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Government The Almighty Buck Politics

Icelandic Prime Minister Resigns After Panama Data Leak (bloomberg.com) 228

Omar Valdimarsson, reporting for Bloomberg: The Panama secrecy leak claimed its first scalp after Icelandic Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson resigned following revelations about his personal finances. The decision was announced in parliament after the legislature had been the focus of street protests that attracted thousands of Icelanders angered by the alleged tax evasion of their leader. Gunnlaugsson, who will step down a year before his term was due to end, gave in to mounting pressure from the opposition and even from corners of his own party. The Panama documents leak, printed in newspapers around the world, showed that the 41-year-old premier and his wife had investments placed in the British Virgin Islands, which included debt in Iceland's three failed banks. An article on The Guardian sheds more light on this: The leaked documents from the Mossack Fonseca law firm show Gunnlaugsson and his wife, Anna Sigurlaug Palsdottir, bought a British Virgin Islands-based offshore company, Wintris Inc, in December 2007 to invest her share of the proceeds of the sale of her father's business, Iceland's only Toyota importer. Gunnlaugsson sold his 50% stake to his wife for a symbolic $1 at the end of 2009, eight months after he was elected to parliament as an MP for the centre-right Progressive party. He failed, however, to declare an interest in the company either then or when he became prime minister in 2013. His office has said his shareholding was an error due simply to the couple having a joint bank account and that it had "always been clear to both of them that the prime minister's wife owned the assets." The transfer of ownership was made as soon as this was pointed out, a spokesman said. The prime minister denies he was required to declare an interest.
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Icelandic Prime Minister Resigns After Panama Data Leak

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  • by liquid_schwartz ( 530085 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:25PM (#51846857)
    Kinda cold for me and I'm not a huge pickled fish eater but otherwise they always sound great.
    • It's an accusation of a conflict of interest tied to a banking collapse. Kind of a political hot potato that doesn't necessarily reflect a functioning democracy. If HRC had been tied to mortgage-backed securities or investing in sub-prime loans pre-2008, she would be polling much worse with independents here.

      The parliamentary system's no-confidence system allows for political squabbles that come up *between* elections to remove a sitting PM. For us there's a delay... and we're a bit less responsive becau

      • The notion of confidence is the chief reason Walter Bagehot, 150 years ago, observed the superiority of the Westminster system to the Presidential system. Short of a trial and conviction for impeachment, there's precious little Congress can do about an errant president.

    • by quintessencesluglord ( 652360 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:46PM (#51847115)

      Keep in mind this is the same country that allowed banks to fail and threw the bankers responsible in jail during the 2008 crisis. Everyone predicted their economy would implode, but actually recovered more quickly than several other European countries.

      I imagine the sting from that has made them more wary of even a hint of corruption, which is oddly starting to reverberate through the US after TARP, TPP, and now no real recovery in sight.

      • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

        It's because the people predicting that were rich assholes that did not want their fake investments to fizzle. All banks should have been allowed to collapse or better yet, given the corporate death penalty around the world.

        But then I also thought that propping up GM was stupid.

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @02:07PM (#51847349) Homepage

      Pickled fish isn't widely eaten here. A commonly eaten thing you're not used to is harðfiskur, which is basically fish jerky. But most food here is pretty standard western fare...probably the most commonly eaten food here is pizza.

      Now, if you want weird stuff, we've got no shortage of options! Want rotten ammonia-reeking poisonous shark? You can have it with some fermented whale and sheep head if you'd like....

      • Want rotten ammonia-reeking poisonous shark? You can have it with some fermented whale and sheep head if you'd like....

        Proof [wikipedia.org] that people in Iceland are descendants of vikings. Seriously what is wrong with my ancestors where they thought that would taste good. I still remember the smell every Christmas at my grandparent's house when my grandfather made that.

      • by e r ( 2847683 )

        It's not the 1990s, Slashdot; fix your unicode support. It's ridiculous that I can't type a thorn here.

        harðfiskur

        But you did type a thorn... right? Isn't that what "ð" is?

