Iceland seeks vote over EU talks
Iceland's new government has said it would ask parliament to vote on whether the recession-hit country should start membership talks with the European Union.
Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir said a Bill authorising accession talks would be introduced when Iceland's parliament, the Althingi, resumes sitting next Friday.
Sigurdardottir and Finance Minister Steingrimur Sigfusson also introduced their new Cabinet, two weeks after their two party coalition won elections.
Talks on forming a government had snagged on whether Iceland should seek to join the EU, and potentially the euro - seen by many Icelanders as the country's best route out of financial crisis.
Sigurdardottir's Social Democratic Alliance supports EU membership, while Sigfusson's Left Green Movement opposes it.