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The Icelandic Central Bank is a Terrorist Organization!

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    The Icelandic Central Bank is a Terrorist Organization!

    At least according to the Brits:



    Angry Iceland defies the world

    Iceland's president has blocked a Bill to pay Britain and Holland up to £3.4bn for Icesave depositors, acknowledging that popular feeling in the island nation is too strong to proceed without a referendum.

    The move reopens a bitter dispute and greatly complicates Iceland's loan agreement with the International Monetary Fund. It has already led to a fresh downgrade to BB+ by Fitch Ratings, which called the decision "a significant setback to Iceland's efforts to restore normal financial relations with the rest of the world."

    The Icesave law was passed by Iceland's parliament in a knife-edge vote late last year, but a petition by the InDefense movement has changed the political landscape. The lobby collected 56,000 signatures – a quarter of voters.

    President Olafur Ragnar Grimsson said the "overwhelming majority" wanted a direct say over the matter, and that no settlement would hold without their assent.

    "It is the cornerstone of the constitutional structure of the Republic of Iceland that the people are the supreme judge of the validity of the law," he said. "At this crucial juncture it is also important to emphasise that the recovery of the Icelandic economy is a matter of vital urgency".

    If voters say "No" when the referendum takes place in a couple of months, the accord thrashed out with London and the Hague during months of wrangling will no longer have any credibility, whatever the legal niceties. The reality is that Icelanders have erupted in collective rage at what they believe to be gross injustice and "gunboat diplomacy" by Downing Street. What rankles is Britain's use of anti-terrorism law to freeze Iceland's assets. The Icelandic central bank was listed besides al-Qaeda as a terrorist body – unprecedented treatment for a NATO ally. Holland was careful not to go so far.

    "Importers couldn't get trade finance for food. We feel deeply wronged," said Johannes Skulason from InDefence.

    Shelves were bare for weeks in Icelandic shops as the banking system disintegrated. Einars Már Gudmundsson, a novelist, said most citizens were unaware that Iceland's three leading banks –Landsbanki, Glitnir and Kaupthing – were operating as global hedge funds with exposure of 11 times Iceland's GDP.

    "I had never heard of Icesave till this happened," said Mr Gudmundsson. "We were told that what these banks did abroad was nothing to do with us but when it all went wrong the responsibility fell back on us. Profits were privatised, but losses were nationalised."

    He added: "We're told if we reject the terms, we will be the Cuba of the North. But if we accept, we'll be the Haiti of the North."

    Both Britain and Holland expect Iceland to stick to its agreement, but the legal claims are far from watertight. Iceland accepted "political responsibility" for the 320,000 British and Dutch deposits in exchange for lenient terms (arguably denied) in November 2008, but never accepted the legal claim. The UK has refunded private savers up to £50,000, but councils such as Kent are relying on the deal to recoup their money. They have retrieved £100m of the £900m put in Icelandic accounts.

    Iceland's Left-wing coalition – which unseated free marketeers in February's "Saucepan Revolution" – has backed the Icesave terms, deeming it is the only way for Iceland to move beyond the disastrous episode. The petitioners said they accept that Iceland's people should foot part of the bill, but object to the "Versailles" terms: a loan at 5.55pc interest, to be repaid within 15 years. The central banks said this will increase Iceland's public debt by 20pc of GDP.

    A report by Sweden's Riksbank said Britain and Europe share blame for the fiasco. It said "absurd" EU rules – which cover Iceland indirectly – told states to set up a "guarantee scheme" for banks, but never said taxpayers were liable for losses. The reports added that the UK "hardly bothered" to inform savers that the schemes were ill-funded. "The conclusion is clear: the EU host countries (UK and Holland) are also to blame for Iceland's disaster. It would be reasonable that they carry some of the burden. It takes two to tango," it said.

    The UK Financial Services Authority said it was unable to stop Icelandic banks raising deposits in the UK under the EU's "passport" system, even when they began milking UK customers to cover losses at home.
    Whatever the rights and wrongs, Iceland was by then already being crushed by a financial tsunami. Britain's use of anti-terror laws at that moment will not sit pretty in diplomatic history.
    $500, Diamantschwarz, and a Dream

    #2
    don't the british bankers watch Top Gear?

    the residents of iceland survive year-round in near-freezing temperatures, hunt reindeer, and build 800hp dune buggies that can drive across water.

    they don't have a standing army- why? because they are the last of the Vikings.

    don't fuck with them.
    past:
    1989 325is (learner shitbox)
    1986 325e (turbo dorito)
    1991 318ic (5-lug ITB)
    1985 323i baur
    current:
    1995 M3 (suspension, 17x9/255-40, borla)

    Comment


      #3
      I´ve been monitoring the news as I´m an Icelandic.

      The current goverment has literally done good old Bendover to the UK and Dutch in hope for a free pass for Iceland into the EU. Which they so desperately believe is some sort of key in resurrecting Iceland in the future. What they did is agreed to a un repayable deal forced on their lacking negotiation committee as they where scared of the future if they actually attempted to stand up and demand a fair deal.

      If this would be agreed it would be the biggest financial burden put onto any nation per capital ever in the history of the world. More then the German nation has had to pay the allied nations since WWII. Which they are still paying FYI.

      but the President decided that he would actually read and follow the Icelandic constitution in where the people will ALWAYS be able to have the final say in any matter. And just by doing that the waters have settled and things are moving into a much better way for the Icelandic nation.

      The bullying action of the brits and dutch (both used to have colonies as you would know and are no strangers to bullying smaller nations) have thus failed and they must play ball fairly. They attempted to literally lie and say that everything would crumple in Iceland if they would say NO. Which is impossible to say and a open threat.

      Why is this happening important?
      Tax payers paying for private business failures!
      And should be noted in other countries as well where governments will force feed their public this same sort of injustice and nonsense. While the people involved in the reasons behind the tax payers paying more are walking away free or with even more money.
      Gunni
      @ Prodrive / Aston Martin Racing

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by gstuning View Post
        Tax payers paying for private business failures!
        And should be noted in other countries as well where governments will force feed their public this same sort of injustice and nonsense. While the people involved in the reasons behind the tax payers paying more are walking away free or with even more money.
        hmmm, this sounds strangely familiar.......

        ps-Germany didn't have to pay monetary reparations after WWII. That's what CAUSED the second world war. Germany was forced to pay reparations for WWI, which bankrupted the entire country, and paved the way for a short vegetarian with a dumb moustache to hijack the government.
        Originally posted by stoliver54
        Aw, balls.
        FS: assault gear....
        http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=159253

        Comment

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