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September 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.
World
- Japanese Prime Minister Resigns (Sept. 1): Yasuo
Fukuda, who has been in office barely a year, announces that he will
step down when his party, the Liberal Democrats, select his successor.
In June 2008, the upper house of Parliament, which is controlled by the
opposition, censured Fukuda, citing his mismanagement of domestic
issues. The lower house, however, supported him in a vote of confidence.
(Sept. 22): Taro Aso, a conservative and former foreign
minister, is elected president of the governing Liberal Democratic
Party. (Sept. 24): The lower house of Parliament elects
Aso as prime minister. He promises to restore the flagging economy.
- U.S. Transfers Control of Once Troubled Province to Iraq
(Sept. 1): The Iraqi military and police assume responsibility
for maintaining security in Anbar Province, which was until recently the
cradle of the Sunni insurgency. More than 1,000 members of the U.S.
military have been killed in the province.
- Thai Government Declares State of Emergency When Protests
Turn Violent (Sept. 1): One person is killed and dozens are
wounded in fighting between supporters of an opposition group and
pro-government demonstrators. For more than a week, thousands of
protesters, called People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD), have
staged a sit-in outside the government buildings in Bangkok, calling for
the resignation of Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej. Pro-government
groups launched counterdemonstrations. (Sept. 2): Prime
Minister Samak declares a state of emergency. (Sept.
3): The military and police do not enforce the state of
emergency. In a press conference, army commander Gen. Anupong Paochinda
declares neutrality in the conflict. "We are not taking sides," he says.
"If the nation is the people, we are the army of the people."
(Sept. 9): Samak is forced from office when Thailand's
Constitutional Court rules that he violated the constitution by being
paid to appear on the cooking show "Tasting and Complaining." Somchai
Wongsawat, the first deputy prime minister, becomes acting prime
minister. (Sept. 14): Acting prime minister Somchai
ends the state of emergency, which has disrupted the tourism industry.
(Sept. 17): Parliament elects Somchai prime minister,
298 to 163.
- U.S. Report on Civilian Deaths in Attack on Afghans
Conflicts With Other Accounts (Sept. 2): A U.S. military report
on the number of civilian casualties incurred in an August airstrike by
U.S. troops on a village in Azizabad finds that five to seven civilians
and 30 to 35 Taliban were killed. The UN and the Afghan government,
however, say as many as 90 Afghan civilians, 60 of them children,
died.
- U.S. Troops Attack Militants in Pakistan (Sept. 3):
In its first acknowledged ground attack inside Pakistan, U.S. commandos
raid a village that is home to al-Qaeda militants in the tribal region
near the border with Afghanistan. The number of casualties is
unclear.
- Governing Party Wins Parliamentary Elections in Angola
(Sept. 5): In the country's first elections in 16 years, the
Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) wins about 82% of
the vote in the legislative election. The opposition, the National Union
for the Total Independence of Angola (Unita), takes 10%.
- Bhutto's Widower Is Elected President of Pakistan (Sept.
6): Asif Ali Zardari, leader of the Pakistan Peoples Party,
wins 481 out of 702 votes in the two houses of Parliament to become
president. Zardari, who served 11 years in prison on charges of
corruption, faces the overwhelming task of rooting out members of al
Qaeda and the Taliban, who control much of the country's tribal areas.
He also promises to improve the relationship between Parliament and the
presidency.
- International Regulator Allows India to Buy Nuclear Fuel
(Sept. 6): The Nuclear Suppliers Group, comprised of
representatives from 45 countries, votes to allow India to buy nuclear
fuel for its reactors as long as it uses the fuel for civilian purposes
only. The U.S. Congress must approve the agreement. The opposition party
in India, the Bharatiya Janata Party, is against the deal, calling it a
"nonproliferation trap." Nuclear trade deal could be scrapped if India
uses the fuel for its weapons program.
- Canadian Prime Minister Calls for Early Elections (Sept.
7): Stephen Harper requests that Parliament be dissolved and
sets national elections for Oct. 14. He hopes to win enough votes to
hold a majority in Parliament; he now heads a minority Conservative
government.
- Three Convicted in Terrorism Plot (Sept. 8): Three
men, out of eight who were on trial, are found guilty in a British court
of conspiracy to commit murder. The defendants were arrested in 2006 for
trying to use liquid explosives to blow up seven planes that were
traveling from the UK to the U.S. and Canada. They are acquitted of the
more serious charge of preparing acts of airborne terrorism.
- Russia Agrees to Withdraw from Georgia (Sept. 8):
Russian president Dmitri A. Medvedev says he will remove troops from
Georgia by mid-October and will permit 200 observers from the European
Union to keep watch over the conflict in South Ossetia and Abkhazia,
which began on Aug. 7 when Georgia attacked the breakaway enclave of
South Ossetia. Russia stepped in to defend South Ossetia. (Sept.
