2012-03-07

Iceland’s ex-PM on trial for “failing country”

*** they are messing with my fonts and spacing, so please just ignore it and read the content.  Its obviously what they do not want you to see.... prosecution of bankers and the difference it has made for Iceland.   I read they are in full recovery now.

Vatic Note:  Remember how we did a blog a long time ago, called "The Mouse that Roared"...?   It was how Iceland stood up to the bankers,  kicked  them out of the country, arrested those that refused to leave and tried and jailed them and then kicked out the politicians on a recall.  I love the charges leveled,  arrested for "failing country".  Nice ring to it.  Wonder if we could do that with the bankers and corporate pigs at the trough or our bought and paid for politicians.   Would be nice.  Is there a recall option in the Constitution?  Anyone know?  I could not find one.  


Even this article glosses over the crimes that were committed by thosesame bankers.  It reads as if it were some misguided accident of carelessness, but now we all know it was fully intentional to achieve their one world order agenda that is floundering.  Their WW III may just be going down the tubes as well.   Iceland is still refusing the EU's demand to make good on their losses, and now they discover the US embassy has spying going on there which is probably for support of Britain and Europe with respect to Icelands rebellion.  Remember, these are not sovereign nations anymore, they are part of Rothschilds empire.   

  

Iceland’s ex-PM on trial for “failing country”
Posted by  on Mar 5th, 2012


Iceland’s former prime minister has rejected charges he failed to protect his country’s economy from financial shocks as the first world leader to go on criminal trial over the 2008 financial crisis.

“I reject all accusations, and believe there is no basis for them,” Geir Haarde said from the dock. He said it was the first chance he had to answer questions in the case.
Haarde became a symbol of the bubble economy for Icelanders who lost their jobs and homes after the country’s main commercial banks collapsed in 2008, sending its currency into a nosedive and inflation soaring.
Prosecutors opened the case at the Landsdomur, a special court being convened for the first time in Iceland’s history.
Part of their case hinges on a charge that Haarde failed to implement recommendations a government committee had drawn up in 2006 to strengthen Iceland’s economy. Haarde told the court that the committee’s work could not have prevented Iceland’s economic crash.
“Nobody predicted that there would be a financial collapse in Iceland” in 2008, he said, adding that the government did not fully understand how much debt the country’s banks had on their books.
Haarde is accused of negligence for failing to prevent the financial implosion from which the small island country is still struggling to recover.
In the crisis’ immediate aftermath – as unemployment and inflation skyrocketed – many sought someone to blame for the havoc across the 330,000-strong nation. A wave of public protests forced Haarde out of government in 2009.
Haarde has pleaded not guilty and sought to have all charges dismissed, calling the proceedings “preposterous.” He has insisted Icelanders’ interests were his “guiding light,” and blamed the banks for the crisis, saying government officials and regulatory authorities tried their best to prevent the crisis and that his “conscience is clear.”
The trial is expected to last until mid-March, with the court taking another four to six weeks to deliver its verdict.

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