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June 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.
- U.S. Casualties in Iraq Reach Lowest Point (June
1): The U.S. military announces that fatalities in Iraq in May
dropped to 19, the lowest level since the war began in 2003.
- Sept. 11 Suspects Are Arraigned (June 5): Khalid
Shaikh Mohammed, who has claimed to have organized the September 11,
2001, terrorist attacks against the U.S., and four others involved in
the planning, face a tribunal for the first time at Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba. All five defendants say they will defend themselves.
- Turkey's Highest Court Rules Against Head Scarves (June 5):
The Constitutional Court overturns a measure passed by
Parliament in February and endorsed by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, which allowed women to wear headscarves at universities, saying
it violates secularist principles inherent in the country's
constitution.
- Massive Turnout in South Korea to Protest Beef Imports (June
10): As many as several hundred thousand people demonstrate in
the streets of Seoul against the government's decision to resume imports
of American beef, which was banned in 2003 after mad cow disease was
diagnosed in the U.S. The protests, which have taken place in Seoul for
about six weeks and peaked on June 10, imply overall dissatisfaction
with President Lee, who promised to boost the flagging economy and reach
out to the United States. Prime Minister Han Seung-soo and all 15
cabinet members submit their resignations. (June 21):
The U.S. and South Korea reach an accord that says the U.S.
will not export beef from cattle more than 30 months old. (June
22): Facing continued public pressure, the government says it
will put the accord on hold.
- U.S. Attack Kills Several Pakistani Soldiers (June 10):
U.S. soldiers launch an air strike aimed at Taliban militants
who had crossed the border from Pakistan into Afghanistan and fired on
American-led troops. Eleven members of a Pakistani paramilitary force
die, angering Pakistani officials and increasing tension between the
U.S. and Pakistan.
- Ireland Votes Against European Union Treaty (June
13): Dissent by Ireland, the only country in the 27-member EU
that put the Lisbon Treaty to a popular vote, jeopardizes the future of
the pact that would have strengthened the EU’s influence in global
politics.
- Taliban Masterminds Brazen Jailbreak (June 13):
Fighters attack guards outside a prison in Kandahar and then
launch a rocket-propelled grenade at a fuel tanker parked outside the
prison. The blast kills several guards and opens a hole in the prison
wall. About 900 inmates escape, including 350 members of the
Taliban.
- Bombings Kill Dozens in Iraq (June 17): At least 60
people are killed and about 75 are wounded when an explosive-laden
minibus explodes at a bus terminal near a crowded market in a Shiite
district of Baghdad. The blast causes an apartment building to burst
into flames. (June 18): The U.S. military attributes
the bombing to a Shiite militia leader, Haydar Mehdi Khadum al-Fawadi,
saying he orchestrated the bombing to incite sectarian violence between
Sunnis and Shiites. (June 26): At least 30 people are
killed in two separate attacks in Anbar Province and the city of Mosul.
The suicide bombing in Anbar occurred at a meeting of the Awakening
Council, an alliance of moderate Sunnis who support the U.S.
- Israel and Hamas Sign a Truce (June 19): Egypt
brokers a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, the militant group that
controls the Gaza Strip. The agreement is intended to quell the violence
in the region.
- Opposition Leader Drops Out of Runoff in Zimbabwe (June 22):
Morgan Tsvangirai, of the Movement for Democracy and Change,
who was to face incumbent president Robert Mugabe in a June 27 runoff
election, withdraws from the race, saying he could not subject his
supporters to violence and intimidation. He also says he refused to take
part in "this violent, illegitimate sham of an election process."
Tsvangirai had been detained by police several times in the past weeks
and 85 supporters of his party have been killed in government-backed
violence against the opposition. (June 27): Voters go
to the polls to cast ballots in an election widely called a sham. Mugabe
wins with about 85% of the vote. (June 28): President
Bush urges the UN to impose an international arms embargo against
Zimbabwe and announces that the U.S. will punish Mugabe with economic
sanctions. "The international community has condemned the Mugabe
regime's ruthless campaign of politically motivated violence and
intimidation," Bush says.
- North Korea Takes Steps Toward Denuclearization (June 26):
Officials hand over to China a list of its nuclear facilities
as well as information on the amount of reprocessed plutonium in its
possession. In exchange, the U.S. removes North Korea from its list of
countries that sponsor terrorism and lifts some sanctions against the
country. (June 27): North Korea destroys a cooling
tower at its main reactor in Yongbyon.
