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January 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.
- Hundreds Die in Tribal Violence in Kenya (Jan.
1-4): After incumbent president Mwai Kibaki is declared the
winner in the presidential election over opposition candidate Raila
Odinga, who had a wide lead in preliminary results, about 50 Kikuyu who
sought refuge in a church in Kiambaa die when a mob of mostly Luo burn
down the church. Odinga is Luo, and Kibaki is Kikuyu. Nearly 500 people
die in fighting across the country. (Jan. 8): Odinga
refuses Kibaki's invitation to discuss the political crisis after Kibaki
appoints his cabinet, which does not include any members of Odinga's
Orange Democratic Party. (Jan. 29): Melitus Mugabe
Were, a member of Parliament representing the Orange Democratic Movement
who worked to mend the ethnic strife in Kenya and help the poor, is
dragged from his car, shot, and killed. Members of the opposition said
the killing was a political assassination. The ethnic violence that has
dragged on for a month since President Mwai Kibaki was narrowly
re-elected in a race deemed tainted by international observers, has spun
out of control throughout the country. (Jan. 31): A
second member of the Orange Democratic Movement, David Kimutai Too, is
shot and killed by a police officer. His supporters say his death was a
political assassination. The police, however, call it a "crime of
passion," saying the police officer who shot Too was upset that Too was
traveling with his girlfriend.
- Suicide Bomber Kills Dozens in Baghdad (Jan. 1): In
the worst attack in Iraq in months, a suicide bomber kills 30 people at
a home where mourners were paying their respects to the family of a man
killed in a car bomb. The Iraqi military blames the attack on al-Qaeda
in Iraq.
- Pakistani Government Postpones Elections (Jan 1):
In the wake of the assassination of former prime minister Benazir
Bhutto, parliamentary elections, which were scheduled for Jan. 8, are
postponed until February 18.
- U.S. Attorney General Opens Investigation into Destroyed
Tapes (Jan. 2): Michael Mukasey orders a formal criminal
investigation into the destruction in 2005 of CIA videotapes of the
interrogation of two al-Qaeda suspects. The tapes, from 2002, reportedly
included agency operatives using harsh interrogation techniques. Federal
prosecutor John Durham is chosen to head the inquiry.
- President of Georgia Is Reelected (Jan. 6): Mikheil
Saakashvili wins 52% of the vote over his nearest challenger, Levan
Gachechiladze, who tallies 27%. Saakashvili called for early elections
in November 2007, after massive protests during which demonstrators
accused him of abusing power and stifling dissent.
- War Crimes Trial of Former President of Liberia Reopens
(Jan. 7): The trial of Charles Taylor, who's charged with
crimes against humanity for supporting rebel troops in Sierra Leone's
brutal civil war that claimed the lives of about 300,000 people in the
1990s, resumes at the Hague.
- Insurgents Kill Several U.S. Soldiers in Iraq (Jan. 9):
Six soldiers die in Diyala Province when they enter a home that
had been booby-trapped.
- U.S. Drops Dozens of Bombs Near Baghdad (Jan. 10):
Air attacks, in which about 40,000 pounds of bombs are dropped, target
insurgents linked to al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia on the outskirts of
southern Baghdad.
- Suicide Bomber Targets Police in Pakistan (Jan.
10): Attacker blows himself up outside a courthouse in Lahore,
where a rally of opposition lawyers was set to occur. About 25 people,
mostly police officers, are killed.
- Iraqi Parliament Passes Law to Allow Some Baathists to
Resume Jobs (Jan. 12): Measure creates a new committee to
determine if lower-level Baathists, former members of Saddam Hussein's
party, are eligible to be reinstated to their government jobs. It also
will pay pensions to many former Baathists who will not be permitted to
return to their positions. Most Baathists lost their posts after the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. If passed by the presidential
council, it would be the first major benchmark of political progress
reached by the Iraqi government. The law, called the Justice and
Accountability Law, was criticized for being vague and confusing, and
its many loopholes may exclude more Baathists from government jobs than
it allows.
- Israeli Strike Kills Several Palestinians in Gaza (Jan.
15): As many as 20 Palestinians, many member of Hamas, die in
the attack. The Israeli operation was in retaliation to the firing of
Qassam rockets and mortar bombs into Israeli towns by Palestinian
militants. (Jan. 18): Israel closes all border
crossings into the Gaza Strip in response to the Palestinian attacks.
Aid and fuel shipments are affected by the border closing. (Jan.
22): Facing criticism for shutting off fuel deliveries to Gaza,
Israel resumes oil shipments.
