Posts Tagged ‘Citizens’

Icelandic president to lose referendum power?

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

johanna1Johanna Sigurdardottir, Prime Minister of Iceland and leader of the Social Democrats, has told reporters she wants the President’s right to veto new acts of parliament and send them to a public referendum to be removed.

The Icelandic President is the country’s head of state and the only person with power over parliament; but Johanna Sigurdardottir said she wants the right to call a referendum to be placed directly in the hands of the public.

Current president, Olafur Ragnar Grimsson has twice used his veto and is the only president to have ever done so, RUV reports.

Sigurdardottir said that her party is very enthusiastic about a bill due before parliament that would call together a constitutional parliament of citizens with the legal power to change Iceland’s constitution. She believes such a parliament should make re-evaluation of the president’s role a priority. Sigurdardottir is also in favour of the office of president having stricter rules on conduct and a clearer job description.

Online citizenship a click away in Sweden

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

swedish-residence-permitAn online citizenship application service has been launched by the Swedish Migration Board (Migrationsverket).

The web-based service, launched last week, aims to simplify and speed up the often lengthy application process for Swedish citizenship.

“The Migration Board has carried out a broad development of services and by the end of 2011 we will have the most expedient citizenship application process in Europe,” said Dan Eliasson, Migration Board director-general, in a report by The Local.

Although the official announcement of the new service was only made last week, the first electronic applicant, Thai citizen Napasorn Rungrueang, has already been approved and has received citizenship confirmation from staff at the Migration Board.

The online application process will still require potential citizens to submit a signed form, but the rest of the electronic submission can be paid for and completed entirely online. The application is then forwarded to the Migration Board for processing.

A valid email address in required by all citizenship applicants, along with the capacity to make payment via internet banking or credit card. Applicants will also need access to a printer and should wait for approval before submitting the final, signed form.

The Migration Board has advised potential applicants that the requirements for citizenship remain the same, and that at least five years’ residency in Sweden is considered standard.

Icelandic population grows again after unprecedented decline

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

babiesThe population of Iceland has increased by 400 since New Year. This follows 2009’s decrease – the first since 1889.

Statistics Iceland reveals that at the end of March 317,900 people were living in Iceland: 159,900 men and 158,800 women. Foreign nationals made up 21,600 of that number at the end of the first quarter of 2010. 201,200 people lived in the Reykjavik capital region.

1,200 children were born in Iceland in the first three months of the year and 480 people died. At the same time, 380 more people moved away from the country than moved to it. There were 430 more Icelandic citizens who left the country in that time than there were Icelandic citizens moving home; but 60 more foreign nationals moved to Iceland than away from it. Males made up a significant majority of departures.

Eight arrested for drugs trafficking in Iceland

Monday, April 19th, 2010

cocaine-littleEight people – seven men and a woman – have been remanded in custody in Iceland accused of large scale drug trafficking. Europol is investigating the case along with Icelandic police.

The people are accused of importing cocaine from Spain to Iceland.

Five of the men were arrested in the Reykjavik area over the weekend and the sixth man and the woman were arrested at Keflavik International Airport due to the vigilance of customs officers, Visir.is reports. Another man was arrested last Thursday.

Most of the people have come to police attention before for differing reasons. They are all Icelandic citizens and are aged in their 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s, according to police.

The Finance Minister Who Doesn’t Get It

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

“I think what is happening in Iceland proves that our own currency is very beneficial to our needs. You don’t have to go far back to see that the currency developments have increased the competitiveness of Icelandic businesses and industries”.

- Steingrimur J. Sigfusson, Finance Minister of Iceland two years after an economic collapse all but wiped out the Icelandic financial sector after years of “hot money” flowing into the country because of exorbitant interest rates imposed to battle inflation.

He is crediting the arsonist for bringing a bucket of water to the fire.

What he is really celebrating is Iceland moving one step closer to the developing world and  improving our “competitiveness” through a worthless currency. Never mind the comparative loss of wealth to citizens in the developed world.

A classic argument for not joining the EU and improving the livelyhood of Iceland’s citizens.