      • harÃfiskur

        How the heck did you get an eth in there? Did you threated whiplash with a large axe? When I qouted you I get junk.

        • He likely uses the alt-ddd digit option in windows. That for reasons that I can't grasp work with /. while every "non latin" letter I enter on my Mac gets garbled.

          And no: even the german umlauts don't work on a PC unless entered via alt-ddd. No idea what the difference is.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          Dunno, I just typed it. Still can't type a thorn, though.

          • Dunno, I just typed it. Still can't type a thorn, though.

            iiinteresting. I'm guessing it's a charset thing. All claims to be UTF8, but I suspect it lies. Surely there isn't a charset out there that has eth but not thorn.

  • Pirate Party (Score:5, Interesting)

    by doconnor ( 134648 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:29PM (#51846899) Homepage

    Of interest to Slashdotters is that the Pirate Party of Iceland currently has a generous lead in the polls if an early election is called.

    • by Thud457 ( 234763 )
      Interesting.
      Iceland is big enough to successfully invade the Turks & Caicos. But just barely.
      • Fuck that! Turks and Caicos are going to become the eleventh Canadian province! Time for Canada to actually have a nice little domestic tax shelter to counter the six or seven that Britain runs!

        • As a province, full Canadian Federal taxes would apply plus whatever provincial taxes they have, so it wouldn't be any more of tax shelter then Alberta.

          • I still think it's a great idea, and I don't know why some Canadian politicians have been so averse to it. I'm sure Britain would love to pass of the Turks and Caicos, considering the problems the dependency has had over the last ten years, and the people of the dependency would become part of Confederation, gaining access to the Canadian economy and a fairly strong political and economic system. Best of all, they wouldn't even have to change the head of state!

      • Re:Pirate Party (Score:4, Informative)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @02:16PM (#51847471) Homepage

        Trivia on the subject. The Icelandic name for the Pirate Party is "Píratapartýið" But that's not Icelandic for "Pirate Party" - pirate is "sjóræningur" and political party is "flokkur". "Pírati" is an Icelandification of "Pirate" as in the international Pirate Party movement (they wanted to differentiate themselves from literal pirates), while "partý" is a loanword for the type of party where you go out and have fun (not the political kind).

    • by interkin3tic ( 1469267 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:42PM (#51847073)
      Odd. I feel like pirates would be much more likely to have their booty buried in Panama.
  • by lazarus ( 2879 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:32PM (#51846933) Journal

    Iceland has had its fair share of political upheaval [voxeu.org] post 2008. Fantastic country though -- I highly recommend a visit.

    These are a very stoic people. They live on a volcanic island that is essentially trying every day to kill them off. In Iceland you can actually see the effect that the environment has on a population. They have some of the most dangerous roads I have ever seen in the world and absolutely no guard rails or for that matter not even much in the way of signs. You can hike out to the West cost of the island (which is the Westernmost point of Europe) and look down to the sea -- which is more than half a kilometer straight down. No railing. No signs. Not even a small rope. Just a nice grassy pleasant stroll until you just walk off the edge and plunge to your death. It's completely fantastic there.

    They take this same stoic (you fuck up, you pay the price) view of their politicians and their banks.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by postmortem ( 906676 )

      Sorry, but westernmost point of Europe is in Portugal, as you can see for yourself here:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      • by vux984 ( 928602 )

        The map you linked is useless.
        Two thirds right.

        The point identified on the map is the westernmost mainland point; which is in Portugal. Correct.

        However, Iceland is not mainland, it is an island; so we are interested in the westernmost point, including islands.

        However, even then its not iceland, and westernmost island point of Europe still happens to be in Portugal, in the Azores islands.

