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#flights from Dhaka to Cairo
airticketbd · 2 years
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Need a flight from Dhaka to Cairo? This article contains information about Dhaka-Cairo flights, ticket price, airways operating flight to Cairo, contacts, hotels in Cairo, food and a lot more. Know everything you must know if you are planning a visit to Cairo, Egypt.
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monaltravelsagency · 3 years
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Monal Travels updates you that the audio Arabian Airlines, the national carrier of the dominion of Saudi Arabia, Monday resumed its international flights through 43 international stations in 30 destinations. The resumption of flight operations began after the Ministry of Interior's decision to lift the suspension of citizens' travel outside the dominion came into effect. Saudi Arabian Airlines confirmed that it'll operate 153 scheduled flights hebdomadally from Riyadh and 178 flights from Jeddah. Furthermore, the resumption of the primary international flights departing from the dominion is going to be from Riyadh to Hyderabad, and from Jeddah to Dhaka. As for its first international flights coming to the dominion of Saudi Arabia, it'll be the Cairo flight to Riyadh and therefore the Jakarta flight to Jeddah. Saudi Airlines also confirmed its readiness to work its flights to 71 stations out of 95 stations, of which 28 are domestic and 43 international destinations. The flights to and from Jeddah are going to be operated from Terminal 1 at King Abdulaziz Airport.
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aymanmatnews · 4 years
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2546 passengers to depart via 11 flights from #Kuwait to (Cairo- Marsa Alam -Trivandrum - Ahmedabad- Dhaka- Doha) #الكويت https://www.instagram.com/p/CA3Xgx3j9CL/?igshid=j77ciqocfc7c
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bestravelzoo · 5 years
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Kuwait Airways Dhaka Sales Office
Kuwait Airways Dhaka Sales Office
Kuwait Airways Sales Office:
Travelzoo Bangladesh Ltd is the authorized sales agent of Kuwait Airways. Kuwait Airways sales office located in Shimanto square, Suite 260, 2nd Floor. If you want to have this amazing experience of Kuwait Airways, you can collect your ticket from Travelzoo Bangladesh Ltd. Travelzoo Bangladesh Ltd is one of the top travel agency in Bangladesh, They provide air tickets at cheap price compare to other travel agents.Travelzoo Bangladesh Ltd provides air tickets, hotel bookings, holiday packages and processes visa for traveling to almost any country in the world.
About Kuwait Airways:
Kuwait airline is one of the biggest airlines in the world right now, which operates 34 destinations all over the world. The main slogan of Kuwait Airways is, “Earning Your Trust”. It operates various kinds of aircraft. The call sign of Kuwait Airways is KU. Kuwait Airways is highly known for its services towards its customers, they always maintain high customer satisfaction. It was founded in 1953. They always stay careful about every slights thing about a customer. The main base of Kuwait Airways is Kuwait International Airport.
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Kuwait Airways is owned by the government of Kuwait. It’s a state-owned Airlines. Kuwait Airways purchasing new aircraft’s as per they’re growth plan .The chairperson of Kuwait Airways is Yousef A M J Alsaqer. It’s improving its service day by day. The flight’s crews of Kuwait airways well trained and they’re service is friendly. They know how to deal with all kinds of customers. Kuwait airways always offer its customers good and interesting deals.
 Call For Air Ticket:+8801618181313 / +8801678569290-99 
Destinations of Kuwait Airways:
Kuwait Airways operates on 34 destinations all over the world with great service. The airlines are planning to increase their international destination flights. They’re purchasing new aircraft’s to increase their service as per their expansion plan. As per their expansion plan, they plan to increase more route’s in Asia and Europe. .They operate many flights in Asia and Middles East, those destinations are:
1). Alexandria, 2). Al Najaf, 3). Beirut, 4). Cairo, 5). Chennai, 6). Dhaka, 7). Islamabad, 8). Kochi, 9). Istanbul, 10). Jeddah, 11). Sana’s, 12). Manila, 13). Lahore, 15). Delhi, 16). Thiruvananthapuram,  17). Jakarta, 18). Bangkok, 19). Kuala Lumpur, 20). Damman, 21). Dubai, 22). Abu Dhabi, 23). Medina, 24). Muscat, 24).Amman, & Ahmedabad They also operate flew flights on Europe also. Those destinations are i). Rome, ii).Vienna, iii). Paris CDG, iv). Geneva, v). London Heathrow, vi). Frankfurt Main, vii). Istanbul. They’re operating all these destinations successfully with high customer satisfaction.
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Classes Of Kuwait Airways:
I) Economy Class: You will get a *)pillow,*) blanket, *)breakfast/lunch/dinner, *)muffin or tea/ coffee, *)headphones,*) TV with various channels and music
II) Business Class: You will get *)pillow, *) blanket, *)breakfast/lunch/dinner,*) snacks with tea/coffee, *)TV with various channels and music,*) headphones.*) Business class passengers get free Oasis and the Dasman lounges service.
III) 1st Class : You will get *) pillow , *) blanket,*) flat-lie seats,*) ensuring privacy,*) snacks with tea/coffee,*) Magazines,*) TV with various channels and music,*) free wifi, *)breakfast/lunch/dinner,*) free access to Oasis and Dasman lounge and get service from that, headphones.
 Baggage Allowance 
Extra baggage’s will charged as per the airline’s policy. The baggage policy can get change anytime by the airline. Carrying prohibited items in aircraft will be considered as violating the law. Please follow every rule while baggage checking to stay hassle free.
Checked Baggage Allowance:
DESTINATION
CLASS
BAGGAGE ALLOWANCE
All Destinations
 Royal Class
3 (32kgs each piece)
 First Class
2 (32kgs each piece)
 Business Class
2 (32kgs each piece)
 Economy Class
2 (23kgs each piece)
Infant: 3 (32kgs each piece)1 (10kgs) not exceeding total dimensions 115 cms or 45 inches.
 Restricted and Prohibited Baggage: 
There is something which you can’t bring in a plane, those items are : 1). Real or toy weapons 2). Arms and ammunition 3). Explosives or anything containing explosives(fireworks or firecrackers) 4). Any kind of knifes 5). Metal cutlery 6). Slingshot  7). Tradesman’s tool 8). Darts 9). Scissors 10). Knitting needles 11). corkscrews 12). Laser pointer 13). Razor blades 14). Hypodermic needles and syringes (if for medical purpose, you have brought the medical certificate to confirm it)
Find Your Booking
Please ensure your tickets before 8 hours of onboard time. This will help you to stay ensure about your flight and flight time. You can check your tickets by contacting the airlines or agencies which have provided your ticket. You can also check your tickets by contacting us charge me to apply.  It is pretty much important to check and ensure your tickets before 8 hours on board time. This will help you to stay tension free about your ticket.  Check Your Booking
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Book Your Ticket Online
The online ticket system is now one of the most reliable ways to get tickets. An online ticket booking service saves you valuable time. You can book your ticket with the help of your smartphone or computer device with an app. Online ticket service is not spam. Every airline is now providing an online ticket booking system. A large amount of people is now booking tickets online. You can check anytime to see if your booking is made or not. You don’t have to stand in a long queue to get your tickets. The online ticket booking system is getting popular day by day. i. One-way or Round-trip or Multi-City. ii. From / Origin and To / Destination. iii Depart (Travel) date and Return date. iv. A number of Passengers and Class and v. Click Search Button.
 Call for Air Tickets:+8801618181313 / +8801678569290-99 
            Weekly 7 days open from 10.30 am to 8.30 pm
Kuwait Airways Sales Office Dhaka Shimanto Square Shopping Mall (2nd Floor), Suite : 260, Road: 2, Dhanmondi, Dhaka – 1205 Call: 01678569290-99 Hotline: +8801618181313 Find Us Google Click Below:
Gulshan Pink City Plot No. 15, Road No. 103 Block C, Level 7, Gulshan Avenue Dhaka-1212, Bangladesh Contact Number: +88 02 8881742 Fax: +88 02 8881558 Email: [email protected] Office Hours: Sunday-Thursday: 09:00am-17:00pm Saturday: 09:00am-14:00pm Kuwait Airways Dhaka Airport Office Address: Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport Room No. 35/36/37 3rd Floor, Terminal 01
Kuwait Airways Dhaka Airport Contact Info Station Manager: +88 02 8901778 Passenger Service: +88 02 8901182 Fax: +88 02 8901183 DAC Airport Office Function Hours: 01:30am-09:30am
Kuwait Airways Dhaka Cargo Address: Cargo Village International Airport Room No. 318
Kuwait Airways Dhaka Cargo Contact Info Telephone: +88 02 8901359 Fax: +88 02 8901361
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pari-shah-posts · 4 years
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SpiceJet: to induct its first Airbus A340 cargo aircraft in freighters fleet
With the most recent acceptance, SpiceJet will have a committed armada of nine tanker airplane comprising of five Boeing 737s, three Bombardier Q-400s, and one Airbus A340
COMPANIES NEWS: SpiceJet on Monday said it will before long draft its first Airbus A340 load airplane in quite a while vessels armada.
The enlistment of the main wide-body vessel will push the carrier to fundamentally workload trips on long stretch courses incorporating to goals in Europe, CIS and African district, SpiceJet said in a delivery.
With the most recent acceptance, SpiceJet will have a devoted armada of nine vessel airplanes comprising of five Boeing 737s, three Bombardier Q-400s, and one Airbus A340.
“The acceptance of our first wide-body freight airplane will be a gigantic distinct advantage in our excursion as the nation’s biggest payload administrator,” SpiceJet Chairman and Managing Director Ajay Singh said.
He said the aircraft very before long will be working constant load administrations over the globe to goals in Europe, Africa, and Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) nations which till a couple of months back would have been unimaginable.
“We are certain that our long stretch load flights would additionally help support Indian organizations, ranchers, pharma organizations giving them consistent access to more current markets,” Singh included.
As indicated by the delivery, SpiceJet as an air load administration supplier has worked more than 5,600 flights shipping more than 31,000 tons of freight since March 25, 2020.
