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August 2007
Here are the key news events of the month organized into three
categories: World News, U.S. News, and Business, Society, and Science
News.
World
- Sunni Block Withdraws from Iraqi Cabinet (Aug. 1):
The Iraqi Consensus Front, the largest Sunni faction in Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki's cabinet, resigns, citing the Shiite-led
government's failure to stem violence by militias, follow through with
reforms, and involve Sunnis in decisions on security.
- Independence Hero Named Prime Minister of East Timor (Aug.
6): President Ramos-Horta names independence activist Xanana
Gusmão as prime minister. Violent protests led by supporters of
the Fretilin party, the former governing party, follow. Fretilin won the
most seats in elections, but Gusmão formed a majority coalition,
called the Alliance of the Parliamentary Majority (AMP).
- UN Passes Resolution on Iraq (Aug. 10): Security
Council resolution, passed unanimously, expands the UN's role in Iraq to
help promote reconciliation, safety of citizens and workers, and civil
rights.
- Taliban Releases Two Hostages (Aug. 13): Two female
hostages are released to the Red Cross following days of talks between
the Taliban and South Korean negotiators. The women were members of a
group of 23 church volunteers abducted from a bus on July 19. Two male
hostages have been shot, and the Taliban has threatened to kill more if
their demands for a prisoner exchange are not met. Fourteen women and
five men are still being held. (Aug. 29): After South
Korea agrees to withdraw its 200 troops from Afghanistan and end any
future evangelical work in the country, the Taliban releases 12 of the
19 remaining hostages. (Aug. 30): The Taliban releases
the last seven hostages.
- Coalition Forces Launch Operation Phantom Strike (Aug. 13):
US-led forces attack insurgent hide-outs, weapons caches, and
bomb-building sites in a series of simultaneous raids. The operation
follows the deployment of nearly 30,000 more US troops into Iraq.
- Quadruple Bombing Leaves at Least 500 Dead in Iraqi Villages
(Aug. 14): Two pairs of truck bombs explode about five miles
apart in the remote, north-western Iraqi towns of Qahtaniya and Jazeera.
At least 500 members of the minority Yazidi community are reported
killed and hundreds more are wounded, making it the single deadliest
insurgent attack of the war.
- Thailand Votes in Favor of New Constitution (Aug.
20): In the country's first referendum, voters approve a new
constitution that was drafted by a panel selected by the military
government. Elections are expected to be held in December, ending a year
of military rule that followed the ouster of Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra.
- U.S. Ambassador Criticizes Iraqi Leadership (Aug. 21):
As sectarian violence continues unabated in Iraq, Ryan Crocker,
the ambassador to Iraq, says political progress in Iraq has been
"extremely disappointing."
- Report Cynical of Progress in Iraq (Aug. 24):
National Intelligence Estimate says the Iraqi government has failed to
end sectarian violence even with the surge of American troops. The
report also says, however, that a withdrawal of troops, a move supported
by many Democrats, would "erode security gains achieved thus far."
- Iraqi Government to Allow Former Baathists to Resume Jobs
(Aug. 26): In an attempt at national reconciliation, a group of
Sunni, Shiite, and Kurdish Iraqi leaders, including Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki, Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, and President Jalal
Talabani, announce that former Baathists, members of the party loyal to
Saddam Hussein, could regain their government jobs that were lost in
2003's de-Baathification process. Hashemi, however, says the move is not
enough to have Sunnis leaders resume their cabinet positions, which they
quit in early August.
- Former Islamist Elected President of Turkey (Aug.
28): Abdullah Gul, of the Justice and Development Party, is
elected president in the third round of voting by the country's
parliament. He is the first Islamist president in the country's modern
history. The military, which is highly protective of a secular state,
opposed Gul's candidacy.
- Deadly Violence Breaks Out Among Rival Shiite Groups (Aug.
28): More than 50 people are killed and hundreds are wounded
when members of the Mahdi Army, the militia loyal to radical Shiite
cleric Moktada al-Sadr, and the Badr Organization, a group of fighters
that supports Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, battle in the streets of
Karbala during a pilgrimage celebrating the birth of Muhammad al-Mahdi.
(Aug. 29): Moktada al-Sadr announces that he has
ordered the Mahdi Army to suspend its military operations for six
months.
- Pakistani Leader to Surrender Role as Military Chief (Aug.
29): According to exiled former prime minister Benazir Bhutto,
President Pervez Musharraf has agreed to step down as army chief and run
for reelection as president. In addition, Bhutto will be allowed to
return to Pakistan and run for prime minister.
Nation
- House Passes Bill to Expand Healthcare for Children (Aug.
1): Legislation, which passed 225 to 204, would provide
healthcare to more than four million children and increase Medicare
payments to doctors by .5%. The bill, which would cost $25 billion over
five years, would be financed by an increase in the federal cigarette
tax.
- Senate Votes to Overhaul Ethics Rules (Aug. 2):
Votes, 83 to 14, to pass the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act,
which calls on lawmakers to disclose the names of lobbyists who bundle
$15,000 in contributions within a six-month period, prohibits lawmakers
from accepting gifts, trips, or meals from lobbyists, and increases the
time from one year to two that former senators must wait before can
lobby Congress.
- House Passes Energy Bill (Aug. 4): Legislation,
passed 241 to 172, calls on most utilities to produce 15% of their
electricity from renewable energy sources, such as wind or solar power,
sets new efficiency requirements for buildings and appliances, and
allots money for research into capturing emissions of carbon
dioxide.
