|
December 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
- Putin's Party Dominates Parliamentary Elections (Dec.
2): United Russia takes 64.1% of the vote, far ahead of the
Communist Party of Russia, which wins 11.6%. Opposition parties complain
that the election was rigged, and European monitors say the vote wasn't
fair. Many believe Putin used his sway over the media to stifle the
opposition and campaign for United Russia, making the election a
referendum on his popularity.
- Venezuela Rejects Referendum (Dec. 2): Voters, 51%
to 49%, reject referendum put forward by President Hugo Chávez
that proposed 69 amendments to the constitution, including the
abolishment of presidential term limits, removal of the Central Bank's
autonomy, which would have given Chávez new power to build a
socialist economy, and others that enjoyed wide support, including
reducing the work day to six hours and offering pensions to street
vendors and housewives.
- Intelligence Report Concludes Iran Has Halted Weapons
Program (Dec. 3): A National Intelligence Estimate compiled by
the 16 agencies of the U.S. intelligence community says "with high
confidence" that Iran froze its nuclear weapons program in 2003. The
report contradicts one written in 2005 that stated Iran was determined
to continue developing such weapons. (Dec. 4): Despite
the report, President Bush says Iran remains a threat and can not be
trusted to pursue enriching uranium for civilian use. "Look, Iran was
dangerous, Iran is dangerous, and Iran will be dangerous, if they have
the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon," he said.
"What’s to say they couldn't’ start another covert nuclear
weapons program?"
- CIA Destroyed Interrogation Tapes (Dec. 6): New
York Times reports that in 2005 the CIA destroyed videotapes of the
interrogation of two al-Qaeda suspects. The tapes reportedly included
agency operatives using harsh interrogation techniques. The tapes, the
paper said, were not given to members of the Sept. 11 commission, which
had requested such evidence, or to the defense team of terrorism suspect
Zacarias Moussaoui. CIA director Michael Hayden said the tapes, if
released, posed a "serious security risk" and could have jeopardized the
safety of CIA officials and their families.
- Putin Names His Choice for Successor (Dec. 10):
Russian president Vladmir Putin endorses Dmitri Medvedev in March 2008's
presidential election. A Putin loyalist who is said to be moderate and
pro-Western, Medvedev serves as a first deputy prime minister and the
chairman of Gazprom, the country's oil monopoly. He has never worked in
intelligence or security agencies, unlike Putin and many members of his
administration. (Dec. 11): Medvedev says he will name
Putin as prime minister if elected president.
- Car Bombs Explode in Algiers (Dec. 11): As many as
60 people are killed in two suicide attacks near United Nations offices
and government buildings in the capital of Algeria. The bombings occur
within minutes of each other. Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, formerly
called the Salafist Group for Preaching, claims responsibility. It's the
worst attack in the Algeria in more than 10 years.
- City in Southern Iraq Hit By Bombs (Dec. 12): In
the worst violence in months, nearly 30 people are killed and 150
wounded when three car bombs explode in Amara. Local officials had
recently assumed control of security.
- European Union Votes to Adopt New Treaty (Dec. 13):
Treaty, if ratified by all 27 members, would have the president of the
EU in office for two-and-a-half years rather than the current six-month
term, and allows most decisions to be reached with a majority vote
instead of unanimity, as is currently required.
- Musharraf Ends Emergency Rule (Dec. 14): Pakistani
president also restores the Constitution, but he also issues several
executive orders and constitutional amendments that preclude any legal
challenges related to his actions during and after emergency rule was
established and bars the judges who he fired from resuming their
positions. "Today I am feeling very happy that all the promises that I
have made to the people, to the country, have been fulfilled," he
said.
- Turkey Attacks Kurdish Targets in Iraq (Dec. 16):
With the help of the U.S. military, Turkish fighter jets bomb
areas in Dohuk Province in northern Iraq, targeting the Kurdistan
Workers' Party, a Kurdish militant group. At least one civilian is
reported to have died in the attack.
- Britain Transfers Control of Basra to Iraqis (Dec.
16): Iraqi government takes military control of Basra, the last
region that was still under British control.