On April 7, 2020, SpiceJet worked India’s first load on-seat flight conveying imperative supplies in traveler lodge and tummy space. From that point forward, the carrier has been routinely sending its B737 and Q400 traveler airplane to convey payload in the traveler lodge, it included.
SpiceJet’s global payload organize now ranges more than 41 universal goals that incorporate Almaty, Abu Dhabi, Baghdad, Bahrain, Bangkok, Cambodia, Cairo, Cebu, Colombo, Dhaka, Doha, Dubai, Guangzhou, Ho Chi Minh, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, Kuwait, Mali, Myanmar, among others.
The carrier has likewise been effectively utilizing Ras Al-Khaimah air terminal as a center point for its load tasks, according to the delivery.
READ MORE: SPICE JET
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leoustarroz-blog · 5 years
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Climate Emergency
www.joboneforhumanity.org/about_job_one_for_humanity?gcli…
2019 (MMXIX) is the current year, and is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2019th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 19th year of the 3rd millennium, the 19th year of the 21st century, and the 10th and last year of the 2010s decade.
2019 has been assigned as International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements by the United Nations General Assembly[1] given that it coincides with the 150th anniversary of its creation by Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869.
Events
January
January 1 All works published in 1923 except sound recordings (see 2022 scheduled events) enter the public domain in the United States, the first works to do so since the passage of the 1998 Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.[2] Jair Bolsonaro begins his four-year term as President of Brazil. Unmanned space probe New Horizons makes a close approach of the Kuiper belt object (KBO) 486958 Arrokoth at 05:33 UTC. Qatar withdraws from OPEC. Same-sex marriage becomes legal in Austria.[3] January 2 – Great Belt Bridge rail accident: A DSB express passenger train is hit by a semi-trailer from a passing cargo train on the western bridge of the Great Belt Fixed Link in Denmark, killing eight people and making it the deadliest rail accident in the country since 1988.[4] January 3 – Chinese probe Chang’e 4 becomes the first human-made object to land on the far side of the Moon.[5] January 5 – Bartholomew I of Constantinople issues a formal decree granting independence to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine from the Russian Orthodox Church.[6] January 6 – Muhammad V of Kelantan abdicates the federal throne as the 15th monarch of Malaysia, making him the first Malaysian monarch to do so.[7] January 7 – A faction of the Armed Forces of Gabon announces a coup d’état. Gabon’s government later declares that it has reasserted control. January 10 – Venezuela enters a constitutional crisis as Juan Guaidó and the National Assembly declare incumbent President Nicolás Maduro "illegitimate" and start the process of attempting to remove him.[8] January 15 – Nairobi DusitD2 complex attack: A terrorist attack at an upscale hotel and office complex in Nairobi, Kenya, kills 21 people (including 5 attackers) and injures 28 more.[9] January 17 – A vehicle-bound suicide bomb attack in Bogotá, Colombia, kills 22 people and injures 68 others, making it the deadliest attack on the Colombian capital since 2003.[10] January 18 – Fuel thieves rupture a pipeline in Tlahuelilpan, Mexico, and a subsequent explosion kills at least 137 people and injures dozens more.[11] January 19 – A magnitude 6.7 earthquake hits Tongoy, Coquimbo Region in Chile, causing two deaths and as many as 200,000 people left without power.[12] Despite its moderate magnitude, since it was an intraplate earthquake, it caused some serious damage in La Serena and nearby cities. January 21 – 2019 Piper PA-46 Malibu crash: An aircraft carrying new Cardiff City F.C. footballer Emiliano Sala and pilot David Ibbotson en route from Nantes, France, to Cardiff, Wales, goes missing over the English Channel. Sala’s body is recovered on February 7.[13] January 23 – 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Thousands of people protest in favor of disputed interim President Juan Guaidó. Several people are killed, and President Maduro severs diplomatic ties with the United States.[14] January 25 – A mine tailings dam breaks in the Brazilian city of Brumadinho, in the state of Minas Gerais. At least 248 people are killed, with 22 missing.[15] January 27 – Two bombs at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Jolo, Philippines, kill at least 20 people and leave more than 100 others injured.[16] January 28 – The U.S. Justice Department charges Chinese tech firm Huawei with multiple counts of fraud, raising U.S.–China tensions.[17] February[edit] February 1 – U.S. President Donald Trump confirms that the U.S. will leave the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987.[18] The next day, Russia follows suit with suspension of its obligations to the treaty.[19] February 3 – Pope Francis arrives in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, becoming the first pope to visit the Arabian Peninsula.[20] February 5 – The Taliban kills at least 47 people in attacks while Afghan–Taliban peace talks are taking place in Moscow. 12 others are injured.[21] February 6 – The Freedom House NGO states that Hungary was no longer a free country, making it the first such country in the European Union to be so.[22] February 7 – 2019 Haitian protests: Anti-government protests demanding the resignation of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse begin in several cities across the country.[23] February 12 – The Republic of Macedonia renames itself the Republic of North Macedonia, ending a decades-old dispute with Greece, paving the way for its integration into NATO and the European Union.[24] February 13 – A suicide bomb attack on a vehicle kills at least 27 Revolutionary Guards in southeastern Iran.[25] It is one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Iran in years.[26] February 14 – A suicide bomb attack on a vehicle convoy in Indian-administered Kashmir kills at least 40 Indian security personnel, making it the deadliest attack on India’s security personnel in Kashmir in three decades.[27] February 20 – A major fire in Dhaka, Bangladesh kills at least 78 people.[28] February 21 – SpaceIL launches the Beresheet probe, the world’s first privately financed mission to the Moon.[29][30] February 23 2019 Nigerian general election, for the President; all 360 seats in the House of Representatives and all 110 seats in the Senate. 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: President Maduro severs diplomatic ties with Colombia as humanitarian aid attempts to enter the country across the border.[31] February 26–27 – The Indian Air Force launches airstrikes on purported militant camps in Balakot, Pakistan; according to Indian claims, "a very large number of … terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and groups of jihadis" were killed,[32] although Pakistan denied the claims[33] and a number of neutral sources suggest that this was not the case.[34][35] The following day, Pakistan retaliated, leading to the shooting down of an Indian MiG-21 fighter, whose pilot was repatriated on March 1.[36] The incidents led to the 2019 India–Pakistan standoff. February 27 – Ramses Station rail disaster: A train smashes into a barrier inside Ramses Station in Cairo, Egypt, causing an explosion and a fire, killing 25 people and injuring 40 others.[37] February 27–28 – The 2019 North Korea–United States summit is held in Hanoi, Vietnam. It is the second summit between United States President Donald Trump and the North Korean Chairman Kim Jong-un. March[edit] March 3 An unmanned demonstration flight of the new crew capable version of the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, intended to carry American astronauts into space, achieves successful autonomous docking with the International Space Station.[38] The 2019 Estonian parliamentary election takes place, for all 101 seats in the Riigikogu.[39] March 5 – A second case of sustained remission from HIV is reported, ten years after the Berlin Patient.[40][41] March 6 – 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Venezuela expels German ambassador Daniel Kriener for his alleged meddling in internal affairs.[42] March 10 – Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 bound for Nairobi, crashes shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa killing all 157 people on board.[43] All Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are subsequently grounded worldwide.[44] March 12 – Cargo ship Grande America sinks after it caught fire on March 10 in the Bay of Biscay, approximately 200 kilometres (120 mi) west of France, causing a 2,200-tonne oil spill.[45] March 13 March 2019 North American blizzard: A winter storm completes its explosive intensification over the Southern Rocky Mountains region, which began the day before, becoming a powerful "bomb cyclone" and triggering severe blizzard conditions across much of the Southwestern and Central United States.[46][47] Australian Cardinal George Pell is sentenced to six years in prison for sexually abusing two choirboys in 1996.[48] March 15 51 people are killed and 50 others injured in terrorist attacks on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand: Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre, both of which were the target of shootings by Australia-born Brenton Harrison Tarrant. It is the deadliest mass shooting and terrorist attack in New Zealand history and described by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as "one of New Zealand’s darkest days".[49] Subsequently, Facebook announced they had disabled 1.5 million videos of the gunman’s rampage.[50] Cyclone Idai makes landfall on Mozambique, causing at least 1,073 fatalities, as well as causing mass flooding and power outages in southern Africa.[51] March 19 Nursultan Nazarbayev resigns as President of Kazakhstan after 29 years in office and appoints Kassym-Jomart Tokayev as acting president.[52] Astana is renamed Nur-Sultan the following day in his honor.[53] American Karen Uhlenbeck is the first woman to win the Abel Prize for outstanding contributions to mathematics.[54][55] March 20 Europe’s antitrust regulators fine Google 1.49 billion euros ($1.7 billion) for freezing out rivals in the online advertising business. The ruling brings to nearly $10 billion the fines imposed against Google by the European Union.[56] Disney acquires the rights to 21st Century Fox leaving out a few assets to be spun-off to the newly formed Fox Corporation.[importance?] March 21 – A major explosion at a chemical plant in Xiangshui, Jiangsu, China, kills at least 78 people and injures more than 600 others. Its powerful impact registered as an artificial earthquake.[57] March 23 The final territory of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, located in Al-Baghuz Fawqani, Syria, is liberated.[58] An estimated 400,000 people march in central London in protest against Brexit.