10): Russia's foreign minister Sergey Lavrov denies that Russia
agreed to allow European Union monitors into South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
Instead, he says they will work in Georgia, outside the breakaway
enclaves.
- Judge Drops Case Against South African Leader (Sept.
12): A High Court judge dismisses corruption charges against
African National Congress leader Jacob Zuma, saying the government
mishandled the prosecution. The ruling clears the way for Zuma to
succeed Thabo Mbeki as president of South Africa. The judge also
criticizes President Mbeki for attempting to influence the prosecution
of Zuma. (Sept. 20): Under pressure from leaders of his
party, the African National Congress (ANC), President Thabo Mbeki says
he has stepped down. Party leaders accused Mbeki of interfering in the
corruption case against ANC leader Jacob Zuma. An interim president will
take over until Jacob Zuma, the leader of the ruling ANC, runs for
Parliament. Once a member of Parliament, Zuma is expected to become
president. Mbeki served as president since 1999. (Sept.
24): Mbeki's deputy and 10 members of his cabinet also resign.
Six ministers say they will not serve in a new government.
(Sept. 25): Parliament elects Kgalema Motlanthe, a
labor leader who was imprisoned during apartheid, as president.
- Several Bombs Tear Through Indian Capital (Sept.
13): Over the course of 25 minutes, five bombs explode in
crowded markets in New Delhi, killing 22 people and injuring dozens. The
Indian Mujahedeen claims responsibility for the attacks.
- Rivals Sign Power-Sharing Deal in Zimbabwe (Sept.
15): President Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan
Tsvangirai, who defeated Mugabe 48% to 43% in March elections but
boycotted the June runoff election because of voter intimidation, will
share executive authority over the country. Tsvangirai will serve as
prime minister and the opposition will control 16 ministries. The
governing party will control 15; Mugabe will continue as president.
- Military Command in Iraq Changes Hands (Sept. 16):
U.S. Gen. Ray Odierno succeeds Gen. David Petraeus as the
commander of the multinational forces in Iraq. Petraeus, who oversaw the
surge of troops into Iraq, will become commander of the U.S. Central
Command that covers all of the Middle East.
- Two Bombs Explode at U.S. Embassy in Yemen (Sept.
17): A car bomb and a rocket hit the U.S. Embassy in Yemen as
staff arrived to work, killing 16 people, including four civilians. At
least 25 suspected al-Qaeda militants are arrested in connection with
the attack.
- Dozens Are Killed in Blast at Popular Hotel in Pakistan
(Sept. 20): A truck bomb explodes outside the Marriott Hotel in
Islamabad, killing more than 50 people and wounding hundreds. The bomb
went off as government leaders, including the president and prime
minister, were dining a few hundred yards away, at the prime minister's
residence. A previously unknown group, Fedayeen Islam, takes
responsibility for the attack.
- Israeli Prime Minister Steps Down (Sept. 21): Ehud
Olmert, who is under investigation for corruption, resigns as prime
minister. Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who was recently elected the
head of Olmert's party, Kadima, is expected to succeed Olmert if she can
maintain the fragile governing coalition.
- Myanmar Releases Thousands of Prisoners (Sept. 23):
Just over 9,000 prisoners are released by the military government,
including the longest-serving political prisoner, Win Tin. Most of those
released, however, are not political prisoners. By most estimates, as
many as 2,000 political prisoners remain in detention, and activists
continue to be arrested.
- Iraq Passes Scaled-Down Election Law (Sept. 24):
Parliament passes a much-anticipated law that calls for
provincial elections to be held in early 2009. Elections had originally
been scheduled for Oct. 2008. Elections in the disputed city of Kirkuk,
however, are postponed until a separate agreement is reached by a
committee made up of representatives from each group involved.
- Car Bomb Explodes in Syrian Capital (Sept. 27): A
powerful bomb, made of more than 400 pounds of explosives, kills 17
people near a Shiite shrine in Damascus. It's Syria's worst attack in
more than 20 years. Terrorism is suspected.
- Five Bombs Kill Dozens in Baghdad (Sept. 28): At
least 27 people die and more than 80 are wounded in bombings that occur
throughout the day.