Related posts:

  1. Thanks A Bucket – But Stiglitz Wants IMF Out Of Iceland
  2. Finance minister wants to abolish price-indexation
  3. UK Crackpot: McDonald’s flight shows Iceland’s policy works

No news from Icelanders in Chile

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

chile-littleAt least 300 people have died in a major earthquake which struck Chile yesterday. The country’s president, Michelle Bachelet, said in an address to the nation that the quake has affected the lives of over 2 million people. Large areas remain without power, telecommunications and water.

The Icelandic Ministry of Foreign Affairs still has not heard anything about 13 Icelanders in Chile and is continuing its efforts to contact them today. The Ministry had a list of 38 Icelandic citizens thought to be in Chile, either as residents or tourists.

Two members of the Icelandic coastguard and a connected couple from the Westman Islands are in Chile examining the final preparations to the new Icelandic coastguard ship being built there. All four are unharmed.

Reykjavik wants to welcome Haiti refugees

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

reykjavikurborg-littleThe Reykjavik City Welfare Board confirmed today it wants to welcome refugees from the recent earthquake in Haiti.

The chairman of the Board, Jorunn Frimansdottir, explained on her Facebook page what will happen: “A (Haiti) project leader will be hired. He/she will be stationed at the Central Reykjavik and Hlidar social services centre.”

She further explained that refugees in need will be contacted through their close friends and relatives who live in Iceland, RUV reported. “That way we can work towards helping the people and getting them here (to Reykjavik),” Frimansdottir said.

The national government has also shown willing to help Haitian refugees, and the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights has received many requests from Icelandic citizens wanting to help their close friends and family in Haiti.

The government has already asked the parliamentary Refugees Committee to investigate the best way to quickly and legally allow Haitian refugees with ties to Iceland to travel to the country.

Denmark to maintain 28-year immigration rule

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

danish-flagDespite a recent threat by Supreme Court judges to undermine the immigration legislation governing citizenship, Denmark will continue with its 28-year rule for naturalising citizens.

Politiken reports that the rule, in place since 2002, stipulates that ‘naturalised citizens’ must reside in Denmark for a minimum of 28 years before being allowed to move their spouse to Denmark under national family reunification laws. The only possibility of circumventing this law is if the combined attachment of the couple to Denmark can be considered greater than that to any other country.

The ruling was called into question following the case of Ousmane Biao who had his application rejected by the Supreme Court when requesting his Ghanaian wife be allowed to join him in Denmark. However, three of the seven judges in the case deemed the ruling to be gratuitously discriminatory, leading to speculation that the immigration laws, long held sacred in Denmark, may be overhauled.

Togo-born Ousmane was raised in Ghana before migrating to Denmark in 1993. Working since 1996, he was granted citizenship in 2002. His request was rejected due to his Ghanaian schooling and frequent visits home to see his siblings and parents along with his wife having no family inside Denmark and that they speak their local language when together.

Birthe Ronn Hornbech, the Immigration Minister, said that the ruling should be seen as an endorsement of the law rather than a questioning. “It would be weird if we, after an endorsement from the Supreme Court, wanted to change the law,” said Hornbech who also added that disagreement among judges was not unusual.

Haitian refugees to Iceland?

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

diversity1Iceland’s Minister for Justice and Human Rights is looking into whether Haitian refugees can be brought to Iceland.

Minister Ragna Arnadottir said she has had nearly 20 enquiries from Icelandic citizens with relatives in Haiti – relatives not deemed close enough by Icelandic law for their guaranteed entry into Iceland.

It is not currently legal to issue residence permits to non-EU nationals who are not yet inside Iceland or who do not have close family ties in the country.

Arnadottir has asked the parliamentary Refugees Committee to investigate how Icelanders’ extended family members in Haiti can legally be offered temporary Icelandic residence permits.

Iceland talking Icesave mediators though NL/UK still say no to new deal talks

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

suicideMPs from the smallest party in Iceland’s parliament say that they are against any future neutral mediator in the Icesave issue coming from a Scandinavian country. They told media that they cannot support an intermediary who comes from a country which has put so much political pressure on Iceland to obey the wishes of the Netherlands and the UK.