[59][60] March 24 The 2019 Thai general election takes place, for all 500 seats in the House of Representatives. A four-page summary of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report into U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign is published by the U.S. Attorney General William Barr. It concludes that there was no collusion with Russia – the basis of the investigation – but on the issue of obstruction of justice states: "While this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him".[61] March 26 – The European Parliament votes by 348 to 278 in favour of the EU Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market, which expands legal liability for websites and includes the controversial Article 13.[62][63] March 31 – Taiwan scrambles its fighter aircraft after two Chinese jets crossed a maritime border between the two nations. Just the day before, Japan had similarly scrambled its jets when the Chinese flew between two Japanese islands, Miyako and Okinawa.[64] April[edit] April 2 – Abdelaziz Bouteflika resigns as President of Algeria amid widespread protests, after nearly two decades in office.[65] April 4 – Second Libyan Civil War: The Libyan National Army (LNA) launches a surprise offensive in western Libya, moving units towards the Government of National Accord-held capital Tripoli and capturing Gharyan. The LNA says that the operation, ordered by General Khalifa Haftar, is aimed at "cleansing the western zone from terrorist groups".[66][67] April 9 – The April 2019 Israeli legislative election takes place, for all 120 seats in the Knesset. April 10 Scientists from the Event Horizon Telescope project announce the first ever image of a black hole, located in the centre of the M87 galaxy.[68][69] Fossil fragments found in the Callao Cave in the Philippines reveal the existence of the Homo luzonensis species of humans. The species is named after the island where it was discovered, Luzon.[70] April 11 WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange is arrested after seven years in Ecuador’s embassy in London.[71][72] Amid mass protests, Omar al-Bashir is deposed as President of Sudan in a coup d’état, after nearly 30 years in office.[73] The 2019 Indian general election begins, along with elections in six states. Counting takes place on 23 May.[74] April 15 – During Holy Week, a major fire engulfs Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, resulting in the roof and main spire collapsing.[75][76] April 16 – The Howse Peak avalanche kills three noted mountaineers: Austrians Hansjörg Auer and David Lama, and Canadian Jess Roskelley.[77] April 17 The 2019 Indonesian general election takes place; for the President, 575 seats in the People’s Representative Council, and 136 seats in the Regional Representative Council. At least 28 people are killed in a bus crash on the Portuguese island of Madeira.[78] April 18 The full 448-page report on the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 United States Presidential Election (the Mueller Report) is released in redacted form.[79] NepaliSat-1 is launched. It is Nepal’s first ever research satellite to be sent into space.[80][81] April 21 A series of bomb attacks occur at eight locations in Sri Lanka, including three churches, four hotels and one housing complex in Colombo, on Easter Sunday, leaving 259 people dead and over 500 injured.[82][83][84][85] This is the first major terrorist attack in the country since the Sri Lankan Civil War ended in 2009.[86] Comedian Volodymyr Zelensky is elected President of Ukraine in a runoff election. Zelensky previously portrayed a fictional Ukrainian president in the television series Servant of the People.[87] April 25 – North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visits Russia to hold a series of summits with Russian leaders, including President Vladimir Putin.[88] April 26 – Avengers: Endgame is released in theaters, breaking many box-office records, including becoming the highest grossing movie of all time. April 28 The 2019 Spanish general election takes place, for all 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of the 266) seats in the Senate. The PSOE, under Pedro Sánchez, wins the most seats, but not an outright majority.[89] Victor Vescovo achieves the deepest dive of any human in history, as he reaches Challenger Deep within the Mariana Trench, at a depth of 10,928 m (35,853 ft).[90][91] April 29 – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the elusive leader of the Islamic State terrorist organization, appears in undated footage released by the group, his first appearance on video since 2014. In the video, he references the 2019 Sri Lanka Easter bombings, indicating it was filmed very recently.[92] April 30 Emperor Akihito of Japan abdicates from his throne, the first abdication by a Japanese monarch in almost two centuries. The abdication ends the Heisei era of Japan and ushers in the Reiwa era with new emperor Naruhito ascending the throne on 1 May.[93][94] 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Venezuelan opposition leader and disputed interim President Juan Guaidó leads an attempted uprising against President Nicolás Maduro.[95] May[edit] May 1 King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand marries his personal bodyguard Suthida Tidjai – a commoner – in a surprise ceremony, making her queen consort of Thailand.[96] Russian President Vladimir Putin signs into law a controversial "sovereign internet" bill that allows Russian authorities to better monitor internet routing and to steer Russian internet traffic away from foreign servers. Proponents of the bill say it ensures Russian internet security and decreases dependence on foreign servers while critics argue it gives new censorship powers to the government and is a part of a global trend of cyber-balkanization.[97] May 3 – The number of deaths from the Kivu Ebola outbreak exceeds 1,000. It is the second deadliest Ebola outbreak in history, only surpassed by the West African Ebola virus epidemic of 2013–2016.[98] May 3–6 – May 2019 Gaza–Israel clashes: The Gaza–Israel conflict escalates after the Israeli military launches airstrikes into Gaza killing more than 20 Palestinians including a pregnant woman and a toddler following the injury of two soldiers from Gazan sniper fire. May 4–6 – Coronation of King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand. May 5 – Aeroflot Flight 1492 crash-lands and bursts into flames at Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, killing 41 of the 78 people on board.[99] May 6 In its first report since 2005, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) warns that biodiversity loss is "accelerating", with over a million species now threatened with extinction; the decline of the natural living world is "unprecedented" and largely a result of human actions, according to the report.[100][101] Syrian Civil War: The Syrian Army launches a major ground offensive against one of the last rebel strongholds in the country.[102] May 8 – A British teenager, Isabelle Holdaway, 17, is reported to be the first patient ever to receive a genetically modified phage therapy to treat a drug-resistant infection.[103][104] May 10 – Amid ongoing negotiations, the United States’ 25 percent tariff hike on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports takes effect, escalating tensions between the two nations in the ongoing China–United States trade war.[105] May 12 – May 2019 Gulf of Oman incident: Four commercial ships, including two Saudi Aramco oil tankers, are damaged near the port of Fujairah in the Gulf of Oman.[106] The United Arab Emirates claims the incident was a "sabotage attack", while an early United States assessment reportedly blames Iran for the attack. The incident occurs during a time of regional tensions between the U.S. and Iran, with the U.S. just weeks prior deploying strategic bombers, a carrier strike group and other military assets to the Persian Gulf following intelligence reports of an alleged plot by Iran to attack U.S. forces in the region.[107] May 13 The 2019 Philippine general election takes place, for all 297 seats in the House of Representatives and 12 seats in the Senate. Prosecutors in Sweden reopen the rape allegation investigation against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Swedish prosecutors mention their intent to seek extradition of Assange from the United Kingdom after he has served his 50-week prison sentence for skipping bail.[108] May 14–18 – The Eurovision Song Contest 2019 takes place in Tel Aviv, Israel, and is won by Dutch entrant Duncan Laurence with the song "Arcade". May 17 Taiwan’s parliament becomes the first in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage.[109] Ibiza affair: A corruption scandal involving the Vice-Chancellor of Austria Heinz-Christian Strache and deputy leader of the Freedom Party Johann Gudenus offering to fix state contracts with a woman posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch at a 2017 meeting in Spain leads to the collapse of the coalition government and calls for snap elections.[110] May 18 – 2019 Australian federal election: Scott Morrison’s Liberal/National Coalition Government is narrowly re-elected,[111] defeating the Labor Party led by Bill Shorten. May 19 Eleven people are killed in a shooting at a bar in Belém, Brazil.[112] China–United States trade war: Google pulls Android update support for Huawei phones, as well as the Google Play Store and Gmail apps, after the Chinese technology company was blacklisted by the United States.[113] May 20 – The redefinition of the SI system of measurement adopted by the majority of countries in the world takes effect.[114] May 23–26 – The 2019 European Parliament election takes place. The election has a 51 percent voter turnout, the highest since the first direct elections in 1979. May 23 2019 Indian general election: Narendra Modi secures a landslide win, with his party BJP alone gaining 303 of the 543 seats in parliament, and his political alliance winning 353 seats of the 543.[115][116][117] Botswana lifts its five-year prohibition on elephant hunting.[118] May 24 British Prime Minister Theresa May announces her resignation as Conservative leader, effective June 7, 2019. A prison riot in Acarigua, Venezuela, leaves 29 prisoners dead and 19 guards injured.[119] May 26–27 – Amazonas prison massacres: More than 50 prisoners are killed in a series of riots at four different prisons in Amazonas, Brazil.[120] May 27 – U.S. President Donald Trump, during an official state visit to Japan, is the first foreign leader to meet with Japanese emperor Naruhito.[121] May 29 Former European Court of Justice judge Egils Levits is elected the 10th President of Latvia. Sinking of Hableány: The Hableány, a sightseeing river cruise ship on the Danube in Budapest, Hungary, collides with another vessel and sinks with two Hungarian crew members and 33 South Korean tourists on board. At least 25 people have been found dead and 3 others remain missing.[122] Less than two months after the April 9 Israeli legislative elections, the Israeli Knesset dissolves itself and votes to hold new elections in September 17, after Benjamin Netanyahu failed to assemble a coalition government within the allotted time.