Nation
- Hurricane Affects Opening of the Republican National
Convention (Sept. 1): With Hurricane Gustav heading toward New
Orleans, which was devastated in 2005 by Hurricane Katrina, party
officials scale back the first day of the Republican National
Convention, making it a business-only affair without the celebratory
mood and speeches. McCain's choice for vice president, Alaska governor
Sarah Palin, announces that her unmarried 17-year-old daughter, Bristol,
is five months pregnant. (Sept. 2): President Bush
delivers a speech via video from the White House, saying McCain is the
man most fit to become president. "We live in a dangerous world,”
Bush says. “And we need a president who understands the lessons of
Sept. 11, 2001: that to protect America, we must stay on the offense,
stop attacks before they happen, and not wait to be hit again. The man
we need is John McCain.” (Sept. 3): In her
address at the Republican National Convention, which was widely praised,
Sarah Palin mocks Sen. Barack Obama's role as a community organizer in
Chicago, portrays herself as a Washington outsider, and outlines her
Alaska upbringing and professional experience. "Before I became governor
of the great state of Alaska, I was mayor of my hometown,” Palin
says. “And since our opponents in this presidential election seem
to look down on that experience, let me explain to them what the job
involves. I guess a small-town mayor is sort of like a ‘community
organizer,’ except that you have actual responsibilities." Shortly
after her speech, delegates select Sen. John McCain as the Republican
presidential nominee. (Sept. 4): In his acceptance
speech, Sen. McCain calls for change from the status quo and indicates
that he will not always tow the party line. "Let me just offer an
advance warning to the old, big-spending, do-nothing,
me-first-country-second Washington crowd: hange is coming," he says.
 Palin family celebrates
with McCain. Photo by Carol M.
Highsmith
- Report Finds That Former Attorney General Mishandled
Sensitive Documents (Sept. 2): The Justice Department's
inspector general, Glenn Fine, concludes that Alberto Gonzales
improperly handled highly classified information relating to the
National Security Agency's wiretapping program and the Bush
administration's prisoner interrogation program. The report says
Gonzales stored documents in his home and in an office safe at the
Justice Department, which violated security protocol.
- Detroit Mayor Steps Down (Sept. 3): As part of a
plea deal, Kwame M. Kilpatrick pleads guilty to two felony charges of
obstruction of justice and agrees to resign from office, serve four
months in jail, and pay $1 million in restitution to end a scandal
stemming from his attempts to conceal a past affair with his former
chief of staff.
- Reports Find Interior Department Agency Riddled by Scandal
(Sept. 10): The Interior Department's inspector general submits
reports to Congress that detail how officials in the department's
Minerals and Management Service accepted gifts from energy companies in
excess of ethics limits, engaged in sexual relationships with
subordinates and employees of oil and gas companies, and used illegal
drugs at industry events.
- House Passes a Bill to Expand Offshore Drilling (Sept. 16):
Legislation would allow drilling for oil 50 miles off the
Atlantic and Pacific coasts if all adjacent states agree and 100 miles
out regardless of a state's position on drilling. The measure, which
passes, 236 to 189, also cuts some tax benefits for oil companies and
calls on utilities to produce 15% of their power from renewable sources
by 2020.
- Congress Approves a Civil Rights Bill (Sept.17):
The House of Representatives votes in favor of a bill that broadens the
definition of disability to include epilepsy, diabetes, cancer, multiple
sclerosis, and other illnesses. The Senate had already unanimously
passed the legislation, which overturns recent Supreme Court decisions
that narrowed the definition of disability and made it difficult for
workers to prove discrimination.
- Presidential Candidates Face Off in First Debate (Sept. 26):
At the end of a tumultuous week in which the country's
financial system teetered on the brink of collapse, Sen. John McCain and
Sen. Barack Obama agree that the government should intervene in the
crisis, but conditions and safeguards must be included in any bailout
package. Obama blames the Bush adminstration's failed economic policy
for the turmoil. On foreign policy, the candidates attack each other
over the war in Iraq. McCain lashes out at Obama for not supporting the
surge of troops that has led to a decrease in violence in Iraq. The
debate, which takes place at the University of Mississippi, was up in
the air until midday, as McCain had said that he would not participate
in the debate in order to focus on the national financial crisis.
- House Approves Nuclear Deal with India (Sept. 27):
Votes, 298 to 117, to end the ban on trading nuclear fuel with India.
The ban was imposed by the U.S. in 1974 after India tested a nuclear
weapon.
- Investigation Finds Political Motivation Was Behind
Prosecutor Dismissals (Sept. 29): An internal inquiry by the
Justice Department's inspector general and its Office of Professional
Responsibility reports “significant evidence that political
partisan considerations were an important factor in the removal of
several of the U.S. attorneys.” Nine federal prosecutors were
fired in 2006. The report is highly critical of former attorney general
Alberto Gonzales, who resigned during the scandal, saying he was
"remarkably unengaged" throughout the dismissal process and faulted his
"extraordinary lack of recollection about the entire removal process" in
his testimony to Congress. It also says the Bush administration's
unwillingness to cooperate with the investigation led to an incomplete
understanding of the scandal. Attorney General Michael Mukasey requests
that federal prosecutor Nora Dannehy continue the investigation to
determine if anyone involved should face criminal charges.
Business/Science/Society
- New Orleans Spared Another Catastrophic Hurricane (Sept.