It remains possible that the Icesave issue will be renegotiated between Iceland and the Netherlands and UK. The Icelandic government has been meeting with opposition leaders in an attempt to hammer out a joint position on the matter, as well as working out what the contract would look like in an ideal world, if agreed on by all Icelandic political parties.

If the contract does end up being renegotiated, pressure and enthusiasm are mounting for the idea of bringing in a neutral mediator from an unconnected country to steer the talks.

Left Green MP Lilja Mosesdottir has, for example, stated her preference for Joschka Fischer, the former German Foreign Minister to be offered the role.

Birgita Jonsdottir, an MP for The Movement (formerly the Citizens’ Movement) says the parties involved should look to France or even the USA; but that Iceland should resist the idea of a mediator from Denmark, Finland, Norway or Sweden. “We ask that he or she not come from Scandinavia. The same countries which have been putting the thumb screw on us over the Icesave issue,” she said.

2009: A Year For Nothing

Friday, January 1st, 2010

A brilliant recap of 2009 by reporter Magnus Geir Eyjolfsson from Pressan.is

The IceSave issue finally closed yesterday with the historic vote of Althingi, ending one of the most humiliating year for politics ever, in an appropriate manner I must say. Never before has such a large group of people embarrassed itself as thoroughly and disappointed its people as much as those who fill Althingi’s chambers today. The men’s national football team doesn’t even come close.

The start of the year 2009 promised so much. A limp government was chased out by the people which had empowered it. A New Iceland was supposed to rise from the ashes but as I have said before, this New Iceland is one of the worst sort of nations that can be found anywhere in the world.

 

 

 

A leftist government was voted in which was totally natural as it was the Iceland of the Independence Party which was flushed down the drain. The new government claimed it would be emphasise “nordic welfare”. And that was the first mistake of this government. Someone should have called their PR people and tell them that you don’t promise nordic welfare when the largest budget cuts and tax hikes in the history of the nation are approaching. So the government made false promises right in the beginning. It gave hope based on nothing. Instead it should have called itself the “Ajax government”, or something in that manner to indicate to the public that it was there to clean up the mess left behind by other parties.

 

 

Tsunamis do not only wash what it can find on the shore into the sea, but also leve behind all sorts of junk. The same happened in the Althingi elections this spring. We got rid of lots of incompetent people, but unfortunately more junk washed up on Althingi. Few people have ever been as disappointing as the new MP’s we got. The Citizens’ Movement exploded in a short period because three of its MP’s were already trading favors, something they promised they’d fight. The results of the elections were as sad as they could possibly be as far as the quality of new MP’s goes.

 

 

Little has been heard of the new MP’s for the government parties but the novices from the opposition have not exactly enhanced the respect of Althingi. Experience has tought me that people who cannot open their mouth without screaming and disreputing others are off balance. MP’s do not refrain from using words such as “liar”, “treason” and “evildoers”. The paranoia is so strong that you would think that these people are on mescaline. The crew around the Progressive Party’s chairman is especially bad. Those people are off-balanced.

 

 

The only thing people wanted when the election was over was that everyone should now work together for the nation, not the political parties. And the parties failed on the first exam which was the EU vote. The Progressive Party did a total U-turn, even if the bill fitted its emphasis’ perfectly. The monster of opportunity simply dwelled to shallowly within the party. The Independence Party had its own interests at heart even if Thorgerdur Katrin and Ragnheidur Rikhardsdottir stayed true to their conviction. The attack they had to endure from their own party, not least the extreme-right was at best disgusting. The EU isssue showed us who really hold the reins of the Independence Party.

 

 

The government blew the issue badly by not reaching out for a bi-partisan conclusion. It is given that EU membership won’t be approved without the Independence Party. Bjarni Beneditktsson and Steingrimur J. Sigfusson have already said that any agreement with the EU is a bad agreement in their mind. The EU bus caught a flat before taking off.

