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May 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. Missile Kills Top Militia Leader in Somalia (May 1):
American officials say Aden Hashi Ayro, leader of Shabab, an
Islamic militant group with ties to al-Qaeda, was killed in a missile
attack. U.S. intelligence officers had been tracking him for several
weeks.
- Pakistan Leaders Agree to Reinstate Judges (May 2):
Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif announces that on May 12, 2008, the
Supreme Court justices who were dismissed in November 2007 by President
Pervez Musharraf will resume their positions. (May 12):
The agreement falls apart when the junior member of the
governing coalition, the Pakistan Muslim League-N, led by former prime
minister Nawaz Sharif, says it is withdrawing from the cabinet because
the senior coalition partner, the Pakistan Peoples Party, insists on
retaining the judges who replaced those who were dismissed. In addition,
the two parties disagree on how to reinstate the justices. Sharif wants
the judges immediately reinstated by executive order; Asif Ali Zardari,
the leader of the Pakistan Peoples Party prefers it be done through
Parliament, a process that may be protracted.
- Zimbabwe Announces Presidential Election Results (May
2): More than a month after the election, officials announce
that opposition candidate Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of the Movement for
Democratic Change, defeated President Robert Mugabe, 47.9% to 43.2%. A
runoff election is necessary because neither candidate won more than
50%. (May 16): The election commission sets a runoff
between Tsvangirai and Mugabe for June 27.
- New President of Russia Is Sworn In (May 7): Dmitri
Medvedev succeeds Vladimir Putin as the president of Russia. Although
he's a Putin loyalist, Medvedev is said to be moderate and pro-Western.
(May 8): Parliament elects Putin, head of the United
Russia party, as prime minister.
- New Prime Minister of Ireland Is Elected (May 7):
The Dáil, Ireland's parliament, votes 88 to 76, to elect former
finance minister Brian Cowen as prime minister.
- Hezbollah and Government Supporters Battle in Beirut (May
7): Members of Hezbollah, a Shiite militia backed by Iran,
block city streets to support a labor union strike and to fight against
supporters of the pro-Western government in Lebanon. (May 9):
Hezbollah takes control of large swaths of western Beirut,
forces a government-supported television station off the air, and burns
the offices of a newspaper loyal to the government. The government
accuses Hezbollah of staging an "armed coup." The fighting is mainly
sectarian, with Shiites fighting against Sunnis. (May
14): In an attempt to end the violence and the threat of a
civil war, the government rescinds plans to shut down a
telecommunications network run by Hezbollah and backs off attempts to
dismiss a Hezbollah-backed head of airport security. In return,
Hezbollah agrees to dismantle roadblocks that have paralyzed Beirut's
airport. The decisions are seen as a major victory for Hezbollah.
(May 21): After several days of negotiations, Hezbollah
and the government reach a deal that ends the violence in Beirut and
calls on Parliament to move toward electing Gen. Michel Suleiman, the
commander of Lebanon’s army, president; the formation of a new
cabinet, which gives Hezbollah and other members of the opposition veto
power; and a discussion of a new electoral law. (May 25):
Lebanon's Parliament elects Gen. Michel Suleiman as president,
filling the position that had been vacant since November. Suleiman, the
consensus candidate, is considered neutral.
- North Korea Discloses Information on Plutonium Program (May
8): North Korea gives U.S. officials about 18,000 pages of
documents detailing its efforts in 1990, 2003, and 2005 to reprocess
plutonium for nuclear weapons. However, officials do not hand over
information on North Korea's uranium program and its efforts to sell
nuclear material.
- State Department Renews Deal with Controversial Contractor
(May 9): Blackwater Worldwide, the company whose guards killed
17 civilians in 2007, will continue to provide security for U.S.
diplomats for another year. "We cannot operate without private security
firms in Iraq," says Patrick Kennedy, an undersecretary of state.
- Sudanese Rebels Attempt to Attack Capital (May 10):
In an unusually bold move, about 3,000 members of the Justice and
Equality Movement move to within a few miles of Khartoum before being
repulsed by government troops. It was the first time that the conflict
in Darfur has threatened to spill over into Khartoum.
- Iraqi Government and Shiite Militia Reach Cease-Fire (May
10): Government and militia led by Moktada al-Sadr agree to end
the fighting in the Sadr City area of Baghdad. As part of the deal, the
government will assume control over Sadr City and the rebels who didn't
actively participate in the battles, which killed hundreds of people,
will avoid arrest. Iran helped to broker the truce. The cease-fire,
however, does not immediately stem the violence in Sadr City.
(May 20): Iraqi troops move into Sadr City, meeting
very little resistance from the Mahdi Army.
