Iceland's prime minister insisted Monday he would not resign after documents leaked in a media investigation linked him to an offshore company that would represent a serious conflict of interest.
News reports have alleged that Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson and his wife set up a company in the British Virgin Islands with the help of a Panamanian law firm at the center of a massive tax evasion leak. The reports have prompted calls for a no-confidence vote in parliament against him.
Going on Icelandic television Monday afternoon, Gunnlaugsson said he would not resign and added there was nothing new in the information contained in the Panama Papers data leak.
Iceland's foreign minister also said on a trip to India that the prime minister had not done anything illegal.
"There is nothing strange there,'' said Gunnar Bragi Sveinsson, the minister for foreign affairs and external trade.
The revelation concerns the company Wintris Inc., which Gunnlaugsson allegedly created in 2007 along with his partner at the time, Anna Sigurlaug Palsdottir, who is now his wife.
He allegedly sold his half of the company to Palsdottir for $1 on Dec. 31, 2009, the day before a new Icelandic law took effect that would have required him to declare the ownership of Wintris as a conflict of interest.
Wintris lost money as a result of the 2008 financial crash that crippled Iceland, and is claiming a total of 515 million Icelandic kronur ($4.2 million) from the three failed Icelandic banks: Landsbanki, Glitnir, and Kaupthing.
Gunnlaugsson has been accused of a serious conflict of interest. As prime minister, he was involved in reaching a deal for the banks' claimants.
Published reports about the prime minister's financial matters have brought quick condemnation from prominent Icelandic politicians. Former Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir called for Gunnlaugsson's resignation, as did Birgitta Jonsdottir, the popular head of the Pirate Party.
The opposition has called for a vote against the center-right government. Protests are scheduled in Reykjavik outside parliament.
"Information on the involvement of current ministers in companies in tax havens was hidden from the Icelandic people before the last elections, and it is only right that they get to appraise the situation again,'' Arni Pall Arnason, leader of the center-left Social Democratic Alliance, told the Morgunbladid newspaper.
Gunnlaugsson, the head of the center-right Progressive Party, began his four-year term in 2013, five years after Iceland's financial collapse.
Iceland, a volcano-dotted North Atlantic nation with a population of just 330,000, went from economic superstar to financial basket case almost overnight when its main commercial banks collapsed within a week of one another in 2008.