[123] May 30 – July 14 – The 2019 Cricket World Cup is held in England and Wales, and is won by England. May 30 – South Korean newspaper The Chosun Ilbo reports that North Korea executed nuclear envoy Kim Hyok-chol and four other diplomats in March after the failed February Hanoi summit with the United States. The newspaper also reports that Kim Yong-chol, a top aide to Kim Jong-un, was sentenced to hard labor during the purge.[124] June[edit] June 2 Nearly five years after abdication, King Juan Carlos I of Spain retires from public life.[125] 2019 San Marino referendum: Sammarinese voters vote to end discrimination based on sexual orientation and initiate a popular legislative initiative for the reform of the electoral system.[126] June 3 – Khartoum massacre: More than 100 people are killed when Sudanese troops and Janjaweed militiamen storm and open fire on a protest camp outside of a military headquarters in Khartoum, Sudan.[127] June 3–5 – U.S. President Donald Trump makes a state visit to the United Kingdom, meeting with Queen Elizabeth II and outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May. It is the first official state visit to the U.K. by a sitting U.S. president since 2011. Trump also attends D-Day commemorative ceremonies.[128] June 5–8 – Chinese President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to Russia, where he also attends the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.[129] June 5 – The 2019 Danish general election takes place, for all 179 seats in the Folketing. June 6 2018–19 Sudanese protests: The African Union suspends Sudan’s membership "with immediate effect" after the Khartoum massacre.[130] Following results from the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election, a new government is formed consisting of 58 percent women.[131] June 7 – British Prime Minister Theresa May resigns as leader of the Conservative Party. June 7 – July 7 – The 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup is held in France and is won by the United States. June 9 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Over 1 million people in Hong Kong protest against proposed legislation regarding extradition to China. It is the largest protest in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover.[132] A large explosive eruption of Mount Sinabung in Indonesia sends a 7,000-meter ash column, generating a pyroclastic flow 3–3.5 kilometers long towards the south and southeast of the mountain.[133][134] June 11 – Botswana decriminalizes homosexuality.[135] June 12 The Supreme Court of Ecuador rules in favor of same-sex marriage, making it legal throughout the country.[136] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: The Hong Kong government and police controversially declare that the protest has "turned into a riot".[137][138][139] June 13 – June 2019 Gulf of Oman incident: Two oil tankers are attacked near the Strait of Hormuz while transiting the Gulf of Oman amid heightened tension between Iran and the United States, with the latter blaming the former for the incident.[140] June 14 – Jane Goodall, British primatologist, is awarded the 2019 Luxembourg Prize for Outstanding Environmental Peace.[141][importance?][unreliable source?] June 15 – 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong announces it will indefinitely suspend the controversial extradition bill, but protests continue, this time calling for the total withdrawal of the bill and the resignation of Chief Executive Carrie Lam.[142] June 16 – A large-scale power outage hits Argentina, Uruguay and parts of Paraguay, affecting nearly 50 million people.[143] June 17 – A triple suicide blast kills 30 and injures 40 in Borno, Nigeria, at a hall where people were watching a football match. June 18 – The U.S. sends an additional 1,000 troops to the Middle East as tensions build with Iran.[144] June 19 – Four men are charged with murdering the 298 passengers and crew of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, the airliner shot down while flying over Ukraine in July 2014.[145] June 20–21 – Chinese President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to North Korea. It is his first visit to the country as president and the first visit to North Korea by a Chinese leader since Hu Jintao’s visit 14 years prior.[146] June 20 – June 2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone: Iran shoots down a United States RQ-4 Global Hawk surveillance drone over the Strait of Hormuz after claiming it violated their airspace. The U.S. claims it was shot down in international airspace in an "unprovoked attack".[147] June 22 – 2019 Amhara Region coup d’état attempt: In the Amhara Region of Ethiopia, regional president Ambachew Mekonnen and national-military chief of staff Se’are Mekonnen are assassinated.[148] June 27 – Angara Airlines Flight 200 overruns the runway during landing and collides with a building, killing the captain and flight engineer, and injuring a further 22 people. Only 45 people survive the crash at Nizhneangarsk Airport, Russia.[149] June 30 – During a trilateral gathering at the Panmunjom Truce Village between South Korean President Moon Jae-in, North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un and United States President Donald Trump, Trump becomes the first sitting U.S. president to cross the Korean Demilitarized Zone and enter North Korea. Trump and Kim also agree to restart stalled denuclearization negotiations.[150] July[edit] July – The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reports, on August 15, that July 2019 was the hottest month on record globally, at 0.95 °C (1.71 °F) above the 20th-century average.[151][152][153] July 1 Japan resumes commercial whaling after a 30-year moratorium, following its withdrawal from the International Whaling Commission.[154][155] Japan announces tightening high-tech exports to South Korea, thus begin the trade dispute between the two countries.[156] The International Atomic Energy Agency confirms that Iran has breached the limit on its stockpile of enriched uranium.[157] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: During the annual July 1 protests that mark the anniversary of the British handover of the city to China, a group of a few hundred protesters stormed the Hong Kong legislature, defacing various portraits and destroying furniture before being dispersed by police using tear gas.[158] A fire on the Russian deep-diving submarine Losharik kills 14 crew members. Submarine commander Denis Dolonsky was among those killed.[159] July 2 – A total solar eclipse occurs over South America. It is the 58th solar eclipse from Saros cycle 127.[160][161] July 3 – 2019 Tajoura migrant center airstrike: An airstrike by Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army hits the Tajoura Detention Center outside Tripoli, Libya, while hundreds of people are inside the facility, killing at least 53 of them and injures 130 others.[162] July 7 – The 2019 Greek legislative election takes place. Leader of the Opposition Kyriakos Mitsotakis, from New Democracy, wins the election and is sworn in Prime Minister as left-wing incumbent Alexis Tsipras falls to second place.[163] July 10 – The last Volkswagen Beetle rolls off the line in Puebla, Mexico. The last of 5,961 "Special Edition" cars will be exhibited in a museum.[164] July 12 – Asasey Hotel attack: A car bomb and a gun attack kill at least 26 people, including two prominent journalists and nine foreigners, in Kismayo, Somalia. Islamist group al-Shabaab claims responsibility.[165] July 13 – Hurricane Barry strikes the Gulf Coast, killing one and causing over $500 million (2019 USD) in damages. July 16 – The European Parliament elects Ursula von der Leyen as the new President of the European Commission. Succeeding Jean-Claude Juncker, she will be sworn in on December 1, 2019. She is the first female to be elected to this office in EU history.[166][167] July 17 Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, former head of the Sinaloa Cartel, which became the biggest supplier of drugs to the U.S., is sentenced to life in prison plus 30 years.[168] The World Health Organization (WHO) declares the Kivu Ebola epidemic to be a public health emergency of international concern.[169] July 18 – At least 35 people are killed and more than 30 others injured after an arson attack at an animation company in Kyoto, Japan.[170] It is one of the deadliest massacres in the country’s history since the end of World War II and the deadliest building fire in the country in 18 years, since the Myojo 56 building fire in 2001.[171] July 19 – The Iranian Navy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps captures British tanker Stena Impero and temporarily seizes British-operated and Liberian-flagged tanker Mesdar in the Persian Gulf. The British Foreign Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, warns there will be "serious consequences" if Iran does not release the tanker.[172][173][174] July 24 – Boris Johnson becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom after defeating Jeremy Hunt in a leadership contest, succeeding Theresa May.[175] July 26 – August 11 – The 2019 Pan American Games are held in Lima, Peru. July 30 – India bans triple talaq.[176] August[edit] August 1 – Danish polar research institution Polar Portal reports a large spike in Greenland ice loss, with 11 billion tons melted in one day and 197 gigatonnes during the month of July.[177] August 2 The United States officially withdraws from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty established with Russia in 1987.[178] 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute: Japan announces the removal of South Korea from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on August 28.[179] August 3 – A mass shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, United States, leaves 22 people dead and 24 others injured.[180] August 4 2019 Cairo bombing: A car crashes into three other cars causing an explosion outside the National Cancer Institute Egypt in Cairo, Egypt, killing at least 20 people and injuring 47 others.[181] 2019 Dayton shooting: Ten people, including the perpetrator, are killed and 27 others injured in a mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio, United States, just 13 hours after the mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.[182] August 5 Revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir: India revokes the part of its constitution that gives Indian-administered Kashmir special status in an unprecedented move.[183][184] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Amid ongoing protests, Hong Kong is hit by the first general strikes of their kind since 1967.[185] August 7 – The Singapore Convention on Mediation, also known as the UN Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation, comes into effect with 46 countries ratifying it. States that have ratified the treaty will have to ensure that international commercial settlement agreements are enforced by their courts.