Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Snapshots of 2016

- Trump wins US vote Britain votes to leave EU Anti-migrant barriers go up Horror in Syria's Aleppo Wave of terror attacks Shift in Latin America Castro dies Science breakthrou­gh

(AFP) From Donald Trump's victory to the Brexit vote and the fall of Syria's Aleppo, here is a snapshot of 10 stories that dominated the news in 2016:

On November 8, Republican billionair­e Trump, a 70-year- old populist with no political experience, wins the US presidenti­al election against Hillary Clinton.

Elsewhere in the world, 2016 is also marked by a surge in populism. In Asia, firebrand Rodrigo Duterte wins the Philippine­s' presidency in May, while in Europe, nationalis­t and far-right parties gain ground.

On June 23, 52 percent of British voters back a divorce from the European Union. Conservati­ve prime minister David Cameron steps down, and is replaced in July by Theresa May. She promises to invoke Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, the first step in leaving the bloc, by March 31, 2017.

From February, the so- called Balkan migrant route taken by hundreds of thousands of migrants in 2015 from Greece to Germany is closed.

In March, the EU and Turkey forge a deal with Ankara to halt the flow of migrants to Europe. The accord is largely successful in reducing numbers crossing the Aegean Sea.

However the flow of migrants crossing the Mediterran­ean to Italy reaches record levels and more than 5,000 people die or go missing this year while making the perilous journey.

On December 22, rebels in Syria's Aleppo suffer their most devastatin­g defeat since the start of the civil war as a major Russianbac­ked offensive sees the regime recapture the east of the city.

While denouncing “war crimes” and criticisin­g Moscow for blocking UN Security Council efforts to obtain a ceasefire, the West proves unable to end the onslaught.

On December 29, Russian President Vladimir Putin announces a nationwide ceasefire deal and says the warring parties have agreed to sit down for peace talks, organised by Russia, Turkey and Iran.

The Syrian conflict has left more than 310,000 dead since March 2011. As it loses territory in Iraq, Syria and Libya, the Islamic State group inspires and claims responsibi­lity for deadly attacks around the world.

Several western countries are targeted, including France, where 86 people are killed in Nice. Forty-nine people die in an attack in Orlando in the United States, while 32 are killed in Brussels. In Germany, 12 people are killed in an attack on a Christmas market.

Turkey also suffers several attacks blamed on IS and Kurdish militants that leave dozens dead.

West Africa is repeatedly hit by Al- Qaeda, notably Burkina Faso and the Ivory Coast.

Meanwhile Boko Haram -- which has pledged allegiance to IS -- continues to carry out suicide bombings in Nigeria and neighbouri­ng states. Turkey: coup and purges On the night of July 15, a rogue military faction tries unsuccessf­ully to oust President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The government blames exiled Muslim preacher Fethullah Gulen for the putsch attempt and tightens its grip on power. Tens of thousands of people are arrested and many more are sacked in purges. After Argentina in 2015, Brazil in August puts an end to 13 years of leftist rule with the impeachmen­t of president Dilma Rousseff for fiddling with government books. She is replaced by Michel Temer of the centre- right.

In July, Peru elects Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, also of the centre- right.

And in Venezuela, which is going through a severe economic crisis, the opposition stages mass protests as it seeks a recall referendum on Socialist President Nicolas Maduro.

On November 25, Fidel Castro, the father of the Cuban revolution and internatio­nal communism's last great figure, dies aged 90, after seeing 11 US presidents in office.

In February, scientists say they have glimpsed the first direct evidence of gravitatio­nal waves, ripples in the fabric of spacetime that Albert Einstein predicted a century ago. Music: tears and cheers Some of the world's best-loved music icons die in 2016, including David Bowie and George Michael, Prince and Leonard Cohen. Meanwhile, songwriter Bob Dylan wins the Nobel Literature Prize.

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