Iceland's former Prime Minister faces trial today as the first world leader criminally charged over the 2008 financial crisis that left the world teetering on the edge of financial disarray.
Geir Haarde became a symbol of the get-rich bubble economy for Icelanders who lost their jobs and homes after the country's main commercial bank collapsed, sending its currency into a nosedive and inflation soaring. He is accused of negligence in failing to prevent the financial implosion from which the small island country is still struggling to emerge.
Haarde's trial - the culmination of a long fight by the politician to avoid prosecution - marks a new chapter in the aftermath of the meltdown: accountability.
The former Prime Minister has rejected the charges, calling them "political persecution" and insisting he would be vindicated when he appears at the Landsdomur, a special court being convened for the first time in Iceland's history to try him.
Legal experts say he has a strong chance of beating the charges, because of the strength of his legal team, growing sympathy for a politician alone in shouldering blame, and because the court's structure - laid out in 1905 - is flawed because it allows lawmakers, not lawyers, to press charges.