REYKJAVIK (AFP) -
Thousands
of Icelanders took to the streets late Monday calling for their prime
minister's resignation after leaked tax documents dubbed the "Panama
Papers" prompted allegations that he and his wife used an offshore firm
to hide million-dollar investments.
Protesters filled the square
outside Iceland's parliament in Reykjavik, footage on public television
RUV showed, answering a call from opposition parties to demonstrate
against Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson.
Police
provided no estimate of the size of the crowd, but said the
demonstrators outnumbered the thousands who in 2009 brought down the
right-wing government over its responsibility in Iceland's 2008 banking
collapse.
"Take responsibility" and "Where is the new
constitution?" read some of the signs carried by demonstrators on
Monday, referring to the country's new charter drawn up after the 2009
political crisis and which has since been held up in parliament.
Financial
records published by the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists showed that Gunnlaugsson, 41, and his wife Anna Sigurlaug
Palsdottir bought the offshore company Wintris Inc. in the British
Virgin Islands in December 2007.
The company was intended to
manage Palsdottir's inheritance from her wealthy businessman father, the
amount of which has not been disclosed.
Gunnlaugsson transferred his 50-percent stake to his wife at the end of 2009, for the symbolic sum of one dollar.
But
when he was elected a member of parliament for the first time in April
2009 as a member of the centre-right Progressive Party, he neglected to
mention the stake in his declaration of shareholdings, as required by
law.
Gunnlaugsson has meanwhile denied any wrongdoing or tax
evasion and insisted Monday he would not step down. He said he never hid
any money abroad and that his wife paid all her taxes on the company in
Iceland.
A motion of no-confidence was presented to parliament by
the opposition, and will be submitted to a vote at an as yet
undetermined date.
"The prime minister should immediately resign,"
former Social Democratic prime minister Johanna Sigurdardottir said in a
message posted on Facebook.
Almost 28,000 Icelanders, in a country of just 320,000 inhabitants, have also signed a petition demanding his resignation.
© 2016 AFP
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