- Palestinian Militants Break Through Border Fence (Jan.
23): After members of Hamas destroy parts of a wall that
separates the Gaza Strip from Egypt, tens of thousands of Palestinians
pass into Egypt to buy food and supplies that are either unavailable in
Gaza or are exorbitantly priced.
- Italy's Government Collapses (Jan. 24): Prime
Minister Romano Prodi resigns after losing a confidence vote in the
senate. He survived one a day earlier in the lower house.
- U.S. Strike Kills al-Qaeda Leader (Jan. 31): The
United States announces that Abu Laith al-Libi, a senior commander of
al-Qaeda who recruited and trained operatives, was killed in a missile
strike in northwest Pakistan.
- Report on Israeli Offensive in Lebanon Finds Failures (Jan.
31): Final report by an Israeli-government-appointed panel, the
Winograd Commission, on Israel's 2006 war against the militant group
Hezbollah in Lebanon, calls the operation a "large and serious" failure
and criticizes the country's leadership for failing to have an exit
strategy in place before the invasion. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is
spared somewhat, as the commission says that in ordering the invasion,
he was acting in "the interest of the state of Israel."
- California Sues EPA (Jan. 2): State challenges the
December 2007 decision by the Environmental Protection Agency that said
17 states, including California, do not have the authority to implement
their own standards for emissions of greenhouse gases by cars and
trucks. The states had sought to impose tougher restrictions than those
in place under federal law.
- Presidential Primaries Begin (Jan. 3): Democrat
Barack Obama and Republican Mike Huckabee are victorious in the Iowa
caucuses, the first races of the presidential primary season. On the
Democratic side, John Edwards and Hillary Clinton place second and
third, respectively. Republicans Mitt Romney and Fred Thompson trail
behind Huckabee. (Jan. 8): Democrat Hillary Clinton
finishes first in the New Hampshire primary, ahead of Barack Obama and
John Edwards. On the Republican side, John McCain leads the pack, ahead
of Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee.
- Jindal Becomes Governor of Louisiana (Jan. 15):
Republican Bobby Jindal takes office as governor of Louisiana,
becoming the first elected Indian-American governor of the United
States. At age 36, he's also the youngest governor in the nation.
- Bush Proposes $145 Billion Stimulus Package (Jan. 18):
Responding to a crisis in the housing market and rising oil
prices, president says a combination of tax cuts for individuals and
businesses will "provide a shot in the arm" to the economy. His plan,
which is vague, is intended to stimulate spending. (Jan.
24): The Bush administration and the House hash out a $146
billion stimulus package that gives rebates of $300-$600 for individuals
earning up to $75,000 and to couples with incomes up to $150,000.
Familes will be eligible for up to $300 in rebates for each child.
Businesses were also given incentives in the form of expanded
deductions. Democrats had sought, but did not get, an increase in food
stamp aid and extended unemployment benefits. (Jan.
29): The House votes, 385 to 35, in favor of the stimulus
plan.
- Padilla Is Sentenced (Jan. 22): Jose Padilla, who
was arrested in Chicago in 2002 and accused of plotting to explode a
dirty bomb in the United States, is sentenced to 17 years and 4 months
in jail. In August 2007, he was convicted 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.
- Bush Delivers Last State of the Union (Jan. 28):
President concedes that there is uncertainty with the economy,
says that even with progress in Iraq a tough battle lay ahead, and asks
Congress to reauthorize the No Child Left Behind Act, pass legislation
on electronic surveillance, and reduces by one half the cost of earmarks
that are attached to legislation.
- Edwards and Giuliani Drop Out of Race (Jan. 30):
John Edwards and Rudolph Giuliani, who both fail to win a
primary or caucus, both drop out of the presidential race after the
Flordia primary.
World | Nation | Business/Science/Society
- Tornadoes Ravage Midsection of the U.S. (Jan. 7-8):
A series of winter tornadoes caused by record-breaking temperatures kill
at least six people, including two children, destroy houses, and flood
roads in Arkansas, Illinois, Missouri, and Wisconsin.
- Markets Plunge Around the World (Jan. 21):
Responding to fears that the U.S. is headed for an imminent
recession, stock markets fall drastically in Frankfurt, Mumbai, Hong
Kong, Paris, London, and other major cities in Europe and Asia.
- Federal Reserve Slashes Interest Rates (Jan. 22):
In response to the plunge in markets around the world, the Federal
Reserve bank cuts interest rates by .75%, the largest single-day
reduction in the bank's history.
Information Please® Database, © 2008 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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