- Israel and Syria Announce Peace Talks (May 21): For
the first time in eight years, Israel and Syria return to t the
bargaining table to try to negotiate a peace deal. Syria hopes to regain
control over the Golan Heights, which was taken by Israel in 1967;
Israel wants to distance Syria from Iran and diminish some of the
influence Iran holds in the Middle East.
- Nepal Nears Final Transition Away from Monarchy (May
28): The newly elected Constituent Assembly votes to dissolve
the 239-year-old monarchy and form a republic. King Gyanendra is told he
must step down within 15 days.
- Congress Passes Law Banning Bias Based on Genes (May
1): The House votes, 414 to 1, in favor of legislation that
forbids health insurers and employers from discriminating against people
based on their genetic information. The Senate had passed the same bill,
95 to 5.
- Democrats Pick Up Seats in Congress (May 3):
Democrat Don Cazayoux wins a seat in the House of Representatives that
had been held by Republicans for more than 30 years. (May
13): Travis Childers, a conservative Democrat from Mississippi,
wins a House seat in a district long considered a Republican
stronghold.
- House Passes Farm Bill (May 14): Approves, 318 to
106, a $307 billion bill that increases subsidies to farmers and expands
by $10.3 billion nutrition programs, including food stamps. President
Bush says he will veto the bill, calling the subsidies bloated.
(May 21): President Bush vetoes the bill. The House
then votes, 316 to 108, to override the veto. (May 22):
The Senate also overrides Bush' veto, 82 to 13, and the bill
becomes law.
- California Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Gay Marriage (May
15): In the 4 to 3 ruling, state's highest court says that
same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry. When the ruling
goes into effect in June 2008, California will be the second state,
behind Massachusetts, to legalize same-sex marriages. It was later
publicized that on May 14, New York governor David Paterson issued a
directive ordering all state agencies to recognize same-sex marriages
performed in other states.
- Kennedy Diagnosed with a Brain Tumor (May 20):
Senator Edward Kennedy, a Democrat from Massachusetts who's
been in office since 1963, is diagnosed with a malignant glioma.
- Democratic Party Officials Reach Compromise on Florida and
Michigan Delegates (May 31): The rules committee of the
Democratic National Committee votes to seat all of the delegates from
Florida and Michigan but only allot them a half vote each at the
Democratic National Convention. The two states were stripped of their
delegates because they held presidential primaries earlier than
permitted by the DNC. Hillary Clinton gains 24 delegates more than
Barack Obama.
World | Nation | Business/Science/Society
- Storms Cause Wide Damage and Death in Arkansas (May
2): At least seven people are killed, more than a dozen are
injured, and about 350 homes and businesses are badly damaged or
destroyed in tornadoes and storms in Arkansas.
- Microsoft Withdraws Bid for Yahoo (May 3): After
Yahoo rejects Microsoft's offer of $33 per share, or about $47.5
billion, up from $29.40 a share, Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer
announces the company has rescinded its offer.
- Cyclone Devastates Myanmar (May 3): Cyclone Nargis
ravages the Irrawaddy Delta and Yangon, killing 78,000 people and
leaving up to a million homeless. About 28,000 people are reported
missing and are feared dead. Most of the death and destruction are
caused by a 12-foot high tidal wave that formed during the storm.
(May 10): The ruling military junta goes ahead with a
constitutional referendum intended to cement its grip on power.
- Tornadoes Strike in Midwest and South (May 11):
More than 20 people die and hundreds more are injured when tornadoes hit
Missouri, Oklahoma, and Georgia. Racine, a town about 170 miles south of
Kansas City, Missouri saw the most damage, leaving about 9,000 people
without electricity for over three days.
- Earthquake Kills Thousands in China (May 12): As
many as 68,000 people are killed and thousands injured when an estimated
7.9 magnitude earthquake strikes Sichuan, Gansu, and Yunnan Provinces in
western China. Nearly 900 students are trapped when Juyuan Middle School
in the Sichuan Province collapses. Several other schools collapse. It is
China's worst natural disaster in three decades. (May
19): Nearly 160 rescue workers are killed in landslides caused
by rain and floods. (May 27): Authorities begin
evacuating residents who are threatened by the potential flooding of
"quake lakes," which formed when landslides blocked several rivers. As
many as 1.3 million people may have to be relocated.
- Polar Bear Designated as Threatened (May 14):
Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne announces that the polar bear
has been listed as threatened, thus protected by the Endangered Species
Act. The Interior Department includes provisions, however, that allow
oil exploration to continue in the Arctic, somewhat watering down the
protection.
Information Please® Database, © 2008 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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