[186] August 8 – Nyonoksa radiation accident: Reports indicate that there may have been a nuclear explosion at the Nyonoksa weapons-testing site in Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia. At least five people were killed and three others injured in the blast, with radiation levels in Severodvinsk, 29 miles (47 km) away from the site, being 20 times above normal levels temporarily.[187] August 10 Morogoro tanker explosion: A fuel tanker truck explodes in Morogoro, Tanzania, killing at least 89 people and injuring dozens more.[188][189] 32 are killed and 1,000,000 evacuated as Typhoon Lekima makes landfall in Zhejiang, China. Earlier it had caused flooding in the Philippines.[190] August 10–25 – 2019 Canary Islands wildfires: A number of forest fires break out in the Canary Islands of Gran Canaria, Tenerife and Lanzarote. The fires on the island of Gran Canaria were the most severe, resulting in the loss of large areas of the island’s forests and leading to the evacuation of thousands of residents from a number of towns and villages.[191][192] August 11 – 2019 Indian floods: At least 114 people, including 57 in Kerala, 30 in Karnataka and 27 in Maharashtra, are reported to have died in monsoon-related floods in India. At least 227 died across India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Pakistan.[193] August 12 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong International Airport is closed due to protests.[194] 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute: South Korea announces the removal of Japan from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on September 18.[195][196][197] The Trump administration announces it will delay its proposal for 10 percent tariffs slated to take effect from September 1 on certain consumer goods from China while exempting other products — less than two weeks after Trump announced the new proposed tariffs.[198] August 13 – The main yield curve for U.S. Treasury bonds inverts, as the yield rate for 2-year bonds rises higher than the yield rate for 10-year bonds.[199] August 14 – The Dow Jones plunges more than 500 points, due to concerns over the yield curve inversion.[200][201][202] August 15 – The European Central Bank shuts down PNB Banka after ruling it had become insolvent; this bank, previously called Norvik Banka, was Latvia’s sixth-largest lender, and was a critic of the Baltic country’s financial authorities.[203] August 18 – 100 activists, officials, and other concerned citizens in Iceland hold a funeral for Okjökull glacier, which has completely melted after once covering six square miles (15.5 km2).[204] August 19 – 2019 Papua protests erupt, mainly across Indonesian Papua, in response to an incident in Surabaya where a group of Papuan students were arrested for alleged disrespect of the Indonesian flag. In Jayapura, Sorong, Fakfak, Timika and Manokwari, protests turned violent, with various private buildings and public facilities being damaged or burned. The protests and unrest were described by Reuters as "the most serious civil unrest in years over perceived racial and ethnic discrimination."[205] August 21 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires: Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE) reports fires burning in the Amazon rainforest at a record rate, with more than 36,000 in the year to date, while smoke reaches São Paulo more than 1,700 miles (2,700 km) away.[206] Giuseppe Conte offers his resignation as Prime Minister of Italy in order to avoid a no-confidence motion.[207] August 23 – German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron describe the widespread Amazon fires as an international emergency, urging the matter to be discussed at the weekend’s G7 summit.[208][209] August 25 – 2019 Beirut drone crash: According to Lebanese officials, two Israeli drones attack Beirut, Lebanon. One crashed into the roof of the Hezbollah Media Center, about 45 minutes before the second exploded in the air and damaged the building.[210] It was the first such incident between Israel and Lebanon since the 2006 Lebanon War.[211] September[edit] September 1 – Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on The Bahamas, with sustained wind speeds of 185 mph.[212] 43 deaths are reported.[213] September 2 Sinking of MV Conception: 34 people are killed following a fire and subsequent sinking of a dive boat near Santa Cruz Island, California, United States.[214] It is the worst maritime disaster in California in more than 150 years.[215] An Iranian woman named Sahar Khodayari sets herself on fire after being arrested for attending a soccer game in Iran. She dies a week later.[216] September 4 – 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announces the official withdrawal of the controversial Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2019, and setting up of an independent study to probe social and economic inequality within the territory.[217] September 6 – Chandrayaan-2, India’s second lunar probe, was successful to put the orbit in lunar orbit, but the lander Vikram crashes into the surface of the moon.[218] September 7 Afghan peace process: U.S. President Donald Trump announces he "called off" planned peace talks with the Taliban at Camp David after they claimed responsibility for the September 2 and 5 bombings in Kabul which killed a U.S. soldier, among others.[219] Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov and 66 others are released in a prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia.[220] September 10 – The Parliament of the United Kingdom is prorogued amid unprecedented protests from opposition MPs, who hold up signs in the House of Commons and refuse to back the shutdown.[221] September 11 – Astronomers announce the detection of water in the atmosphere of exoplanet K2-18b, the first such discovery for an exoplanet in the habitable zone around a star.[222] September 14 – 2019 Abqaiq–Khurais attack: Two Saudi Aramco oil refineries in Abqaiq and Khurais, Saudi Arabia, are attacked by drones, resulting in fires. Houthi militants claim responsibility, saying that they used ten drones for the attack. Aramco’s oil exports and production are disrupted by five million barrels a day, close to half of the entire Saudi Arabian oil exports.[223] September 16 – A gas explosion in Koltsovo, Novosibirsk Oblast, Russia sets off a fire in a bioweapons plant that houses viruses including smallpox, ebola and anthrax.[224] September 17 – Israel holds legislative elections for the second time in 2019, after the 21st Knesset voted to dissolve itself due to Benjamin Netanyahu’s failure to cobble a parliamentary coalition. September 19 – 30 Afghan nut farmers are killed and 40 injured in a U.S. drone attack in Nangarhar Province.[225] September 20 – An international strike and protest led by young people and adults is held three days before the latest UN Climate Summit, to demand action be taken to address the climate crisis. The event is one of the largest climate mobilizations in history.[226][227] September 20 – November 2 – The 2019 Rugby Union World Cup is held in Japan; the South Africa Springboks defeat the England national rugby union team 32–12.[228] September 21 – U.S. President Donald Trump approves deployment of several hundred troops and military equipment to Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates following the September 14 attack on Saudi oil refineries.[229][230] Both Saudi Arabia and Iran vow to defend themselves.[231] September 22 – Nearly three weeks after Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on The Bahamas, the official death toll stands at 52 and 1,300 are reported missing. Rescuers report the widespread stench of rotting bodies in the rubble.[232] September 23 One of the largest and oldest travel firms, Thomas Cook, goes bankrupt as last-minute rescue negotiations fail, stranding 600,000 tourists worldwide.[233] Russia formally adopts the Paris climate agreement.[234] September 24 The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom unanimously rules that the September 2019 prorogation of Parliament was unlawful and void.[235] The Supreme Court of Spain unanimously rules in favour of the exhumation of the remains of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco from the Valle de los Caídos.[236] He was finally exhumed on 24 October, being re-inhumed in a private crypt with his wife.[237] U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi announces the start of a formal impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump.[238] September 27 – 500,000 people march in a climate change protest led by activist Greta Thunberg and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Montreal, Canada.[239] 4,000,000 go on strike around the world.[240] September 28 The 2019 Afghan presidential election takes place. Hurricane Lorenzo becomes the furthest northeast Category 5 hurricane on record.[241] September 30 – The Republic of Ireland promises to plant 440 million trees in twenty years to combat climate change.[242] October[edit] October 1 2019 Hong Kong protests: A protester is shot in the chest with a live round of ammunition and critically injured.[243][244] The Nanfang’ao Bridge, the only steel single-arch bridge in Taiwan, collapses, killing six people and injuring more than twenty others.[245] October 2 – 25 soldiers are killed and 60 missing following attacks on two army camps in Boulkessi and Mondoro, Mali.[246] October 3 Paris police headquarters stabbing: A man stabs five officers at the central police headquarters in Paris, France, killing four of them. The attacker, shot dead by other officers, was an administrative intelligence employee at the station.[247] The European Court of Justice rules that Facebook must take down a post about Austrian politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek. The post originated in Ireland and the court ruled that the post defamed and insulted the politician and must be removed all over the world.[248] European Commission spokesperson Daniel Rosario threatens retaliatory measures if the United States imposes a US$7.5-billion (approximately €6.8-billion) tariff on products such as olives, whiskey, wine, cheese, yogurt, and airplanes. The tariffs are scheduled to take place on October 18.[249] October 4 – 2019 Hong Kong protests: Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam and the Chief Executive in Council invokes the Emergency Regulations Ordinance and banning the face mask in public gatherings with immediate effect.[250] October 5 – 2019 Iraqi protests: 91 people are killed by police during a week of demonstrations in Iraq.[251][importance?] October 6 – The 2019 Portuguese legislative election takes place, for all 230 seats to the Assembly of the Republic. October 8 2019 Ecuadorian protests: The Government of Ecuador, headed by President Lenín Moreno, moves to Guayaquil as the Carondelet Palace in Quito is overtaken by protesters and chaos persists in the capital.[252] About 200 Extinction Rebellion activists block the gates of Leinster House (parliament) in the Republic of Ireland.[253] October 9 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria: President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey announces a military invasion of north-eastern Syria, targeting the SDF and other Kurdish militias.