    • Re:Upheaval (Score:4, Funny)

      by DNS-and-BIND ( 461968 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:55PM (#51847209) Homepage
      Iceland has zero diversity. It's all white, all the time. They are also 87% Christian, Islamophobia seems popular there. The other Scandinavian countries are having great success with immigration adding value to their countries, Iceland is culturally backwards and stuck in the 20th century.
      • Adding value? What kind of value? I have no idea why someone wouldn't want mass immigration of Muslims though. Do you? Any idea?
        • Cheap labour. Raising and educating children is not cheap. Imported labour is one way to keep the costs down. This was also done in France some time ago and now they are paying the price. The imported labour has to be integrated into local society and not treated as trash. When treated as trash you end up with ethnic ghettos - a breading ground for rebellious teens with no future who are willing to blow themselves up.
        • Kebab, Falafel, Baklava, oriental wine, Karniyarik, Guellac, Rakki, oriental jewelry, and assuming you are a male idiot and not a girl idiot: the most sexy girls on the planet! But perhaps you are a girl and lesbian and missed that aspect so far ... which would prove the point: you are an complete idiot.

          BTW: we are talking about The Icelands here. A Viking country. The Vikings have the longest history of peaceful trade with Arabia and other islamic countries than any other " western nation" of the world. On

      • Re:Upheaval (Score:4, Informative)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @02:27PM (#51847585) Homepage

        Iceland has a higher percentage immigrants than Europe on average - more than all the other Nordics except Sweden. The second to fourth (it varies) most common immigrant nationality in Iceland is filipino. Despite high church registration, Iceland consistently polls as one of the least religious countries in the world, with one recent poll finding that not a single young person in the hundred-something that they polled backed a creationist worldview over that of the Big Bang. Iceland has been far more welcoming to immigrants during the immigrant crisis than mainland Europe.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      . No railing. No signs. Not even a small rope. Just a nice grassy pleasant stroll until you just walk off the edge and plunge to your death.

      Natural selection.

      No, seriously, why should we cordon off everything that could hurt you? We'd be cordoning off the whole country....

      That said, if tourists keep dying at Reynisfjara we might have to do something. Apparently the sign at the parking lot warning of rogue waves isn't enough to stop people from... well, getting swept out into rough, cold, shark-infested wa

  • by Lucas123 ( 935744 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @01:35PM (#51846959) Homepage
    Iceland's citizenry turned out by the thousands to protest their PM's refusal to resign after the Panama Papers revealed his corruption. The Kremlin on the other hand has already called the Panama Papers a CIA plot, (big surprise there). Hopefully, if the Panama Papers do reveal Putin used a shell to hide his money, Russia's citizens will not stand for it and force his hand. Let's hope other nation's citizens follow suit, including here in the U.S.
    • Even if it comes out that Putin has a couple of trillion bucks stashed away he just has to say that he's doing it to stick it to the USA & the EU while not wearing a shirt and his popularity will go *up*.

      • Putin seems the brightest of the bunch. His friends and family have zillions of dollars, but somehow Putin, like a great black hole at the center of a galaxy of corruption, can't be seen at all.

        But even if someone finds a way to directly implicate him, it will be irrelevant, because much of the Russian press is in Putin's pocket, so most Russians will hear little more than whispers, and what they do hear will be countered with "Evil Yankee pig-dogs trying to make our beloved leader look bad..."

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      if the Panama Papers do reveal Putin used a shell to hide his money, Russia's citizens will not stand for it and force his hand.

      I think that greatly depends on the why and how Putin and the media he controls spin it. Russian's are a proud people. That is one of the reasons they continue to support their strong man.

      If Putin makes it appear the reason for the shell corps and money laundering was to evade international sanctions for example, a good portion of the population will cheer him for being clever. The only way this is a political problem for him is if claims he did it for tax evasion or something as a primary objective ca

      • Russians support strong men because, for centuries, it's all they've ever known. Their brief experiments with democracy; the brief periods of government that approached actual democracy, the four months of the Lvov coalition in 1917 and the Yeltsin years after the collapse of the USSR were such incredible failures that I don't think a lot of Russians actually even want anything but nominal democracy.

    • The Kremlin on the other hand has already called the Panama Papers a CIA plot, (big surprise there). Hopefully, if the Panama Papers do reveal Putin used a shell to hide his money, Russia's citizens will not stand for it and force his hand.

