no other collateral than the shares themselves. The Sheikh wasn’t risking much of his own money. Apparently, Kaupþing’s second-largest owner Ólafur brokered the deal. In secret the bank lent the money to Ólafur’s and Al-Thani’s companies without much collateral, who in turn invested it in the bank. The issuing of the loans later proved to be the criminal deeds in the case. The few previous sentences passed for financial crime in Iceland have most often amounted to two years or less. Though quite a few cheered the up to five-and-a-half-year sentencing of the bankers in a kind of schadenfreude, others in our close-knit society only felt sad to see some of the country’s formerly most celebrated businessmen being locked up. Perhaps most were just calmly relieved that the judicial system seemed to be working in the way it should. Special Prosecutor Ólafur Þór Hauksson said the conviction held precedence for many upcoming cases, some against the same culprits, who could, thus, face added prison time to their sentences. Whether these sentences will hold precedent elsewhere is still unknown. However, the fact that Icelandic laws on finances are for the most part the same as elsewhere on the European internal market has caused a nervous wave across the financial world. Heavier sentences have been issued for financial crime in the U.S. but not in relation to the 2008 crisis. A MORE PROFOUND CRISIS The ruling in the Al-Thani case is just one example of how Iceland has responded differently to the crisis than many other countries. Not bailing out the banks and then refusing to implement strict austerity is another example of Iceland’s unique path in this crisis. To understand the nature of this crisis it’s important to keep in mind that the crash not only was a severe finan- cial crisis but also served a devastating blow to Icelandic politics. Key government institutions and the political class stood accused of having sponsored the rise and collapse of the failed neoliberal model. The profound crisis opened new opportuni- ties for political reform in addition to the economic recovery. In a series of largely non-violent protests, branded the Pots- and-Pans Revolution, the Independence Party-led government was popularly ousted in February 2009. A fragile left-wing coa- lition government, the first in the young republic’s history, replaced it. Many measures were taken in the after- math of the crash, which collectively had the aim of widespread political reform. The parliament appointed a Special Investigation Commission to analyze the events leading up to the crash and estimate whether government ministers had been at fault. Significantly for the case dis- cussed here, the government furthermore established the Special Prosecutor’s Office, which was to investigate criminal activity in the financial sector leading up to the crash. The left-wing government was however becoming increasingly unpopular, losing spectacularly in the 2013 parliamentary election, which resulted in a right-of-center coalition being formed, led by Iceland’s old agrarian party, the Progressive Party, together with the Independence Party. BANKING COLLAPSE Then Kaupþing, now Arion Bank, headquarters, Reykjavík. P H O TO B Y P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N .
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