- Russia Delivers Nuclear Fuel to Iran (Dec. 17):
Russia says Iran has promised to use the enriched-uranium fuel
rods for a power plant at Bushehr. The International Atomic Energy
Agency will monitor and control the fuel.
- African National Congress Selects New Leader (Dec. 18):
Delegates choose Jacob Zuma as their leader, ousting South
African president Thabo Mbeki, who had been in control of the party for
the last ten years. With the victory, Zuma is poised to become president
when Mbeki's term expires in 2009. Zuma was acquitted of rape charges in
2006 and faces corruption charges.
- Conservative Politician Wins Presidential Election in South
Korea (Dec. 19): Lee Myung-bak, of the opposition Grand
National Party, wins 48.7% of the vote. Chung Dong-yong, who was
endorsed by outgoing president Roh Moo-hyun, takes 26.1%. Lee has been
dogged by allegations of ethical improprieties, and the National
Assembly voted two days before the election to reopen an investigation
into whether he manipulated the stock of an investment company.
- Dozens Die in Suicide Bombing at Pakistan Mosque (Dec.
21): About 50 people die in an assassination attempt on Aftab
Ahmed Khan Sherpao, Pakistan's former interior minister, during a
celebration of Id al-Adha at a mosque in the northwest part of the
country.
- Backers of Ousted Prime Minister Win Parliamentary Elections
in Thailand (Dec. 23): People Power Party, which supports
former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, takes 233 out of 480 seats in
parliamentary elections, a clear rebuke to the military, which ousted
Thaksin in a coup in 2006.
- Bhutto Killed in Suicide Attack (Dec. 27): Former
Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto dies at a campaign rally in
Rawalpindi. President Pervez Musharraf blames al Qaeda for the attack,
which kills 23 other people. Bhutto's supporters, however, accuse
Musharraf's government of being involved in the bombing. Rioting
throughout the country follows the attack. (Dec. 30):
The Pakistan People's Party selects Bhutto's eldest son, Bilawal Bhutto
Zardari, as its chairman to succeed his mother.
- Disputed Kenyan Election Sparks Deadly Tribal Violence (Dec.
27): Preliminary results have opposition candidate Raila
Odinga, of the Orange Democratic Movement, defeating incumbent Mwai
Kibaki, 57% to 39%, in Kenya's presidential election. In addition,
several of Kibaki's closest allies, including the vice president, lose
their seats in Parliament. Odinga, a champion of the poor, had promised
to eliminate corruption and tribalism. (Dec. 30):
Odinga's lead diminishes, and Kenya's election commission
declares Kibaki the winner, 46% to 44%. Violence breaks out among
members of the Luo and Kikuyu tribes. Odinga is Luo, and Kibaki is
Kikuyu. International observers say the vote was rigged.
- Attacks in Iraq Fall Significantly (Dec. 29): Gen.
David Petraeus reports that car bombs and suicide attacks dropped by 60%
since June 2007. He also says that al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia remains the
greatest threat to Iraq's security.
Nation
- Teen Birth Rate Increases (Dec. 5): The birth rate
for teens ages 15 to 19 rose to 3% in 2006, the first increase since
1991. The report leads several family-planning advocates to question the
effectiveness of President Bush's $176 million abstinence-only sex
education program.
- Bush Administration and Lenders Reach Deal for Subprime
Borrowers (Dec. 6): Mortgage lenders agree to freeze rates for
up to five years for people who are up to date on their subprime loans
that are due to increase 30% or more when the introductory rates expire.
However, only a very small percentage of the some two million people
facing the sharp increases qualify for the relief, prompting many
Democrats to criticize the deal as too weak.
- Congress Passes Energy Legislation (Dec. 6): House
votes, 235 to 181, in favor of ambitious package that requires passenger
vehicles sold in the U.S. to have fuel economy standards of 35 mpg by
2020, a 40% increase over the current standard. Measure also calls for
an increase in the production of ethanol and other biofuels to 36
billion gallons a year by 2022, up from the current 5 billion; calls on
electric utilities to obtain 15% of their power from alternate sources;
and imposes $21 billion in new taxes on oil companies. (Dec.