      Not likely. Here's why. And I speak from personal experience. I speak Russian rather well and I've spent more time in the ex-USSR than most people who aren't from there. One of the problems with Russians in particular is that for centuries they've had this rather quaint idea that the guy at the top is a really great, caring guy and the greatest leader in the world and it's those evil underlings beneath him who are corrupt and not doing his will. There are stories of peasants in the old days of the Tsar

      • In sheer number of deaths, Mao is the worst (nobody is certain how many Chinese died in the Great Leap Forward, but it's in the tens of millions). As to whether Stalin or Hitler are worse, I still say Hitler, and not just because of the Holocaust (Stalin's purges, forced relocations and forced famines killed more), but because Hitler's actions not only lead to the Second World War, but so thoroughly altered the world order that in many ways we still live under the shadow the Nazis. Without WWII, it seems li

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Iceland's citizenry turned out by the thousands to protest their PM's refusal to resign after the Panama Papers revealed his corruption. The Kremlin on the other hand has already called the Panama Papers a CIA plot, (big surprise there). Hopefully, if the Panama Papers do reveal Putin used a shell to hide his money, Russia's citizens will not stand for it and force his hand. Let's hope other nation's citizens follow suit, including here in the U.S.

      Well, I'm sure if the Kremlin continues to deny it, then the

    • Falkland? Britten-Norman?

      Which islanders are you talking about, you dickhead?

  • He shouldn't have had to resign for this. That's ludicrous. The implications of corruption in government, this seems like.. it will be the smallest collusion amongst any of the implications from any country's gov't officials, and if this is truly the reason he had to resign (neglecting anything about policy or ability to perform in other ways that leads the country to stability and prosperity) that's a shame.

    Surely there will be much larger heads to fall, and surely, if this type of leak continues, much mor

    • He did run for election to stop this type of corruption. Iceland was probably the nation that suffered the worst from the bank meltdowns nearly a decade ago. So its a big thing on Iceland. In most other nations it would have been a blip on the radar and nothing would have happened. But on Iceland its an important issue.

      Yesterday it was a "small" demonstration where little less then a tenth of all of icelanders was demonstrating. Ok, so it was like 25 000 people, but with a population of only 330 000 its a b

      • I'd like to think that in just about any liberal democracy, having the head of government being caught trying to hide a significant conflict of interest and then rejigging a repayment scheme so that a large amount of money was directed at his or her spouse would at the very least raise an eyebrow.

    • If he did nothing wrong then why the protests marching to the parliament buildings in Iceland? He resigned because he was caught funneling money to protect investors of the failed banks to which he was hiding his involvement with. If he could have not resigned he would not have resigned.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      He shouldn't have had to resign for this. That's ludicrous.

      Funneling off $2B of state money in order to benefit "corporate creditors" of banks of which he just happens to be one himself in secret is kind of a big thing in a country with fewer inhabitants than a suburb in the U.S. In particular when you won your election basically on themes fighting corporate greed and corruption.

      He probably needed to resign solely in order to be able to leave the country legally as fast as possible.

    • Of course he should resign. He had an undeclared conflict of interest and clearly knew he had such a conflict, which is why he went out of his way to try to hide the conflict; including a transfer of the assets to his wife (which wouldn't in almost any jurisdiction clear him of conflict) and in a timely fashion to avoid ever having to report it. He's the head of the government, a government which negotiated to have payments redirected to creditors, of which he (despite his pretty flimsy attempt to hide it)

  • Anyone interested in watching a person being confronted with the first bits of evidence of malfeasance and totally being guilty is here: [theguardian.com] http://www.theguardian.com/new... [theguardian.com] .
    Icelandic PM walks out of interview
  • by J'raxis ( 248192 ) on Tuesday April 05, 2016 @05:30PM (#51848827) Homepage

    The Prime Minister is properly addressed by his first name, Sigmundur, not "Gunnlaugsson," which is not surname like we use in English but a patronymic (his father is named Gunnlaug). Icelandic name [wikipedia.org].

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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