- U.S. Army Faults Itself in Report on Post-Hussein Iraq (June
30): In 700-page study called "On Point II: Transition to the
New Campaign," the Army says that while it was capable of toppling
Saddam Hussein, it was not equipped to rebuild Iraq into a functional
country.
- Obama Secures the Democratic Nomination (June
3): On the final day of the 2008 primary
season, Sen. Barack Obama secures 2,154 delegates and becomes the
presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. He's the first black
candidate to head a major party ticket in a presidential election.
Hillary Clinton does not withdraw from the race, but is expected to in
the coming days. (June 7): Sen. Hillary Clinton
suspends her campaign and endorses Obama for the presidency.
- Defense Secretary Fires Top Air Force Officers (June 5):
Michael Wynne, Air Force secretary, and Gen. T. Michael
Moseley, the Air Force's chief of staff, are forced to step down after
an investigation into how fuses for nuclear warheads were mistakenly
shipped to Taiwan.
- Five-Year Inquiry Finds Bush Exaggerated Evidence on Iraq
(June 5): The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence report
states that President Bush and his staff repeatedly overstated evidence
that Saddam Hussein possessed nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons
and misled the public about ties between Iraq and al-Qaeda.
- Supreme Court Decides in Favor of Guantánamo
Detainees (June 12): Court rules, 5 to 4, that prisoners at
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, have a right to challenge their detention
in federal court. It is the third decision against the Bush
administration’s policy on such detainees.
- House Votes to Extend Unemployment Benefits (June 12):
A day after the same measure fails, the House passes, 274 to
137, a bill to extend unemployment benefits to 39 weeks, up from 26. In
addition, for those living in states with unemployment rates of 6% or
higher, benefits would be lengthened by a total of 26 weeks.
- California Begins Performing Same-Sex Marriages (June 16):
A month after the state supreme court struck down laws
prohibiting gay marriage, couples flood into city halls all over the
state to get married. California is the second state, behind
Massachusetts, to legalize same-sex marriage. However, the future of gay
marriage is in doubt; a referendum set for November seeks to define
marriage as a union between “a man and a woman.”
- Bush Asks Congress to End Ban on Offshore Drilling (June
18): President urges Congress to act by July 4 to rescind a
law, passed by the first President Bush in 1990, that prohibits offshore
drilling for oil. Critics of the plan say relief from high gas prices,
which have exceeded $4 a gallon, will not take effect until 2030.
- Obama Opts Out of Public Funding for the General Election
(June 19): Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Barack
Obama becomes the first presidential candidate to bypass public
financing since the program was established. Obama says he believes the
move will provide better resources to defend his campaign from attacks
by Republicans.
- House Passes Law to Expand Civil Rights for the Disabled
(June 25): Votes, 402 to 17, that eases the burden of workers
to prove discrimination and expands the impairments included under the
term disability. Cancer, diabetes, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, and
multiple sclerosis would be covered.
- Supreme Court Rules for Gun Rights (June 26, 2008):
The Supreme Court rules, 5 to 4, that the Constitution protects an
individual's right to possess a gun, but insists that the ruling "is not
a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever
and for whatever purpose."
World | Nation | Business/Science/Society
- California Governor Declares a Drought (June 4):
With reservoir levels well below average and the state experiencing its
driest spring in 88 years, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger officially
declares that California is in a drought and warns of potential
rationing. It is the first such declaration in 17 years.
- Unemployment Rate Spikes (June 6): The U.S.
Department of Labor reports that the jobless rate increases from 5% to
5.5%, the biggest monthly increase in 22 years.
- Several Die in Midwest Floods (June 9): Severe
flooding from storms cause already swollen rivers and lakes in Iowa,
Indiana, and Wisconsin to flood, killing 10 people, breaking three dams,
and forcing thousands to evacuate their homes. In addition, at least 90
roads are closed.
- Boy Scouts Are Killed by Tornado (June 11): Four
Boy Scouts die and another 48 are injured when a tornado tears through
the Little Sioux Scout Ranch in western Iowa. The tornado also touches
down in Kansas, killing two people.
- Hundreds Are Killed by Typhoon in the Philippines (June
21): More than 800 people die when a ferry is struck by Typhoon
Fengshen. About 500 other people die during the storm.
- Gates Ends Day-to-Day Work at Microsoft (June 27):
Bill Gates remains chairman of the software giant, but he will no longer
work at the company full time. Instead, he will devote more time to the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Information Please® Database, © 2008 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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