- Bush Signs Law to Expand Wiretapping (Aug 5): Law
legalizes government eavesdropping of telephone conversations and emails
of American citizens and people overseas without a warrant as long as
there is a "reasonable belief" that one party is not in the United
States. Both the House and Senate approved the legislation before
leaving for August recess. The law expires in six months.
- Republican Senator Pleads Guilty to Disorderly Conduct (Aug.
8): The guilty plea follows Larry Craig's June arrest for
making sexual advances to an undercover police officer in a Minneapolis
airport. (Aug. 29): The Idaho senator steps down from
his leadership positions on several Senate committees.
- Rove Announces His Resignation (Aug 13): Karl Rove,
highly influential and controversial advisor to President Bush,
announces he will leave his position as deputy chief of staff at the end
of August. Although Rove was instrumental in securing Bush victories in
2000 and 2004, many critics believe his focus on conservative voters has
alienated more moderate Republicans and Independents--̶two groups
that may swing the election in 2008.
- Dirty Bomb Suspect Is Found Guilty (Aug. 17): A
federal jury convicts Jose Padilla, who was arrested in Chicago in 2002
and accused of plotting to explode a dirty bomb in the United States, of
conspiracy to commit terror overseas and giving material support to
al-Qaeda. The government had held him as an enemy combatant until 2006,
when he was transferred to the civilian justice system and charged with
another set of crimes. It was these charges that resulted in the
conviction.
- Report Says Former CIA Head Failed to Understand Gravity of
Terrorist Threat (Aug. 21): Report, completed in 2005 but not
released until now, outlines several bureaucratic and intelligence
failures that allowed the 9/11 hijackers to enter the United States and
concludes that George Tenet, the former director of the CIA, should be
held accountable for not formulating a plan to dismantle al-Qaeda.
- Attorney General Steps Down (Aug. 27): The White
House announces that Alberto Gonzales, the beleaguered attorney general,
has submitted his resignation to President Bush. Gonzales has been under
fire for the firing of nine federal prosecutors in 2006, and some say he
perjured himself when testifying about the National Security
Agency’s wiretapping program.
- Median Household Income Up, Number of Insured Down (Aug.
28): Census Bureau reports that median household income
increased to $48,201 in 2006, from $47,845 in 2005. Figures, however,
reveal that more people are working longer hours, but wages have not
increased. The poverty rate fell to 12.3% in 2006, from 12.6% in 2005.
The number of uninsured increased to 47 million in 2006, from 44.8
miillion in 2005.
- Attorney General Gonzales Is Under Investigation (Aug.
30): The Justice Department announces that its inspector
general, Glenn Fine, is investigating whether Gonzales made
"intentionally false, misleading, or inappropriate" statements in his
testimony to Congress about his role in the 2006 dismissals of U.S.
prosecutors and in the National Security Agency's warrantless
wiretapping program.
Business/Science/Society
- Bridge Collapses into the Mississippi River (Aug. 1):
An eight-lane interstate bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota, that
is packed with cars breaks into sections and falls into the river,
killing 13 people and injuring at least 60. The bridge was in the midst
of repairs when it buckled and broke apart.
- Coal Miners Are Trapped Inside Shaft (Aug. 6): Six
miners are trapped 1,500 feet below ground after a shaft collapses at
the Crandall Canyon Mine in Utah. (Aug. 23): The owner
of the mine says that finding survivors is "virtually, totally
unlikely."
- Educator Lifts Off to the Space Station (Aug. 8):
Barbara Morgan, a former teacher from Idaho, is part of a mission aboard
the space shuttle Endeavour to the International Space Station,
where additional trusses will be added and supplies delivered. Morgan
was the backup to Christa McAuliffe, the teacher who died in 1986 when
the shuttle Challenger disintegrated shortly after takeoff.
(Aug. 16): Following the discovery of a small gash on the
underside of the Endeavour, NASA considers whether to direct the
crew to attempt a repair, or to allow them to fly home as is. The gash
is believed to have occurred when a piece of foam fell off the fuel tank
and struck the underside of the shuttle. (Aug. 21):
Endeavour lands safely after a 12 day, 17 hour mission.
- Federal Reserve Pumps Billions into Financial System (Aug.
10): Fed puts $72 billion into the U.S. financial system over
two days to steady the volatile markets that plummeted in response to
losses in the American mortgage market.
- NBA Referee Pleads Guilty in Betting Scandal (Aug. 14):
Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy pleads guilty to conspiracy to
engage in wire fraud and transmitting waging information through
interstate commerce. Donaghy, once known as one of the NBA's best
referees, sold inside information pertaining to NBA games to bettors
before being investigated by the FBI and resigning on July 9. Donaghy,
who faces up to 25 years in prison, must pay a $500,000 fine and at
least $30,000 in restitution.
- Quake Near Lima, Peru, Kills Hundreds (Aug. 15): A
8.0-magnitude earthquake occurs 90 miles southeast of Lima, Peru,
killing at least 500 people and injuring hundreds more. The cities of
Pisco, Chincha, and Ica are among those reporting the most damage.
- Hurricane Dean Slams the Caribbean (Aug. 21): Dean
makes landfall in Mexico as a Category 5 hurricane, the third most
intense Atlantic hurricane since the 1850s. The storm killed more than
20 people.
Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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