COMIC RELIEF

After back-to-back disasters, Icelanders seek escape in humour



Reykjavik:

Economic implosion, then volcanic explosion: not since the 18th century has
Iceland been associated with so much tumult in Europe.   There are only
317,000 people on this barren north-Atlantic island and until recently, with
the exception of eccentric pop singer Bjork, they’d barely caught the
outside world’s attention.

   But now Iceland is famous — infamous, even. The Eyjafjoell volcano may
have caused relatively little damage here since erupting last week. Only 700
people, mostly farmers, are affected and no one has been killed.

   Yet in Europe, ash from the hard-to-pronounce volcano has inflicted
spectacular disruption, shutting down the continent’s air travel network and
stranding passengers around the globe.
   The ash cloud is the second storm from this once quiet corner in the near
past. When the British and Dutch governments demanded $3.9 billion
compensation, furious voters in Iceland used a referendum to tell their
powerful neighbors to get lost unless they came back with a fairer deal. A
joke gleefully repeated since the volcano erupted relates that Britain
“wanted cash, but because the Icelandic alphabet contains no letter C, they
got only ash.”

  Another quip goes like this: “When Iceland’s economy died, its final wish
was that its ashes would be spread across Europe.”

   One joke perfectly catches the absurdity of tiny Iceland, which doesn’t
even have a standing army, going out to bully the world. “You mess with
Iceland?” goes the gag, in full Mafioso mode: “We shut down all your
airports.”


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