1): Hurricane Gustav, which was on a path toward New Orleans as
a Category 5 storm, makes landfall in rural Louisiana, southwest of New
Orleans, as a Category 2 storm. About two million people evacuated New
Orleans in anticipation of a devastating storm. At least seven people
die in the hurricane and more than one million homes are left without
power.
- China Admits Shoddy Construction May Have Caused Schools to
Collapse in Earthquakes (Sept. 4): For the first time, the
Chinese government acknowledges that poor construction of hastily built
schools possibly contributed to their collapse in the May 12 earthquake
that killed 70,000 people, including 10,000 students.
- U.S. Financial Markets Roiled by Turmoil (Sept. 7):
The U.S. government places Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
companies that together hold more than half of the country's mortgages,
under government conservatorship, which is akin to bankruptcy
reorganization. U.S. treasury secretary, Henry M. Paulson Jr., says the
move was crucial to avoid turmoil in the national and international
economies. "This turmoil would directly and negatively impact household
wealth: from family budgets, to home values, to savings for college and
retirement,” he says. “A failure would affect the ability of
Americans to get home loans, auto loans and other consumer credit and
business finance. And a failure would be harmful to economic growth and
job creation.” (Sept. 14): Merrill Lynch agrees
to be acquired by Bank of America for $50 billion, and Lehman Brothers
prepares to declare bankruptcy when it fails to find a buyer. Merrill
Lynch was valued at more than $100 billion in the past year.
(Sept. 15): The Dow Jones Industrial Average drops more
than 500 points, or 4.4%, amid concerns over a financial crisis. It is
the worst one-day loss since the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
In addition, Lehman Brothers goes ahead and declares bankruptcy.
(Sept. 16): The Federal Reserve agrees to a $85 billion
rescue of the American International Group, an enormous insurance
company that covers financial institutions. (Sept. 20):
The Bush administration seeks authority from Congress to allow
the Treasury Department to buy up to $700 billion in bad mortgage assets
from private investment companies. If approved, the deal will be the
largest bailout in U.S. history. The Treasury would hire outside
investment experts to manage the securities. (Sept.
22): Congres begins debating the bailout package, with
Democrats insisting that any plan include relief for Americans burdened
by mortgages they can't afford. In addition, many lawmakers, skeptical
of the authority the plan gives to the Treasury Department, demand
strict oversight of the program. (Sept. 26): Federal
regulators seize Washington Mutual, the nation's largest savings and
loan. Almost immediately after, JP Morgan Chase buys the majority of
Washington Mutual. (Sept. 28): Congressional
negotiators and Treasury secretary Henry Paulson agree on a $700 billion
bailout plan that gives the Treasury unprecedented authority to buy a
wide range of troubled financial assets, limits executive pay, gives the
government an equity stake in companies that participate in the plan,
and gives the federal government the ability to recoup losses from the
financial industry after five years, which is considered a major
concession. (Sept. 29): In a stunning move that leaves
the financial world in disarray, the House rejects the bailout plan, 228
to 205. Only 65 Republicans vote in favor of the bill, despite strong
pleas by President Bush; 140 Democrats support the measure. The Dow
Jones Industrial Average drops 778 points, it's biggest point decline
ever.
- Unemployment Rate Reaches Highest Level in Five Years (Sept.
5): The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the jobless
rate in the U.S. hits 6.1%, the highest point since 2003. Some 84,000
people lost jobs in August.
- Hundreds Die in Storm in Haiti (Sept. 5): Tropical
Storm Hanna strikes the port city of Gonaïves, killing at least 500
people and leaving many more injured or missing.
- Hurricane Leaves a Path of Devastation (Sept. 7-8):
At least 61 people die in Haiti, four more are killed in Cuba,
and 80% of homes are destroyed on Turks and Caicos islands when category
2 Hurricane Ike strikes the Caribbean. (Sept. 13-14):
Hurricane Ike continues its damage when it hits Texas and causes at
least 30 deaths, thousands more to evacuate their homes, and millions to
lose power in Houston alone. Ike hits the island city of Galveston Bay
the hardest, knocking out water, power, and sewer lines. Despite
requests to evacuate, at least 15,000 people remaind in Galveston amid
worsening sanitary conditions.
- More Than Two Dozen Die in Train Crash (Sept. 12):
At least 25 people die when a commuter train crashes head-on into a
freight train in Chatsworth, California. The commuter train's engineer,
who dies in the accident, fails to stop for a red signal.
- Several Are Killed in School Shooting in Finland (Sept.
23): A 20-year-old male student shoots and kills at least nine
students and himself at a vocational college in Kauhajok, 330km (205
miles) north of the capital, Helsinki.
- Chinese Astronaut Makes First Spacewalk (Sept. 27):
Zhai Zhigang steps out of the Shenzhou VII spacecraft and enters
outer space, performing the first spacewalk by a Chinese astronaut.
Information Please® Database, © 2008 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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