[254] The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and the U.N. Human Rights Office issue a report that says that U.S. bombings in Nimroz and Farah Province, Afghanistan, that killed 39 civilians are unlawful. The U.S. said the attacks were against drug labs that fund the Taliban.[255] October 12 – Typhoon Hagibis makes landfall in Japan, the biggest storm to hit the region in decades, with over seven million people urged to evacuate.[256] October 13 – The 2019 Polish parliamentary election takes place, for all 460 seats in the Sejm and all 100 seats in the Senate. October 14 Trial of Catalonia independence leaders: The Supreme Court of Spain sentences nine Catalan independence movement leaders to 9 to 13 years of prison for sedition and misuse of public funds. Three others are disqualified for 1 year and 8 months for disobedience. Violent protests erupt across Catalonia.[257][unreliable source?][258] A New York Times investigation reveals that Russian planes have bombed at least 50 hospitals and clinics in opposition-held Idlib, Syria.[259][unreliable source?] October 17 – Shootouts erupt in Culiacán, Mexico, after the arrest of El Chapo’s son, Ovidio Guzmán López, on an arrest warrant for drug dealing in the United States.[260] Eight people are killed and 56 convicts escape from prison; 7 are recaptured by October 18. Guzmán López is released in an effort to restore peace and to prevent more bloodshed.[261] October 19 – An estimated one million people march through London in a protest organised by People’s Vote, to demand a second referendum on Brexit.[262] October 20 – 2019 Bolivian general election: Evo Morales defeated his nearest rival by 10%, but after multiple allegations of irregularities the Organization of American States said it had found "clear manipulations" of Bolivia’s voting system; Morales called for a new election.[263] October 21 – The 2019 Canadian federal election takes place, for all 338 seats in the House of Commons of Canada. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party win a narrow victory to form a minority government. October 23 The bodies of 39 people are found in a truck container in Essex, England. A 25-year-old man from Northern Ireland is arrested on suspicion of murder.[264] Google announces that its 53-qubit "Sycamore" processor has achieved quantum supremacy.[265][266][267][268] IBM disputes the claim.[269] October 25 – Tourists visit the summit of Uluru (also known as Ayers Rock) for the last time, as a ban on climbing the famous rock in Australia’s Northern Territory comes into effect.[270] October 26 – The Amazon Catholic bishops synod proposes that married men be ordained as priests, which would reverse the Church’s centuries-old discipline of celibacy.[271] October 27 U.S. President Donald Trump announces that the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was killed in a U.S. special forces operation. It was reported that al-Baghdadi detonated a suicide vest after being chased into a tunnel.[272][273] The 2019 Argentine general election takes place. Peronist candidate Alberto Fernández is elected President getting 48% of the vote, defeating President Mauricio Macri. Former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is elected Vice President. The 2019 Uruguayan general election takes place. October 30 Social media website Twitter bans all political advertising worldwide.[274] An earthquake of 6.6. Mw[importance?] rocks the Philippine island of Mindanao two days after an earthquake killed eight and left 12,000 people homeless.[275][unreliable source?] October 31 A fire destroys much of the 500-year-old Japanese Shuri Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[276] A train catches fire near Rahim Yar Khan in Pakistan. The blaze, sparked by gas used by passengers cooking on board, kills at least 74 people.[277] Heavy rain and flooding leave 3 dead and 200,000 people are homeless in Beledweyne, Somalia. Meanwhile, 29 are dead and 29,000 homeless due to flooding in nearby Kenya.[278] November[edit] November 2 – Pirates take nine crew members from Norwegian ship MV Bonita, owned by J. J. Ugland, near Cotonou, Benin.[279] November 3 – The Archdiocese of Russian Orthodox churches in Western Europe officially reunited with the Russian Orthodox Church. November 4 LeBarón family massacre: Nine Americans are killed when Mexican gang members open fire on their vehicles while driving to a wedding about 70 miles (110 km) south of the Mexico–United States border.[280] Amnesty International alleges that Bangladesh killed 466 people in 2018 under the guise of an anti-drugs campaign in what appears to be a wave of extrajudicial executions.[281] The United States formally begins process to pull out of the Paris Agreement on climate change.[282] November 5 11,000 scientists from around the world publish a study in the journal BioScience, warning "clearly and unequivocally that planet Earth is facing a climate emergency".[283][284][285] Air pollution in parts of India hits record levels.[286] November 6 – 2019 Fada N’gourma attack: At least 37 people are killed and 60 others injured when gunmen attack a Canadian gold mining company convoy on a road in Burkina Faso.[287] November 7 – Former Congolese rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda is sentenced to 30 years in prison for war crimes and crimes against humanity, the longest sentence ever handed down by the International Criminal Court.[288] November 9 The Supreme Court of India awards a holy site in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh to Hindus, rejecting a Muslim claim. The move is likely to spur sectarian disputes.[289][importance?] Cyclone Bulbul kills seven in West Bengal, India and seven in Bangladesh. 2,000,000 people are evacuated.[290] November 10 The November 2019 Spanish general election takes place, for all 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of the 266) seats in the Senate. 2019 Bolivian protests: President Evo Morales resigns after calling for a re-vote in the disputed elections. November 11 – A transit of Mercury occurs. November 13 Public impeachment hearings against U.S. President Donald Trump begin in the House of Representatives.[291][292] The Chinese University of Hong Kong officially announces a premature end to the semester as a result of large-scale protests and civil unrest. Besides CUHK, several Hong Kong universities switch to online learning and suspend on-campus class. The Education Bureau in Hong Kong officially announces to close all schools in Hong Kong due to the ongoing protests.[293][294] November 14 – Italy declares a state of emergency in Venice following record flooding.[295] November 17 – 2019 Hong Kong protests: Police use tear gas and water cannons against protesters who try to break through cordons and reach Polytechnic University, which is at the center of a week-long standoff between demonstrators and law enforcement. Protesters fight back with Molotov cocktails, arrows, and bricks.[296] November 19 – Google enters the video game market with the launch of Google Stadia. Predicted and scheduled[edit] November 23 – 2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum. November 30 – December 11 – The 2019 Southeast Asian Games are scheduled to be held in the Philippines. December 2–13 – The 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference is scheduled to take place in Madrid, Spain, after Chilean President Sebastián Piñera announced his country could not do so due to political unrest in the country.[297] December 12 – 2019 United Kingdom general election, for all 650 seats in the House of Commons. December 17 – The CHEOPS space telescope, whose mission is to study the formation of extrasolar planets, is expected to be launched.[298] December 26 – An annular solar eclipse will be visible from South Asia. The eclipse will be a part of Saros 132.[299] Date unknown[edit] The European Spallation Source is expected to go into operation in Lund, Sweden.[300] SpaceX expects to perform suborbital hop tests of their Starship prototype. Births[edit] May 6 – Archie Mountbatten-Windsor, first child of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and seventh in the line of succession to the British throne[301] Deaths[edit] Deaths January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November Further information: Category:2019 deaths January[edit] Main article: Deaths in January 2019
Pegi Young
Bob Einstein
Michael Atiyah
Carol Channing
Henry Sy
Tibor Baranski January 1 Ivan Dimitrov, Bulgarian footballer (b. 1935)[302] Pegi Young, American singer-songwriter, educator, and philanthropist (b. 1952)[303][importance?] January 2 Paulien van Deutekom, Dutch world champion speed skater (b. 1981)[304] Daryl Dragon, American musician (b. 1942)[305] Bob Einstein, American actor and comedian (b. 1942)[306] Gene Okerlund, American wrestling announcer (b. 1942)[307] January 3 – Herb Kelleher, American businessman (b. 1931)[308] January 5 Bernice Sandler, American women’s rights activist (b. 1928)[309] Dragoslav Šekularac, Serbian footballer and manager (b. 1937)[310] January 6 – José Ramón Fernández, Cuban revolution leader (b. 1923)[311] January 7 – Moshe Arens, Lithuanian-born Israeli aeronautical engineer, diplomat, and politician (b. 1925)[312] January 9 – Verna Bloom, American actress (b. 1938)[313] January 10 – Theo Adam, German opera singer (b. 1926)[314] January 11 Michael Atiyah, British-Lebanese mathematician and academic (b. 1929)[315] Fernando Luján, Mexican actor (b. 1939)[316] January 12 Bonnie Guitar, American country singer-songwriter (b. 1923)[317] Jaime Rosenthal, Honduran politician (b. 1936)[318] January 13 – Phil Masinga, South African footballer (b. 1969)[319] January 14 – Paweł Adamowicz, Polish politician (b. 1965)[320] January 15 – Carol Channing, American actress (b. 1921)[321] January 17 Babiker Awadalla, 8th Prime Minister of Sudan (b. 1917)[322] Windsor Davies, Welsh actor (b. 1930)[323] Mary Oliver, American poet (b. 1935)[324] January 19 Nathan Glazer, American sociologist (b. 1923)[325] Henry Sy, Chinese-Filipino business magnate (b. 1924)[326] January 20 Tibor Baranski, Hungarian-American educator (b. 1922)[327] Andrew G. Vajna, Hungarian-American film producer (b. 1944)[328] January 21 Kaye Ballard, American actress (b. 1925)[329] Henri, Count of Paris, Head of the House of Orléans (b. 1933)[330] Emiliano Sala, Argentine footballer (b. 1990)[331] January 23 Jonas Mekas, Lithuanian-born American filmmaker, poet, and artist (b. 1922)[332] Oliver Mtukudzi, Zimbabwean musician, businessman, and philanthropist (b. 1952)[333] January 24 Fernando Sebastián Aguilar, Spanish cardinal (b. 1929)[334] Rosemary Bryant Mariner, American naval aviator (b. 1953)[335] January 25 Florence Knoll, American architect and furniture designer (b. 1917)[336] Dušan Makavejev, Serbian film director (b. 1932)[337] Krishna Sobti, Indian Hindi-language fiction writer and essayist (b. 1925)[338] January 26 Jean Guillou, French composer, organist, and pianist (b. 1930)[339] Michel Legrand, French composer (b. 1932)[340] January 27 – Yvonne Clark, American engineer (b. 1929)[341] January 28 Humberto Akʼabal, Guatemalan K’iche’ Maya poet (b. 1952)[342] Susan Hiller, American artist (b. 1940)[343] January 29 – James Ingram, American R&B musician (b. 1952)[344] January 30 – Dick Miller, American actor (b. 1928)[345] February[edit] Main article: Deaths in February 2019
