Iceland review - 2016, Side 21

Iceland review - 2016, Side 21
ICELAND REVIEW 19 PANAMA PAPERS PROBLEMS PERSIST Containing over 11 million documents, this spring’s Panama Papers leak is taking some time to sift through and new details are coming to light. After the initial political fallout in Iceland, it has since emerged that some of the country’s best-known businesspeople have had extensive offshore financial dealings. Father and son tycoons Björgólfur Guðmundsson and Björgólfur Thor Björgólfsson, for example, are reportedly linked to over 50 offshore companies. While this is not illegal, it does provide them with wide scope for secrecy. One of the com- panies mentioned—a Tortola-registered business called Ranpod Ltd.—was established just months before the 2008 banking crash and the subsequent declaration of personal bankruptcy from Björgólfur senior, who was the largest shareholder in Landsbankinn before it collapsed. MÝVATN MIRACLE North Iceland’s famous Lake Mývatn is under extreme environmental pressure from tourism, industry and poor planning; so much so that those calling for urgent action are using terms like “major crisis.” A bright spot has emerged, however, with the discovery of a few young marimo lake balls (charmingly called kúluskítur, or ‘ball shit’ in Icelandic) which were previously thought extinct in Mývatn—one of only two lakes in the world which sup- ports them. WOLF, SON OF EAGLE Good old-fashioned Icelandic names like the above-men- tioned ‘Wolf, Son of Eagle’ (Úlfur Arnarson) could be a thing of the past, language purists warn. The dire pre- diction comes in response to a proposed law to remove nearly all naming restrictions and allow people to call their children whatever they want to, presumably including Kevin, without the prior approval of a naming committee. Patronymics and matronymics would also cease to be com- pulsory. Public opinion is generally in favor of the change. UNWILLING WORKERS UNVEILED Trafficking is one of the world’s biggest human rights issues today and according to the 2016 Global Slavery Index there are an estimated 400 people living and working in Iceland against their will, or under unreg- ulated illegal conditions. Following the surprising discovery of three women in forced labor in the tiny town of Vík, a deaf Russian woman is also believed to have been a victim after being charged USD 1,000 for a work permit she neither needed nor received, in order to sell charity lottery tickets. Another woman has come forward, after being paid a tiny wage to work overly long hours at a Reykjavík hotel and share a bedroom with her boss; under the false threat of deportation. (Read more about trafficking in Iceland in our interview with the National Commissioner of the Icelandic Police on page 72). PHOTO BY ZOË ROBERT. BY ALËX ELLIOTT. PHOTOS BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON AND ZOË ROBERT.
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