Iceland review - 2016, Side 42

Iceland review - 2016, Side 42
40 ICELAND REVIEW THE INTERVIEW Jóhannes Kr. Kristjánsson is the Icelandic investigative journalist behind the recent viral video, featuring Iceland’s then prime minister, Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson. The awkward interview centered on the PM’s connections to an offshore company, revealed in the Panama Papers, and ultimately led to his resignation. Zoë Robert asks Jóhannes about the revelations, what he learnt during his months of research, and the state of the media in Iceland. At 6 pm on Sunday April 3, half the Icelandic nation—98 percent of television viewers that evening, according to a Gallup poll—tune in to Iceland’s state broadcaster, RÚV, to watch a special edition of news analysis program Kastljós. The suspense is pal- pable: something big will be revealed. We know it relates to Icelandic politi- cians and offshore companies, but few could have predicted the extent of the revelations and the fallout. The nation watches as Prime Minister Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson is asked whether he has links to an offshore company in a tax haven. He insists that any such possible links would have been through one of the Icelandic companies he has worked for, stressing that he has never hidden any of his assets. The interview comes to a head when Icelandic investigative journalist Jóhannes Kr. Kristjánsson, of Reykjavik Media, and his Swedish colleague, Sven Bergman of SVT (Swedish public ser- vice television), confront Sigmundur about his and his wife’s ownership of company Wintris Inc., registered in the British Virgin Islands. After responding that the company has been listed on his tax return from the beginning and insist- ing he was not obliged to declare it in parliament, Sigmundur Davíð abruptly stands up and walks out. The PM’s han- dling of the interview caused ridicule in Iceland and abroad. Sigmundur Davíð sold his share in Wintris to his wife, Anna Sigurlaug Pálsdóttir, for one dollar in December 2009, eight months after taking parlia- mentary office. His links to the compa- ny were revealed in the unprecedented leak of more than 11 million documents from Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca, which connected numerous current and former heads of state, oligarchs, mafia bosses and sports personalities to offshore companies in tax havens. The revelations about the PM were particu- larly scandalous because the company had registered a claim of around ISK 500 million (USD 4 million at today’s exchange rates) against the assets of the bankrupt estates of the failed Icelandic banks, and Sigmundur Davíð failed to mention, when negotiating a bailout deal with foreign creditors, that his wife was herself among the ‘foreign’ creditors. Amid intense pressure, including what was reportedly the largest public protest in Icelandic history, in which 22,000 people demonstrated in front of parlia- ment, he resigned as prime minister two days after the interview’s broadcast (read more about the story on pages 34-38). In contrast to this fast sequence of events, the fateful interview was long in the making. Jóhannes and data jour- nalist Aðalsteinn Kjartansson, who in 2015 started their own media compa- ny, Reykjavik Media, spent months working on the story in collaboration with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). Jóhannes also co-founded and sits on the board of the Icelandic Center for Investigative Journalism. PHOTOS BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON.
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