Julie Adams
Albert Finney
Bruno Ganz
Karl Lagerfeld
Peter Tork
André Previn February 2 – Carol Emshwiller, American author (b. 1921)[346] February 3 Julie Adams, American actress (b. 1926)[347] Detsl, Russian musician (b. 1983)[348] Kristoff St. John, American actor (b. 1966)[349] February 4 Matti Nykänen, Finnish Olympic-winning ski jumper and singer (b. 1963)[350] Leonie Ossowski, German writer (b. 1925)[351] Izzy Young, American-Swedish folklorist and author (b. 1928)[352] February 6 Manfred Eigen, German Nobel Prize winning biophysical chemist (b. 1927)[353] Rosamunde Pilcher, British author (b. 1924)[354] February 7 Albert Finney, English actor (b. 1936)[355] Jan Olszewski, 3rd Prime Minister of Poland (b. 1930)[356] Frank Robinson, American baseball player, coach, and manager (b. 1935)[357] February 8 – Walter Munk, Austrian-American oceanographer (b. 1917)[358] February 9 Shelley Lubben, American author, activist, singer, and pornographic actress (b. 1968)[359] Maximilian Reinelt, German rower and doctor (b. 1988)[360] Tomi Ungerer, French illustrator (b. 1931)[361] Patricia Nell Warren, American novelist, poet, and journalist (b. 1936)[362] February 10 Carmen Argenziano, American actor (b. 1943)[363] Jan-Michael Vincent, American actor (b. 1945)[364] February 11 – Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, Afghani politician (b. 1925)[365] February 12 Betty Ballantine, British-born American book publisher (b. 1919)[366] Gordon Banks, English footballer (b. 1937)[367] Pedro Morales, Puerto Rican professional wrestler (b. 1942)[368] February 13 – Idriz Ajeti, Kosovar Albanologist (b. 1917) February 14 – Andrea Levy, English novelist (b. 1956) February 15 – Lee Radziwill, American socialite (b. 1933) February 16 Bruno Ganz, Swiss actor (b. 1941)[369] Li Rui, Chinese politician, historian and dissident (b. 1917)[370] February 17 – Šaban Šaulić, Serbian folk singer (b. 1951) February 18 Wallace Smith Broecker, American geophysicist (b. 1931)[371] Alessandro Mendini, Italian architect and designer (b. 1931)[372] Bob Van Der Veken, Belgian actor (b. 1928)[373] Peter Wells, New Zealand writer and filmmaker (b. 1950)[374] February 19 – Karl Lagerfeld, German fashion designer (b. 1933)[375] February 20 – Dominick Argento, American composer (b. 1927)[376] February 21 Stanley Donen, American film director (b. 1924)[377] Peter Tork, American musician and actor (b. 1942)[378] Hilde Zadek, German operatic soprano (b. 1917)[379] February 22 Brody Stevens, American comedian and actor (b. 1970)[380] Morgan Woodward, American actor (b. 1925)[381] February 23 – Katherine Helmond, American actress (b. 1929)[382] February 24 Antoine Gizenga, 21st Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (b. 1925)[383] Donald Keene, American-born Japanese scholar, historian, and writer (b. 1922)[384] February 25 – Waldo Machado, Brazilian footballer (b. 1934)[385] February 26 – Christian Bach, Argentine-Mexican actress and producer (b. 1959)[386] February 27 – France-Albert René, Seychellois politician, 2nd President of Seychelles (b. 1935)[387] February 28 – André Previn, German-American pianist, conductor and composer (b. 1929)[388] March[edit] Main article: Deaths in March 2019
Zhores Alferov
Keith Flint
Luke Perry
Vladimir Etush
Dick Dale
Scott Walker
Agnès Varda March 1 Zhores Alferov, Soviet and Russian Nobel physicist (b. 1930)[389] Kumar Bhattacharyya, British-Indian engineer, educator, and government advisor (b. 1940)[390] Eusebio Pedroza, Panamanian boxer (b. 1956)[391] Kevin Roche, Irish-born American architect (b. 1922)[392] March 2 Yannis Behrakis, Greek photojournalist (b. 1960)[393] Med Hondo, Mauritanian film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor (b. 1936)[394] March 4 King Kong Bundy, American professional wrestler (b. 1957)[395] Juan Corona, Mexican serial killer (b. 1934)[396] Keith Flint, English musician, singer, and dancer (b. 1969)[397] Klaus Kinkel, German politician (b. 1936)[398] Ted Lindsay, Canadian professional ice hockey player (b. 1925)[399] Luke Perry, American actor (b. 1966)[400] March 5 – Jacques Loussier, French pianist and composer (b. 1934)[401] March 6 José Pedro Pérez-Llorca, Spanish politician and diplomat (b. 1940)[402] Carolee Schneemann, American visual artist (b. 1939)[403] March 7 – Guillaume Faye, French journalist and writer (b. 1949)[404] March 8 – Michael Gielen, Austrian conductor and composer (b. 1927)[405] March 9 Bernard Binlin Dadié, Ivorian novelist and playwright (b. 1916)[406] Vladimir Etush, Soviet and Russian actor (b. 1922)[407] March 10 İrsen Küçük, 6th Prime Minister of Northern Cyprus (b. 1940)[408] Victims of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 plane crash: Pius Adesanmi, Nigerian-Canadian professor and writer (b. 1972)[409] Sebastiano Tusa, Italian archaeologist and politician (b. 1952)[410] March 11 – Hal Blaine, American drummer (b. 1929)[411] March 13 – Andrea Pollack, German swimmer (b. 1961)[412] March 14 Godfried Danneels, Belgian cardinal (b. 1933)[413] Charlie Whiting, British motorsports director (b. 1952)[414] March 15 W. S. Merwin, American poet (b. 1927)[415] Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Louly, 3rd Head of State of Mauritania (b. 1943)[416] March 16 Dick Dale, American guitarist and surf music pioneer (b. 1937)[417] Barbara Hammer, American filmmaker (b. 1939)[418] Alan Krueger, American economist (b. 1960)[419] March 17 – Tunku Puan Zanariah, Malaysian royal, Raja Permaisuri Agong (b. 1940)[420] March 19 – Marlen Khutsiev, Georgian-born Soviet and Russian filmmaker (b. 1925)[421] March 20 Donald Kalpokas, 2nd Prime Minister of Vanuatu (b. 1943)[422] Mary Warnock, British philosopher (b. 1924)[423] March 22 Frans Andriessen, Dutch politician (b. 1929)[424] Scott Walker, American-born British singer-songwriter (b. 1943)[425] March 23 Larry Cohen, American film director and screenwriter (b. 1936)[426] Rafi Eitan, Israeli intelligence officer and politician (b. 1926)[427] March 24 Nancy Gates, American actress (b. 1926)[428] Fred Malek, American business executive, political advisor and philanthropist (b. 1936)[429] March 27 Valery Bykovsky, Soviet and Russian cosmonaut (b. 1934)[430] Bruce Yardley, Australian cricketer (b. 1947)[431] March 29 – Agnès Varda, Belgian-born French filmmaker (b. 1928)[432] March 31 – Nipsey Hussle, American rapper (b. 1985)[433] April[edit] Main article: Deaths in April 2019
David J. Thouless
Bibi Andersson
Alan García
Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg
Jean-Pierre Marielle
Peter Mayhew April 1 Vonda N. McIntyre, American science fiction author (b. 1948)[434] Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio, Spanish writer (b. 1927)[435] April 2 – Jamshid Mashayekhi, Iranian actor (b. 1934)[436] April 4 – Georgiy Daneliya, Soviet and Russian film director and screenwriter (b. 1930)[437] April 5 Anandavally, Indian actress (b. 1952)[438] Sydney Brenner, South African Nobel biologist (b. 1927)[439] Gianfranco Leoncini, Italian footballer (b. 1939)[440] April 6 – David J. Thouless, British Nobel physicist (b. 1934)[441] April 7 Seymour Cassel, American actor (b. 1935)[442] Cho Yang-ho, South Korean businessman (b. 1949)[443] April 9 Elwyn Berlekamp, American mathematician (b. 1940)[444] Charles Van Doren, American writer and editor (b. 1926)[445] April 10 Earl Thomas Conley, American singer-songwriter (b. 1941)[446] Estrella Zeledón Lizano, Costa Rican politician and First Lady of Costa Rica (b. 1929)[447] April 12 Georgia Engel, American actress (b. 1948)[448] Tommy Smith, English footballer (b. 1945)[449] April 13 Tony Buzan, English author and educational consultant (b. 1942)[450] Neus Català, Spanish political activist and Holocaust survivor (b. 1915)[451] Paul Greengard, American Nobel neuroscientist (b. 1925)[452] Lydia Wideman, Finnish cross-country skier (b. 1920)[453] Yvette Williams, New Zealand track-and-field athlete (b. 1929)[454] April 14 Bibi Andersson, Swedish actress (b. 1935)[455] Mirjana Marković, Serbian politician and First Lady of Yugoslavia (b. 1942)[456] Gene Wolfe, American science fiction and fantasy writer (b. 1931)[457] April 16 – Fay McKenzie, American actress and singer (b. 1918)[458] April 17 – Alan García, 61st and 64th President of Peru (b. 1949)[459][460] April 18 – Lyra McKee, Northern Irish journalist (b. 1990)[461] April 19 – Patrick Sercu, Belgian cyclist (b. 1944)[462] April 20 – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Iranian artist (b. 1922)[463] April 21 – Ken Kercheval, American actor (b. 1935)[464] April 22 Lê Đức Anh, Vietnamese politician, 4th President of Vietnam (b. 1920)[465] Billy McNeill, Scottish footballer and manager (b. 1940)[466] April 23 Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg (b. 1921)[467] David Winters, English-American actor, choreographer, and director (b. 1939)[468] April 24 – Jean-Pierre Marielle, French actor (b. 1932)[469] April 25 – John Havlicek, American basketball player (b. 1940)[470] April 26 – Ellen Schwiers, German actress (b. 1930)[471] April 27 – Negasso Gidada, Ethiopian politician, 4th President of Ethiopia (b. 1943)[472] April 28 – John Singleton, American film director, screenwriter and producer (b. 1968)[473] April 29 Les Murray, Australian poet (b. 1938)[474] Josef Šural, Czech footballer (b. 1990)[475] April 30 Anémone, French actress (b. 1950)[476] Beth Carvalho, Brazilian samba singer (b. 1946)[477] Peter Mayhew, English-American actor (b. 1944) May[edit] Main article: Deaths in May 2019
Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba
Doris Day
Bob Hawke
Murray Gell-Mann
Prem Tinsulanonda May 2 Red Kelly, Canadian professional ice hockey player and coach (b. 1927)[479] Ali Mroudjaé, 9th Prime Minister of the Comoros (b. 1939)[480] May 3 – Goro Shimura, Japanese mathematician (b. 1930)[481] May 5 – Norma Miller, American dancer, actress and author (b. 1919)[482] May 6 John Lukacs, Hungarian-American historian (b. 1924)[483] Seymour Nurse, Barbadian cricketer (b. 1933)[484] May 7 – Jean Vanier, Canadian Catholic philosopher (b. 1928)[485] May 8 Sprent Dabwido, 13th President of Nauru (b. 1972)[486] Yevgeny Krylatov, Soviet and Russian film composer (b. 1934)[487] May 9 – Alvin Sargent, American screenwriter
Posted by UK & Beyond on 2019-10-03 19:53:33
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Wine Aroma Green Pepper
2019 (MMXIX) is the current year, and is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2019th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 19th year of the 3rd millennium, the 19th year of the 21st century, and the 10th and last year of the 2010s decade.
Skip to topSkip to bottom 2019 has been assigned as International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements by the United Nations General Assembly[1] given that it coincides with the 150th anniversary of its creation by Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869.