13): The Senate approves, 86 to 8, legislation calling for the
higher fuel efficiency standards and the increase in biofuel production
that passed in the House, but strips from the package the tax increase
and requirement that utilities obtain power from alternate sources of
energy. (Dec. 18): The House passes, 314 to 100, the
same legislation passed by the Senate. (Dec. 19):
President Bush signs the bill into law.
- Congressional Committee Votes to Ban Severe Interrogation
Techniques (Dec. 6): The Senate and House intelligence
committees vote to outlaw all methods of interrogation that are banned
in the Army Field Manual, which prohibits waterboarding and other harsh
techniques that have been used by the CIA. (Dec. 13):
House votes, 222 to 199, in favor of the legislation.
- Senate Approves Tax Relief for Middle Class (Dec.
6): Votes, 88 to 5, to change the tax law to prevent millions
of Americans from having to pay the alternative minimum tax. There is no
provision to offset the tax cut, which was sought by Democrats.
(Dec. 19): The House passes a one-year reprieve of the
tax.
- Sentencing Commission Retroactively Changes Guidelines for
Crack Cocaine (Dec. 11): Votes unanimously to lower sentences
for crimes involving crack cocaine. Sentences have been lighter for
offenses related to cocaine in powder form than for crack, and black
people have disproportionately been affected by the tougher sentences
than whites.
- Bush Vetoes Children's Healthcare Bill for Second Time (Dec.
12): President says the legislation that would have increased
the funding of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) to
$60 billion from $35 billion to provide health insurance to more than 10
million children was identical to the one he vetoed in October.
- FCC Changes Media Rules (Dec. 18): Federal
Communications Commission passes new rules that say a cable television
company can control no more than 30% of the market and allows newspaper
companies to also own radio and television stations in large
cities.
- Congress Sends Bush Budget (Dec. 19): House
approves a $556 billion spending bill, which the Senate endorsed a day
earlier. Package includes an additional $70 billion for the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan ($460 billion had already been authorized) and funds
such programs as health care for the poor and elderly, law enforcement,
food stamps, foreign aid, and border security. Democrats fail again to
tie spending for the Iraq war to a troop withdrawal. (Dec.
26): President Bush signs the spending bill.
Business/Science/Society
- Gunman Opens Fire at Omaha Mall (Dec. 5): Robert
Hawkins, 19, of Bellevue, Nebraska, kills eight people before turning
the gun on himself at the Von Maur department store in the Westroads
Mall in Omaha. Five people are also wounded.
- Report on Steroids Rocks Professional Baseball (Dec.
13): Document, the result of a thorough, far-reaching
investigation led by former U.S. senator George Mitchell, accuses 89
current and former Major League Baseball players of using illegal
performance-enhancing drugs. Players include Roger Clemens, Chuck
Knoblauch, and Eric Gagne.
- U.S. Resists Pressure at Climate Change Conference (Dec.
15): At the end of a two-week conference on climate change in
Bali, Indonesia, delegates from 187 countries agree to formulate a
follow-up to the Kytoto Protocol, which expires in 2012. The U.S.
concedes that a new agreement is necessary, but refuses to make a firm
commitment to reduce emissions.
- EPA Says States Can't Set Own Emissions Standards (Dec.
19): Environmental Protection Agency administrator Stephen
Johnson declares that 17 states, including California, do not have the
authority to implement their own standards. The states had sought to
impose tougher restrictions than those in place under federal law.
Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
More on March 2007 from Infoplease:
- March 2007 - March 2007 Here are the key news events of the month organized into three categories: World News, ...
- 2007 Current Events - 2007 Current Events Here are the key news events of the year organized into three categories: World ...
- Top Five Countries Using the Internet - Top Ten Countries Using the Internet Number of Internet Users * 1. United States 211,000,000 2. ...
- Daily Internet Activities - Daily Internet Activities Activity Percent of those with Internet access Most recent survey date 1. ...
- Leopard Species Discovered - Genetic tests lead to the discovery on Borneo and Sumatra
|
24 X 7
Private Tutor
|
24 x 7 Tutor Availability |
|
Unlimited Online Tutoring |
|
1-on-1 Tutoring |
|