Icelandic demonstrators marched on the British parliament on Tuesday in a new protest against the way London acted against Reykjavic at the start of the banking crisis last autumn.
Led by an Icelandic rock star beating a drum, and a woman in traditional Icelandic "skautbunigur" cloak, the demonstrators held placards saying "Icelanders Are Not Terrorists".
They were referring to Britain's decision to use anti-terror legislation to freeze the assets of Icelandic banks in the UK after they collapsed, owing millions of euros to British savers.
The demonstrators handed a petition containing 83,000 signatures, representing more than a quarter of Iceland's adult population.
Rock star Orri Pall Dyrason, drummer of the Sigur Ros band, said the purpose of the protest was to show British people that London had behaved improperly in deploying anti-terror laws against Iceland.
Another campaigner, Olafur Eliasson, said they wanted to make clear to the British people that Icelanders weren't terrorists.
The demonstrators were greeted at the gates of parliament by British MP Austin Mitchell, of the British Icelandic Parliamentary Group.
Mitchell said the value of Icelandic assets frozen by the UK remained unclear.
He called for a speedy resolution to the issue.
Icelanders were shocked when British authorities used the country's sweeping anti-terror legislation to freeze the assets collapsing Icelandic banks in a bid to protect British savers' deposits.
Iceland's government said the move was a "completely unfriendly act" and it prompted many in the nation of 300,000 to complain that their country was being labelled a terrorist entity.
APTN