 

 

 

To top the whole craziness, David Oddson was pulled up by the fishing-quota billionaires who bought Morgunbladid. There he attempts to write history in his favour, totally excluding any hope of peace and togetherness within the society. I am absolutely sure that we would laugh out loud if we read in the news that the Central Bank manager of Zimbabwe would be made editor of the most respected newspaper in the country. Does no one see the madness?

 

 

Which brings me to the next issue which is the attitude within Iceland towards the outside world. It seems like there has been an agreement made within the country that the economic crash in Iceland was due to the unfairness of other nations. Each and every trace of self-examination which was evident at the begining of the year has disappeared. Foreigners are cursed and the blood of business vikings is called for, but nobody seems prepared to examine what exactly went wrong here in Iceland.

 

 

The IceSave issue has not helped. It was badly managed, by both sides, government and opposition. I have changed my mind several times myself, because I fear the consequences of what happens if we pay, as I do if we don’t. Only time will tell, but I, along with most Icelanders I dare say are first and foremost ecstatic that it is over for now. And I think that we have done what was right in the end.

 

 

 

Hopefully, MP’s will use their New Years Eve break to carefully think about what they can do to make Iceland bearable again. Althingi’s Investigation Committee’s report will hopefully lead to a decent cleaning out. That, along with the mountain of cases forming on the desk of the Special Prosecutor, is the last rope the nation can cling onto if it wants real reform. Fact is that the situation is not as bad as we feared in the beginning. But while this reckoning is missing, the nation cannot move forward. To move on without it would be like prescribing ibufen for a brain tumor.

We have already spent one year in vain. Let’s not let another go to waste.

Magnus Geir Eyjolfssonreporter, December 31, 2009.

Related posts:

  1. EU In Less Than A Year
  2. Why Althingi Won’t Approve The IceSave Deal
  3. The Logical Trap Of A Double Election On The EU

How much money is enough money to live in Iceland?

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

visasIcelanders, and people all over the world, have often asked whether those on low wages really earn enough to properly support themselves and their families. Iceland’s Directorate of Immigration has now unwittingly answered the question.

A Thai lady, Tipphawan Laopha, has had her application for an Icelandic residence permit turned down by the country’s Directorate of Immigration because she is not financially able to support herself. This comes despite the fact she is in full-time employment and has been since arriving in Iceland four years ago. Furthermore, she is employed in the public sector, in the laundry room at a public hospital.

Laopha came to Iceland to be reunited with her family and got a job at a hospital. She has worked there ever since, as well as other part time jobs, and has paid all due taxes, which are much higher on second jobs than on primary employment.

The Directorate of Immigration decision that the woman cannot support herself comes following the year-old decision to start assessing applicants’ income after taxes. The incomes of Icelandic citizens are, on the other hand, always assessed before tax for all government purposes.

This strange quirk effectively means that her wages would legally be considered sufficient for an Icelandic citizen to support themselves, but not for a foreigner.

Laopha has been working in Iceland on a work permit held by her employer; but after four years, non-EEA foreigners are entitled to apply for residency permits, which are issued to the individual and not to employers.

Lawyer Katrin Theodorsdottir, working on Laopha’s behalf, says the situation is bizarre and asks what message the Directorate of Immigration is sending out to all low-paid workers in Iceland.

“The message from the Directorate of Immigration is that it is simply not enough for a foreigner to work legally full-time in order to support themselves and their children,” the lawyer told Visir.is.

ENVIRONMENT-ICELAND: Do-it-Yourself Renewable Energy Catches On

Monday, December 14th, 2009

When Innovation Centre Iceland managers began courses in farming renewable energy in October they were unprepared for the enthusiastic response from citizens.

Fewer Immigrants Leave Iceland Than Expected

Thursday, December 10th, 2009
At the beginning of this year, 28,644 foreign citizens resided in Iceland, or nine percent of the Icelandic population. In the first nine months of 2009, 3,538 foreign citizens moved out of the country while 2,793 moved to the country, so the number of foreign-born residents has only dropped by 745 in this period, or by 2.6 percent.

Icelandic women charged with human trafficking

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

gavelTwo women accused of human trafficking prostitutes, have been put into custody without bail until 11th December. Their victims in the case number at least three and police are also investigating those purchasing the sexual services that were on offer.

