Jæja þá er stjórnin fallin og sýnist heimurinn dást að þjóðinni frekar en hitt. Fékk að minnsta kosti bréf frá venjulegum breta í gær með yfirskriftinni: ,,Iceland is leading the way”. Hér eru einhverjar greinar og viðtöl sem ég hef flækst í. Yfirleitt talar maður í hálftíma en niðurstaðan í greininni er: ,,Núna étum við slátur”. Hér er smá kvót í Washington Póst þar sem skáldið virðist hafa ruglað saman Róm og Títanic. En hvað um það – menn spiluðu á fiðlu í báðum tilfellum og líklega er Titanic meira lýsandi fyrir ástandið hér. Skipið var ósökkvanlegt og keyrt á fullri ferð gegnum jakahrönglið:
Sjá hér fréttina í Washington Post:
LONDON, Jan. 26 — Iceland’s coalition government collapsed Monday, the first government to fall as a direct result of the global economic turmoil.
Global Financial Crisis Fells Iceland Government
Prime Minister Geir Haarde said he and his cabinet would resign immediately. As personal savings have been wiped out and joblessness has soared, Icelanders — once among the world’s wealthiest people — have taken to the streets in protest, banging pots and pans and throwing eggs and toilet paper at Haarde and other parliamentary leaders.
Protests have mounted throughout Europe, where the political backlash to the crisis is growing. In Ireland, Britain, Spain and other countries where bankruptcies and home foreclosures are rising, polls show that approval ratings of leaders are sinking. In Eastern Europe and Greece, where there is less of a government safety net, protesters have spilled onto the streets by the thousands. Last month’s collapse of the Belgian government, which had been wrestling with long-standing conflicts, was also hastened by the banking crisis, analysts said.
Perhaps nowhere has the economic crash been more spectacular than Iceland, an island with 300,000 residents on the edge of the Arctic Circle. Last fall, its largest banks went bust and the value of its currency plummeted. In recent days, protests intensified as no leader took responsibility for the crash, prompting police to use tear gas for the first time in half a century.
People felt that the government was “playing the violin while the Titanic was sinking,” best-selling Icelandic author Andri Snær Magnason said in a telephone interview from Reykjavik, the capital. “Everybody who has a loan is paying 20 percent interest,” and even those who own modest homes find their salaries cannot cover what is owed, he said. Lesa meira …