Iceland review - 2016, Side 20

Iceland review - 2016, Side 20
18 ICELAND REVIEW THE BIG STORY OF OCTOBER WAS THE PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION AND EVENTS LEADING UP TO IT, COVERED ON PAGE 80. ASIDE FROM THE ELECTION, THE PAST TWO MONTHS HAVE SEEN EARTHQUAKES, ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDS, INTERNATIONAL CELEBRITIES, A POWER LINE STRUGGLE, SPORTING SUCCESS AND THE ANNIVERSARY OF A SUMMIT. In October, the Höfði Reykjavík Peace Center was opened in celebration of the 30th anniversary of the Reykjavík Summit. The center will be a forum for international coop- eration to encourage peace in the world. October 11-12, 1986, US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev met in Höfði House, halfway between their two superpowers, to discuss arms control. According to a member of Reagan’s negotiating team, Ken Adelman, who spoke at the Höfði Reykjavík Peace Center opening reception, more was accomplished during ten and a half hours of negotiations at Höfði House than there had been during seven and a half years of nego- tiations in Geneva. Although the meeting produced no signed agreement, it is generally credited with having paved the way for the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty. It required the two superpowers to eliminate their nuclear and conventional ground-launched ballistic and cruise mis- siles with ranges of 500 to 5,500 km, unofficially marking the beginning of the end of the Cold War. BY VALA HAFSTAÐ. News Roundup PHOTO BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON. P H O TO B Y P Á LL S TE FÁ N S S O N . ON THE BALL The Icelandic national football teams have continued to do well. In mid-September, the women’s team qualified for the UEFA Women’s EURO 2017. This is the third time in a row that the team qualifies for the European Championship. Meanwhile, the men’s team is currently playing in the qualifying round for the 2018 World Cup. Their three games have result- ed in a draw with Ukraine and victories against Finland and Turkey, placing ‘Our Boys’ with Croatia at the top of their group. GOOSE HUNTERS DIG UP VIKING September was the month when goose hunters turned archaeologists. On a riv- erbank in South Iceland, they stumbled upon a sword dating back to the Viking Age. Archaeologists were sent to the scene to start digging, but not until a second set of goose hunters arrived on October 2 were human bones discovered, likely of the sword’s owner. A valid ID was nowhere to be found, so his identity remains a mystery. Meanwhile, a major archeological find in East Iceland in September suggested the country may have been inhabited by Nordic settlers as early as the year 800, or 74 years earlier than its official settlement date. Now we’ll have to revise our history books. THIRTY YEARS SINCE REYKJAVÍK SUMMIT
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