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April 2008 Current Events
Here are the key news events of the month organized into three
categories: World News, U.S. News, and Business, Society, and Science
News.
- Opposition Leader Declares Himself the Winner in Zimbabwe
Election (April 2): Morgan Tsvangirai, of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change, says he won 50.3% of the vote in March's
presidential election, defeating Robert Mugabe, who has been in power
since 1980 and presided over the economic collapse of the country. The
Movement for Democratic Change wins a majority of the seats in
Parliament. Mugabe refuses to concede, and election officials have not
yet released results from the March 29 vote. (April 7):
Zimbabwe's HIgh Court delays a ruling on a petition filed by
the Movement for Democratic Change to force the government to release
the results of the presidential election. (April 14):
The High Court of Zimbabwe dismisses the opposition's request for the
release of election results. (April 19): Election
officials begin a partial recount of the vote. (April
24): As the government continues to violently crack down on the
opposition, the United States declares Morgan Tsvangirai the outright
winner of March's presidential election. (April 25):
Police raid the offices of the opposition and election monitors
and detain dozens of people for questioning.
- Irish Prime Minister Announces His Resignation (April
2): Bertie Ahern, who is under investigation for allegedly
accepting a bribe in the early 1990s when he was finance minister, says
he will step down in May.
- NATO Invites Two Countries to Join Alliance (April
3): Leaders of NATO invite Croatia and Albania to become part
of the alliance. Once admitted, NATO will include 28 countries. Greece
vetoes the invitation to Macedonia, and despite lobbying by the U.S.,
Ukraine and Georgia are also denied membership.
- Iran Announces Plans to Expand Uranium Enrichment (April
8): President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says that the country has
begun installing 6,000 additional centrifuges to its uranium enrichment
plant at Natanz, which already has 3,000 centrifuges.
- Nepal Holds Historic Election (April 10): Millions
of voters turn out to elect a 601-seat Constituent Assembly that will
write a new constitution. Maoist rebels, who recently signed a peace
agreement with the government that ended the guerrillas' 10-year
insurgency, are vying for seats in the assembly. (April
21): The Maoists win 120 out of 240 directly elected
seats.
- Kenyan President Names New Cabinet (April 13):
President Mwai Kibaki, who was narrowly elected over opposition leader
Raila Odinga in flawed elections in December 2007, announces a new
national unity cabinet that includes 94 ministers. Odinga is named prime
minister. Kibaki's supporters head powerful ministries, such as finance
and foreign relations.
- Iraqi Government Fires Soldiers Who Failed to Fight in Basra
(April 13): About 1,300 soldiers who either refused to fight or
deserted the military during the March operation in Basra to oust Shiite
militias are dismissed.
- Berlusconi to Serve Third Term as Prime Minister (April 14):
The center-right coalition led by Silvio Berlusconi, who was
ousted by Romano Prodi in 2006, wins parliamentary elections. Prodi's
government collapsed in January.
- Dozens Are Killed in Suicide Attacks in Iraq (April
15): As many as 50 people die in a car bombing in Baquba, a
northern city formerly under the control of Sunni insurgents that U.S.
troops say they had won control of. An additional 13 are killed in a
suicide attack in Ramadi in Anbar Province, another city that was once a
Sunni stronghold.
- Putin Is Elected Leader of Russia's Leading Political Party
(April 15): Russian president Vladimir Putin is chosen as
chairman of the United Russia party and agrees to become prime minister
when Dmitri Medvedev assumes the presidency in May.
- Iraqi Forces Take Control of Basra (April 19): The
Mahdi Army, led by radical Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr, retreats from
the last districts under its control. In March, Iraqi troops attempted
and failed to oust the miltiants in Basra. Iran endorses the assault on
the Mahdi Army, a group which it once supported.
- Sunnis Say the Will Rejoin Government (April 24):
After a boycott of almost a year, the largest Sunni block in Iraq's
government, Tawafiq, announces it will return to the cabinet of Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki. Tawafiq's leader, Adnan al-Dulaimi, says by
passing an amnesty law and launching an assault on Shiite militias, the
government has met enough of its demands to end the boycott.
- Bush Administration Releases Photos That Link North Korea
with Syria's Nuclear Reactor (April 24): Seven months after
Israel destroyed a building it suspected housed a nuclear reactor, the
U.S. publicizes photos it says confirm that North Korea helped Syria
with the technology to build the facility.
- Afghan President Survives Assassination Attempt (April
27): Three people are killed and about a dozen are wounded when
suspected Taliban militants attack President Hamid Karzai, who was
taking part in a parade to celebrate Afghan national day.
- Commander in Iraq Recommends Delay in Troop Withdrawal
(April 8): At a Congressional hearing, Gen. David Petraeus
advises against further drawdowns of American troops until at least 45
days after the one underway is completed in July, which means troop
levels would be maintained at around 140,000. He also reports that
progress in Iraq has been "significant but even" and is "fragile and
reversible." He also said, "We haven't turned any corners. We haven't
seen any lights at the end of the tunnel." Petraeus blamed some of the
turmoil in Iraq on the "destructive role Iran has played."
- Senate Passes Housing Relief Bill (April 10): In an
attempt to help homeowners on the brink of foreclosure, the Senate
approves, 84 to 12, a measure that gives a $7,000 tax credit to people
who buy foreclosed houses, provides $150 million to counsel home buyers,
and allocates $4 billion to localities that purchase foreclosed
buildings. The bill, which would cost about $15 billion over 10 years,
is criticized for also giving tax breaks to home builders, automakers,
airlines, and other industries.
- Bush Nominates New Housing Secretary (April 19):
President selects Steven Preston, the head of the Small
Business Administration, to replace Alphonso Jackson, who announced his
resignation in March.
- Bush Nominates General to Take Over Central Command (April
23): President nominates Gen. David Petraeus, the four-star
general who has command of all U.S. troops in Iraq, to succeed Adm.
William Fallon, who recently retired as head of Central Command.
World | Nation | Business/Science/Society
- Olympic Torch Relay Draws Protests (April 6):
Dozens of human rights protesters are arrested in London after they
clash with police who line the route of the Olympic torch relay.
(April 7): The torch is extinguished several times
during the Paris leg of the relay.
- Pope Denounces Pedophile Priests (April 15):
During his first visit to the United States, Benedict XVI says he is
"deeply ashamed" by the scandal that has rocked the Catholic church in
recent years. "It's difficult for me to understand how it was possible
that priests betrayed in this way their mission to give healing, to give
the love of God to these children," he said. (April
17): Benedict XVI celebrates a mass before 46,000 people at
Washington Nationals stadium in Washington, DC. He later holds a suprise
meeting with several victims of sexual abuse by priests in the Boston
archdiocese.
- Woman Wins Indy Race (April 20): Danica Patrick
wins the Indy Japan 300, becoming the first woman to win an IndyCar
race.
- Tornadoes Strike in Virginia (April 29): Twisters
in Norfolk, Suffolk, and Colonial Heights injure more than 200 people
and destroy at least 140 homes.
Information Please® Database, © 2008 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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