Iceland PM Resigns, Eyes Presidency
Jakobsdottir Shifts Focus Amidst Volcanic Eruptions and Economic Strain
COPENHAGEN – Icelandic Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir announced on Friday that she will resign from her post and run for president, public broadcaster RUV and daily Morgunbladid reported.
It was not immediately clear who would succeed Jakobsdottir as prime minister, a job she has held since 2017.
“I have decided to ask to be released from the position of prime minister of Iceland and to stand in the upcoming presidential election,” Jakobsdottir said in a video message according Morgunbladid.
Iceland will hold a presidential election on June 1 to elect its new head of state, a largely ceremonial post with no public policy-making role.
Read more:Taiwan says Chinese air force approached close to island’s coast
The island nation of almost 400,000 people faces uncertainty after recent volcanic eruptions that triggered the indefinite evacuation of thousands, adding to pressures on an economy already facing high inflation and soaring interest rates.
Australia to appoint ‘special adviser’ on probe into Israel airstrike
Australia’s government said on Saturday it would appoint a special adviser to work with Israel to ensure “full confidence” in investigations into an airstrike in Gaza that killed seven aid workers including an Australian.
“The government will appoint a special adviser who we have requested the Israelis work with so we can be advised about the appropriateness of the process,” Foreign Minister Penny Wong said in a televised media conference in Adelaide.
“We want to have full confidence in the transparency and accountability of any investigation and we will continue to work to achieve that.”
The Israeli military on Friday dismissed two officers and formally reprimanded senior commanders after an inquiry into this week’s deadly airstrike on the aid workers, including Australian Zomi Frankcom, found serious errors and breaches of procedure.
Wong described the dismissals as “necessary first steps” but said the government had told Israel in a letter sent overnight that “initial responses suggest that the gravity of the death of seven humanitarian workers is yet to be appreciated by the Israeli government”.
“This cannot be brushed aside,” Wong said, adding that she expected all evidence in the investigations to be preserved.
Along with Frankcom, the airstrike killed citizens of Britain and Poland, Palestinians and a dual citizen of the US and Canada. Those killed were working for the charity World Central Kitchen.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese this week said he spoke with Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu and conveyed Australia’s anger and concern at Frankcom’s death.
Netanyahu has called the deaths a “tragic event in which Israeli forces unintentionally harmed non-combatants in the Gaza Strip”.
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