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Iceland's govt collapses

Ah Hai

Alfrescian
Loyal
REYKJAVIK (Iceland) - ICELAND'S coalition government collapsed on Monday after an unprecedented wave of public dissent, plunging the island nation into political turmoil as it seeks to rebuild an economy shattered by the global financial crisis.

Prime Minister Geir Haarde resigned and disbanded the government he's led since 2006. Mr Haarde was unwilling to meet the demands of his coalition partner, the Social Democratic Alliance Party, which insisted on choosing a new prime minister in exchange for keeping the coalition intact.

'I really regret that we could not continue with this coalition, I believe that that would have been the best result,' Mr Haarde told reporters.

Iceland has been mired in crisis since October, when the country's banks collapsed under the weight of debts amassed during years of rapid expansion.

Thousands of angry citizens have joined noisy protests against the government's handling of the economy, clattering pots and kitchen utensils in what some commentators called the 'Saucepan Revolution'.

The value of the country's krona currency has plummeted, hitting many Icelanders who took out special loans denoted in foreign currencies for new homes and cars during the boom years.

In addition, Iceland must repay billions of dollars to Europeans who held accounts with subsidiaries of collapsed Icelandic banks.

Mr Haarde's government has nationalized banks and negotiated about $10 billion (S$15 billion) in bailout loans from the International Monetary Fund and individual countries.

Mr Haarde - a fiscal conservative with degrees from the University of Minnesota, Brandeis and Johns Hopkins - is suffering from cancer and has announced he would not seek another term. He called early elections last week, following the mass protests by Icelanders upset at soaring unemployment and rising prices.

Though largely peaceful, the protests have seen Reykjavik's tiny parliament building doused in paint and eggs hurled at Mr Haarde's limousine. Last Thursday, police used tear gas to quell a protest for the first time since 1949.

Mr Haarde said last week that he wouldn't lead his Independence Party into the new elections because he plans to seek treatment in the Netherlands for his cancer.

Following discussions with Mr Haarde, Iceland's figurehead President Olafur Ragnar Grimsson said he would hold talks with Iceland's four other main political parties late Monday before asking one of the organisations to form an interim government.

On Tuesday, he's likely to ask Foreign Minister Ingibjorg Gisladottir, head of the Social Democratic Alliance, to govern with smaller opposition parties until new elections are held.

Ms Gisladottir said she wouldn't agree to take part in a national government composed of all five major political parties.

'We should have a result no later than tomorrow (Tuesday) morning,' Mr Steingrimur Sigfusson, chairman of the opposition Left-Green movement told RUV television.

'The only real possibility is a minority government.'

Ms Gisladottir said on Monday she won't seek to personally replace Haarde as Iceland's leader. She instead proposed her party's popular Social Affairs Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir.

The restoration of trust in the government is critical, said Iceland's Environment Minister Thorunn Sveinbjarnardottir, an alliance member.

'What is needed straight away is to try to restore trust between the political establishment and the general public,' Mr Sveinbjarnardottir told The Associated Press. 'What we need is for the general public to believe that the politicians are working in their interests.'

Both the demonstrators and the alliance seek the ouster of Central Bank Gov David Oddsson, who has served for 13 years.

Mr Sveinbjarnardottir said Mr Oddsson's ouster should be accompanied by the tightening of regulations in the country's financial industry.

'We need a certain amount of cleansing to be the first steps,' she said.

At a rally on Monday outside Parliament, protester Svginn Rumar Hauksson said demonstrations won't end yet.

'The protests will continue until it becomes clear that things are really changing,' he said. -- AP

http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking+News/Money/Story/STIStory_330919.html
 

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
Barak Obama is not in any better position than the already gone Irish Govt. Not too far from now it will be Obama to face disappointed and impatient Americans. Read this:

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/afp/20090126/tts-finance-economy-world-c1b2fc3.html


Finance crisis claims government, 85,000 jobs
AFP
AFP - Tuesday, January 27

NEW YORK (AFP) - - Companies forecast more than 85,000 job cuts in a single day as the rampant financial crisis hit workers in factories and offices across the globe and brought down a government on Monday.


In a sign of the deepening social impact of the US-born crisis, several companies announced an avalanche of cuts, piling pressure on US President Barack Obama as he pushes a stimulus plan for the world's biggest economy.

The financial catastrophe also claimed a scalp as Iceland's Prime Minister Geir Haarde announced the resignation of his government after months of protests over economic policies that brought the country close to bankruptcy.

Obama warned the recession-hit United States could not afford delays in Congress over his 825-billion-dollar (630-billion-euro) stimulus plan.

He called for "swift and extraordinary" action, after earlier saying the downturn could get "dramatically worse."

In New York, construction equipment giant Caterpillar said it planned 20,000 job cuts worldwide to cope with plunging sales.

New York-based drug maker Pfizer announced it would acquire its rival Wyeth for 68 billion dollars, the largest pharmaceutical takeover deal in nearly a decade amid a dearth of corporate dealmaking due in part to a credit squeeze.

It said it would also cut its global workforce by around 10 percent -- meaning at least 8,000 posts cut in a company that currently employs almost 82,000 people in more than 150 countries.

General Motors announced plans Monday to cut 2,000 jobs at two US plants as it prepares to submit a long-term viability plan in exchange for billions in loans from the US government.

US telecom operator Sprint Nextel announced 8,000 cuts -- 14 percent of its staff -- and top US home improvement retailer Home Depot said it would cut 7,000.

Japan's top 12 automakers expect to cut a total of 25,000 jobs between now and the end of March, a survey by Jiji Press concluded on Monday.

Dutch banking and insurance group ING announced 7,000 job cuts and a deal for the Dutch state to guarantee billions of euros' worth of troubled assets.

Dutch electronics giant Philips said it would eliminate 6,000 jobs.


The announcements by the two Dutch companies came ahead of confirmation that Europe's second-biggest steelmaker, Indian-owned Corus, said it would cut more than 3,500 jobs around the world, most of them in Britain.

Workers arriving early Monday were gloomy about their prospects. "People feel gutted. I have already had to take a 10 percent pay cut," said 45-year-old Douglas Mayhill, a worker at a Corus plant in Port Talbot, southern Wales.

"I was told on Friday I have a choice -- either accept a 10 percent pay cut or take redundancy -- that is no choice."

The US Congress was meanwhile due to begin debate this week on Obama's stimulus bill, designed to haul the US economy out of a paralysing recession.

In his first presidential radio address at the weekend, Obama raised the spectre of double-digit unemployment and a massive erosion of family incomes if Congress did not act on the bill.

Obama was to meet later this week with Republican leaders hostile to the bill. The lower House of Representatives was expected to vote Wednesday on the stimulus, with the Senate to follow later.

European shares surged on Monday however with sharp gains in the banking sector on positive news from British group Barclays, whose share price surged more than 75 percent on unexpectedly strong profit expectations, analysts said.

London closed 3.86 percent higher, Paris added 3.73 percent and Frankfurt climbed 3.54 percent.

US stocks opened narrowly mixed with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 0.25 percent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq edged up 0.08 percent.
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Mr Haarde - a fiscal conservative with degrees from the University of Minnesota, Brandeis and Johns Hopkins - is suffering from cancer and has announced he would not seek another term. He called early elections last week, following the mass protests by Icelanders upset at soaring unemployment and rising prices.

He also like to fiscal here and fiscal there?
 
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