Politicians everywhere are jumping onto Twitter, sometimes to their detriment. After all, once you tweet something, it’s there forever. Just ask Sarah Palin; she can’t refudiate it. Icelandic politician Birgitta Jonsdottir is about to find out that the long arm of US law stretches even internationally. US Attorney General Eric Holder is seeking to get Birgitta Jonsdottir’s Twitter information, as she is one of the contributors to Wikileaks being investigated over Cablegate. Birgitta Jonsdottir is Reykjavik South’s representative to Iceland’s parliament, Althing, and a member of the Movement in Iceland. Iceland is so put out they’ve summoned the US ambassador, Luis Arreaga, into emergency meetings.
“[It is] very serious that a foreign state, the United States, demands such personal information of an Icelandic person, an elected official,” said Iceland’s interior minister, Ogmundur Jonasson. “This is even more serious when put [in] perspective and concerns freedom of speech and people’s freedom in general.”
Meanwhile, Iceland has bigger problems than one MP’s involvement in the Wikileaks scandal. They’re still recovering from the volcano, nearly going bankrupt in the banking crisis, and a crippling lack of McDonald’s.
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