Daily Observer (Jamaica)

This Day in HISTORY

Today is the 42nd day of 2020. There are 323 days left in the year.

- TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT

2013: Jamaican legend of athletics administra­tion Neville “Teddy” Mccook dies.

OTHER EVENTS

1254: The British Parliament first convenes.

1531: King Henry VIII is recognised as supreme head of the Church in England.

1744: Naval battle of Toulon begins between Britain and combined Franco-spanish fleet.

1798: French forces take Rome.

1812: Massachuse­tts Governor Elbridge Gerry signs a redistrict­ing law that favours his party — giving rise to the term “gerrymande­ring”.

1888: King Lobengda of Matabele, Rhodesia, accepts British protection. 1889: Constituti­on is granted in Japan, with two-chamber Diet, but emperor retains extensive powers.

1922: Nine-power treaty is signed in Washington for securing China’s independen­ce and maintainin­g “open door” policy.

1929: Italy signs the Lateran Treaty establishi­ng an independen­t Vatican City.

1944: US carrier planes strike heavy blows against Japanese positions in Marshall Islands in Pacific during World War II.

1945: US President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet leader Josef Stalin sign the Yalta Agreement during World War II.

1956: Referendum in Malta favours integratio­n with Britain.

1967: Military rule is imposed in Beijing during civil strife in China. 1968: Communist troops execute 300 civilians in South Vietnam and bury them in a mass grave during fighting for city of Hue.

1971: Treaty banning nuclear weapons from ocean floor is signed by 63 nations in ceremonies at Washington, London and Moscow.

1975: Margaret Thatcher becomes the first female head of the British Conservati­ve Party.

1979: Followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini seize power in Iran, nine days after the religious leader returns to his home country following 15 years of exile.

1986: Jewish dissident Anatoly Scharansky walks to freedom in Berlin after almost nine years in Soviet captivity on espionage charges.

1989: Barbara Harris becomes the first consecrate­d female Episcopal bishop in United States.

1990: African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela is released after 27 years in South African prisons.

1993: A Somali gunman hijacks a Lufthansa Airbus over Austria with 104 people aboard and orders it flown to New York, where he surrenders peacefully and releases his hostages unharmed.

1994: A Nato-enforced ceasefire takes hold in Sarajevo.

1999: The US Justice Department closes the books on a Us$1.6-billion reparation­s programme for ethnic Japanese interned in American camps during World War II.

2000: Britain strips Northern Ireland’s Protestant-catholic Government of power in a bid to prevent its collapse over the Irish Republican Army’s refusal to disarm.

2001: About 7,500 counterdem­onstrators turn out to protest against a neo-nazi march in western Germany that draws

250 people. Four police officers suffer minor injuries, and 17 demonstrat­ors are arrested.

2002: Jordan’s State Security Court sentences Us-born Raed Hijazi to death by hanging for plotting attacks on US and

Israeli targets in Jordan during celebratio­ns in the new year 2000.

2006: Adventurer Steve Fossett completes the longest non-stop flight in aviation history with an emergency landing in England, flying 26,389 miles (42,469 kilometres) in about 76 hours but stopping early because of mechanical problems.

2007: Turkmenist­an holds a tightly controlled presidenti­al election, the first ever with more than one candidate, to replace long-time, iron-fisted leader Saparmurat Niyazov. Gurbanguli Berdymukha­medov wins, but shows little promise for liberalisa­tion in the isolated former Soviet republic.

2008: Rebel soldiers shoot and critically wound East Timor’s President Jose Ramos-horta and open fire on Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, who escaped the attack unhurt, in a failed coup attempt in the recently independen­t nation.

2010: Iranian security forces unleash a crushing sweep against Opposition protesters as President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d uses the 31st anniversar­y of the Islamic revolution to defy the West and boast his country is now a “nuclear state”.

2011: Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak resigns and hands power to the military after protesters flood the streets of Cairo and other cities.

2012: Gunmen assassinat­e an army general in Damascus in the first killing of a highrankin­g military officer in the Syrian capital since the uprising against President Bashar Assad’s regime began in March.

2013: Pope Benedict XVI does what no pope has done in more than half a millennium, announcing his resignatio­n and sending the already troubled Roman Catholic Church scrambling to replace the leader of its one billion followers.

2015: The Republican­controlled US Congress approves a Bill to construct the Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada, setting up a confrontat­ion with President Barack Obama who has threatened to veto the measure.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Thomas A Edison, US inventor (1847-1931); Sidney Sheldon, US author (19172007); Burt Reynolds, US actor (1936-2018); Tina Louise, US actress (1934- ); Sergio Mendes, Brazilian musician (1941- ); Sheryl Crow, US singer (1962- ); Jennifer Aniston, US actress (1969- ); Brandy, US singer/actress (1979- )

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