Daily Observer (Jamaica)

THIS DAY IN HISTORY

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TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT

1993: African National Congress (ANC) President Nelson Mandela and South African President F W de Klerk are awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts in dismantlin­g apartheid and negotiatin­g South Africa’s transition to a non-racial democracy.

OTHER EVENTS

1571: In a naval engagement, allied Christian forces — an Austrian, Genovese and Venetian fleet — defeat the Turks in the Battle of Lepano during an Ottoman campaign to acquire Cyprus.

1765: The Stamp Act Congress convenes in New York to draw up colonial grievances against

England.

1769: Captain James Cook lands in New Zealand for the first time, at Poverty Bay.

1826: The first gravity-powered American railroad goes into operation, running from Quincy to Milton, Massachuse­tts, carrying granite rock down to the waterfront.

1879: Britain invades Afghanista­n.

1935: League of Nations declares Italy aggressor in Ethiopia.

1949: German Democratic Republic is establishe­d in Sovietoccu­pied eastern Germany.

1950: UN General Assembly approves Allied advance north of 38th parallel in Korean conflict.

1954: Marian Anderson becomes the first black singer hired by the New York Metropolit­an Opera House.

1958: President Iskander Nirza proclaims martial law in Pakistan.

1963: US President John F Kennedy signs nuclear test ban treaty between United States, Britain and Soviet Union.

1970: Egypt’s Vice-president Anwar Sadat officially succeeds the late General Gamal Abdel Nasser as president.

1975: The Soviet Union and East Germany sign a revised treaty of “friendship, cooperatio­n and mutual assistance” eliminatin­g all reference to the eventual unificatio­n of the two German states.

1981: Egypt’s Vice-president Hosni Mubarak is nominated as successor to slain President Anwar Sadat.

1982: The Andrew Lloyd Webber-tim Rice musical

Cats opens in New York, beginning its record run of 7,485 performanc­es.

1992: Trade representa­tives from the United States, Canada and Mexico initial the proposed North American Free Trade Agreement in Texas.

1995: New York’s Central Park is transforme­d into a giant, openair cathedral as Pope John Paul II celebrates mass before a flock of 250,000.

1996: Two car bombs explode inside the British army’s heavily guarded headquarte­rs in Northern Ireland, injuring 31 people.

2000: Vojislav Kostunica takes the oath of office as Yugoslavia’s first popularly elected president, closing the turbulent era of Slobodan Milosevic.

2001: The United States and Britain launch a military attack on Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect in the Sept 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, and his Taliban backers in Afghanista­n.

2002: Israeli tanks and helicopter gunships attack targets in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip, killing 16 Palestinia­ns and injuring at least 80 others. Most of the victims are killed when an Israeli helicopter fires a missile into a crowded street.

2003: California votes in a special election to recall Democratic Governor Gray Davis from office and replace him with Arnold Schwarzene­gger, a Republican action-film star.

2007: The UN’S highest court grants Honduras sovereignt­y over four Caribbean islands in its decades-old dispute with Nicaragua, and carves up rich fishing grounds and offshore exploratio­n concession­s for oil and gas.

2008: A former US Army contractor pleads guilty to stealing nearly US$40 million worth of jet and diesel fuel from a US Army base in Iraq and selling it on the black market.

2009: Pakistan’s powerful military rejects US attempts to link billions of dollars in foreign aid to increased monitoring of its anti-terror efforts, complicati­ng American attempts to strike alqaeda and Taliban fighters on the Afghan border.

2010: The toxic red sludge that burst out of a Hungarian factory’s reservoir reaches the mighty Danube after wreaking havoc on smaller rivers and creeks, and downstream nations rush to test their waters.

2011: Revolution­ary fighters assault Moammar Gadhafi’s hometown of Sirte from all sides in what they hope will be a final, all-out offensive to crush resistance in the most important bastion of regime loyalists.

2012: President Hugo Chavez wins re-election and a new endorsemen­t of his socialist project, surviving his closest race yet after a bitter campaign in which the Opposition accused him of unfairly using Venezuela’s oil wealth and his near total control of State institutio­ns to his advantage.

2013: A string of attacks kill nine members of Egypt’s security and military forces and hit the country’s main satellite communicat­ions station in an apparent retaliatio­n by Islamic militants a day after more than 50 supporters of the ousted president were killed in clashes with the police.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS

Sir Walter Raleigh, English explorer-poet-courtier (15521618); Niels Bohr, Danish nuclear physicist and Nobel Prize winner

(1885-1962); Desmond Tutu, Anglican archbishop in South Africa, winner of the 1984

Nobel Peace Prize (1931- );

Yo-yo Ma, cellist (1955- ); Toni Braxton, US singer (1968- ); John Mellencamp, US singer (1951- ); Simon Cowell, British producer/ judge on TV’S American Idol

(1959- )

 ?? ?? Archbishop Desmond Tutu was born on this day in history.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu was born on this day in history.
 ?? ??

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