Reykjavik Police have been investigating the case for several weeks and a city centre brothel has already been closed down during the investigation.

One of the women now in custody is 20 and the other is 30 and both are Icelandic citizens.

The elder of the two, Catalina Ncogo was sentenced to two-and-a-half years’ prison for other pimping and drugs offences.

Police say at least three other women are involved in the case but will not be charged because prostitution is not illegal in Iceland – whereas a third person profiting from the act (so-called pimping) is illegal.

At the same time as the two women were arrested yesterday, two house searched were also carried out in relation to the case and small amounts of illegal drugs were found in one. Further information from police was not forthcoming, RUV reports.

The Currency Loans Were Legal – The Dark Side Of The Government’s Inept Solutions

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Remember this man. He is one of the faces of Iceland who has been cast aside by his society.

The District Court of Reykjavik yesterday declared that the borrower of a currency loan was responsible for paying his loan fully, even if it had doubled in one year. The Court really had few other options, the agreement between lender and borrower is one where the bank lends foreign currency and it was the customer’s choice whether to take that option or one of a loan in ISK.

So much for the imbalance between the lender who is supposed to know more about finance and the borrower who is not an expert.

The Courts and society has determined that Iceland is a country built for banks, not people.

This probably means that all those who have been waiting to hear about the outcome of this court case and have loans in foreign currency can say goodbye to their former lives. Tens of thousands of Icelanders are going to become bankrupt or heavily strapped.

Meanwhile, us who didn’t take the risk of currency loans even if they were offered are also being thrown to the wolves. What choices did we have? Not choices similar to people in countries around us of loans that go down as you pay.

Force majeure anyone? Is it unfair to compare the financial collapse of Iceland to anything but a natural disaster, an extraordinary event?

Meanwhile the governor of the Central Bank has assured Icelandic MP’s that even if the IMF has come out and said that Iceland’s debts were even larger than 310% of GNP, then it is OK because included in that number are all private foreign debts which are going to be written off, making the picture much brighter.

So the government, the banks and the largest companies will all see write offs that they will not grant to their citizens themselves.

A tragic story has emerged of Olafur Jon Leosson, a roughly sixty year old truck driver who bought himself a new truck on a foreign currency loan when jobs were everywhere for him to put it to use. Then the jobs started disappearing, and then the currency dropped. He tried to negotiate with the banks, the financing company Lysing, everything. He took his own life recently as he had found the door shut everywhere.

Great is the shame of the government, Althingi and the financial institutions. Did they ever read Grapes of Wrath?

Related posts:

  1. Loans of the Icelanders
  2. Will there be a fair solution?
  3. Two days later – our homes are at risk

The Filibuster Calendar

Friday, December 4th, 2009

I am particularly interested to see the MP’s of the Movement, so aptly named after they deserted the citizens who voted for the Citizens’ Movement partake in the filibustering.

This is probably the only thing the Progressive Party and the Independence Party have been able to organize successfully this year except for the fundraising for Illugi Gunnarsson and Gudlaugur Thordarson.

One Progressive Party MP Gudmundur Steingrimsson on the other hand says he wants none of this, and is the bigger man for it. He wants to vote on the IceSave agreement and let the government bear responsibility for the bill.

Related posts:

  1. Citizens’ Movement Without MP’s
  2. The Logical Trap Of A Double Election On The EU
  3. Blind, deaf or just stupid?

Hard To Understand

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

It is hard to understand why members of parliament and the government are outraged when the state is supposed to pay unfair debts.

When they are simultaneously adamant that the state’s citizens should pay up their unfair debts fully and completely.

A New Aluminum Vote For The Strong

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

“The strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they want”
- Thucydides

Two years ago, the residents of Hafnarfjordur rejected the enlargement of Rio Tinto Alcan’s aluminum plant in their vicinity in a popular vote.

Today the plant’s supporters are back. They needed 25% of registered voters to sign a petition to ask for a new vote.

In this economic environment, it is no surprise that they got those signatures. So now the citizens’ can vote again.

But what does the timing say about this development?


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