Events
January
January 1 All works published in 1923 except sound recordings (see 2022 scheduled events) enter the public domain in the United States, the first works to do so since the passage of the 1998 Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.[2] Jair Bolsonaro begins his four-year term as President of Brazil. Unmanned space probe New Horizons makes a close approach of the Kuiper belt object (KBO) 486958 Arrokoth at 05:33 UTC. Qatar withdraws from OPEC. Same-sex marriage becomes legal in Austria.[3] January 2 – Great Belt Bridge rail accident: A DSB express passenger train is hit by a semi-trailer from a passing cargo train on the western bridge of the Great Belt Fixed Link in Denmark, killing eight people and making it the deadliest rail accident in the country since 1988.[4] January 3 – Chinese probe Chang’e 4 becomes the first human-made object to land on the far side of the Moon.[5] January 5 – Bartholomew I of Constantinople issues a formal decree granting independence to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine from the Russian Orthodox Church.[6] January 6 – Muhammad V of Kelantan abdicates the federal throne as the 15th monarch of Malaysia, making him the first Malaysian monarch to do so.[7] January 7 – A faction of the Armed Forces of Gabon announces a coup d’état. Gabon’s government later declares that it has reasserted control. January 10 – Venezuela enters a constitutional crisis as Juan Guaidó and the National Assembly declare incumbent President Nicolás Maduro "illegitimate" and start the process of attempting to remove him.[8] January 15 – Nairobi DusitD2 complex attack: A terrorist attack at an upscale hotel and office complex in Nairobi, Kenya, kills 21 people (including 5 attackers) and injures 28 more.[9] January 17 – A vehicle-bound suicide bomb attack in Bogotá, Colombia, kills 22 people and injures 68 others, making it the deadliest attack on the Colombian capital since 2003.[10] January 18 – Fuel thieves rupture a pipeline in Tlahuelilpan, Mexico, and a subsequent explosion kills at least 137 people and injures dozens more.[11] January 19 – A magnitude 6.7 earthquake hits Tongoy, Coquimbo Region in Chile, causing two deaths and as many as 200,000 people left without power.[12] Despite its moderate magnitude, since it was an intraplate earthquake, it caused some serious damage in La Serena and nearby cities. January 21 – 2019 Piper PA-46 Malibu crash: An aircraft carrying new Cardiff City F.C. footballer Emiliano Sala and pilot David Ibbotson en route from Nantes, France, to Cardiff, Wales, goes missing over the English Channel. Sala’s body is recovered on February 7.[13] January 23 – 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Thousands of people protest in favor of disputed interim President Juan Guaidó. Several people are killed, and President Maduro severs diplomatic ties with the United States.[14] January 25 – A mine tailings dam breaks in the Brazilian city of Brumadinho, in the state of Minas Gerais. At least 248 people are killed, with 22 missing.[15] January 27 – Two bombs at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Jolo, Philippines, kill at least 20 people and leave more than 100 others injured.[16] January 28 – The U.S. Justice Department charges Chinese tech firm Huawei with multiple counts of fraud, raising U.S.–China tensions.[17] February[edit] February 1 – U.S. President Donald Trump confirms that the U.S. will leave the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987.[18] The next day, Russia follows suit with suspension of its obligations to the treaty.[19] February 3 – Pope Francis arrives in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, becoming the first pope to visit the Arabian Peninsula.[20] February 5 – The Taliban kills at least 47 people in attacks while Afghan–Taliban peace talks are taking place in Moscow. 12 others are injured.[21] February 6 – The Freedom House NGO states that Hungary was no longer a free country, making it the first such country in the European Union to be so.[22] February 7 – 2019 Haitian protests: Anti-government protests demanding the resignation of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse begin in several cities across the country.[23] February 12 – The Republic of Macedonia renames itself the Republic of North Macedonia, ending a decades-old dispute with Greece, paving the way for its integration into NATO and the European Union.[24] February 13 – A suicide bomb attack on a vehicle kills at least 27 Revolutionary Guards in southeastern Iran.[25] It is one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Iran in years.[26] February 14 – A suicide bomb attack on a vehicle convoy in Indian-administered Kashmir kills at least 40 Indian security personnel, making it the deadliest attack on India’s security personnel in Kashmir in three decades.[27] February 20 – A major fire in Dhaka, Bangladesh kills at least 78 people.[28] February 21 – SpaceIL launches the Beresheet probe, the world’s first privately financed mission to the Moon.[29][30] February 23 2019 Nigerian general election, for the President; all 360 seats in the House of Representatives and all 110 seats in the Senate. 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: President Maduro severs diplomatic ties with Colombia as humanitarian aid attempts to enter the country across the border.[31] February 26–27 – The Indian Air Force launches airstrikes on purported militant camps in Balakot, Pakistan; according to Indian claims, "a very large number of … terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and groups of jihadis" were killed,[32] although Pakistan denied the claims[33] and a number of neutral sources suggest that this was not the case.[34][35] The following day, Pakistan retaliated, leading to the shooting down of an Indian MiG-21 fighter, whose pilot was repatriated on March 1.[36] The incidents led to the 2019 India–Pakistan standoff. February 27 – Ramses Station rail disaster: A train smashes into a barrier inside Ramses Station in Cairo, Egypt, causing an explosion and a fire, killing 25 people and injuring 40 others.[37] February 27–28 – The 2019 North Korea–United States summit is held in Hanoi, Vietnam. It is the second summit between United States President Donald Trump and the North Korean Chairman Kim Jong-un. March[edit] March 3 An unmanned demonstration flight of the new crew capable version of the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, intended to carry American astronauts into space, achieves successful autonomous docking with the International Space Station.[38] The 2019 Estonian parliamentary election takes place, for all 101 seats in the Riigikogu.[39] March 5 – A second case of sustained remission from HIV is reported, ten years after the Berlin Patient.[40][41] March 6 – 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Venezuela expels German ambassador Daniel Kriener for his alleged meddling in internal affairs.[42] March 10 – Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 bound for Nairobi, crashes shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa killing all 157 people on board.[43] All Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are subsequently grounded worldwide.[44] March 12 – Cargo ship Grande America sinks after it caught fire on March 10 in the Bay of Biscay, approximately 200 kilometres (120 mi) west of France, causing a 2,200-tonne oil spill.[45] March 13 March 2019 North American blizzard: A winter storm completes its explosive intensification over the Southern Rocky Mountains region, which began the day before, becoming a powerful "bomb cyclone" and triggering severe blizzard conditions across much of the Southwestern and Central United States.[46][47] Australian Cardinal George Pell is sentenced to six years in prison for sexually abusing two choirboys in 1996.[48] March 15 51 people are killed and 50 others injured in terrorist attacks on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand: Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre, both of which were the target of shootings by Australia-born Brenton Harrison Tarrant. It is the deadliest mass shooting and terrorist attack in New Zealand history and described by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as "one of New Zealand’s darkest days".[49] Subsequently, Facebook announced they had disabled 1.5 million videos of the gunman’s rampage.[50] Cyclone Idai makes landfall on Mozambique, causing at least 1,073 fatalities, as well as causing mass flooding and power outages in southern Africa.[51] March 19 Nursultan Nazarbayev resigns as President of Kazakhstan after 29 years in office and appoints Kassym-Jomart Tokayev as acting president.[52] Astana is renamed Nur-Sultan the following day in his honor.[53] American Karen Uhlenbeck is the first woman to win the Abel Prize for outstanding contributions to mathematics.[54][55] March 20 Europe’s antitrust regulators fine Google 1.49 billion euros ($1.7 billion) for freezing out rivals in the online advertising business. The ruling brings to nearly $10 billion the fines imposed against Google by the European Union.[56] Disney acquires the rights to 21st Century Fox leaving out a few assets to be spun-off to the newly formed Fox Corporation.[importance?] March 21 – A major explosion at a chemical plant in Xiangshui, Jiangsu, China, kills at least 78 people and injures more than 600 others. Its powerful impact registered as an artificial earthquake.[57] March 23 The final territory of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, located in Al-Baghuz Fawqani, Syria, is liberated.[58] An estimated 400,000 people march in central London in protest against Brexit.[59][60] March 24 The 2019 Thai general election takes place, for all 500 seats in the House of Representatives. A four-page summary of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report into U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign is published by the U.S. Attorney General William Barr. It concludes that there was no collusion with Russia – the basis of the investigation – but on the issue of obstruction of justice states: "While this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him".[61] March 26 – The European Parliament votes by 348 to 278 in favour of the EU Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market, which expands legal liability for websites and includes the controversial Article 13.[62][63] March 31 – Taiwan scrambles its fighter aircraft after two Chinese jets crossed a maritime border between the two nations. Just the day before, Japan had similarly scrambled its jets when the Chinese flew between two Japanese islands, Miyako and Okinawa.[64] April[edit] April 2 – Abdelaziz Bouteflika resigns as President of Algeria amid widespread protests, after nearly two decades in office.[65] April 4 – Second Libyan Civil War: The Libyan National Army (LNA) launches a surprise offensive in western Libya, moving units towards the Government of National Accord-held capital Tripoli and capturing Gharyan. The LNA says that the operation, ordered by General Khalifa Haftar, is aimed at "cleansing the western zone from terrorist groups".[66][67] April 9 – The April 2019 Israeli legislative election takes place, for all 120 seats in the Knesset. April 10 Scientists from the Event Horizon Telescope project announce the first ever image of a black hole, located in the centre of the M87 galaxy.[68][69] Fossil fragments found in the Callao Cave in the Philippines reveal the existence of the Homo luzonensis species of humans. The species is named after the island where it was discovered, Luzon.[70] April 11 WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange is arrested after seven years in Ecuador’s embassy in London.[71][72] Amid mass protests, Omar al-Bashir is deposed as President of Sudan in a coup d’état, after nearly 30 years in office.[73] The 2019 Indian general election begins, along with elections in six states. Counting takes place on 23 May.[74] April 15 – During Holy Week, a major fire engulfs Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, resulting in the roof and main spire collapsing.[75][76] April 16 – The Howse Peak avalanche kills three noted mountaineers: Austrians Hansjörg Auer and David Lama, and Canadian Jess Roskelley.[77] April 17 The 2019 Indonesian general election takes place; for the President, 575 seats in the People’s Representative Council, and 136 seats in the Regional Representative Council. At least 28 people are killed in a bus crash on the Portuguese island of Madeira.[78] April 18 The full 448-page report on the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 United States Presidential Election (the Mueller Report) is released in redacted form.[79] NepaliSat-1 is launched. It is Nepal’s first ever research satellite to be sent into space.[80][81] April 21 A series of bomb attacks occur at eight locations in Sri Lanka, including three churches, four hotels and one housing complex in Colombo, on Easter Sunday, leaving 259 people dead and over 500 injured.[82][83][84][85] This is the first major terrorist attack in the country since the Sri Lankan Civil War ended in 2009.[86] Comedian Volodymyr Zelensky is elected President of Ukraine in a runoff election. Zelensky previously portrayed a fictional Ukrainian president in the television series Servant of the People.[87] April 25 – North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visits Russia to hold a series of summits with Russian leaders, including President Vladimir Putin.[88] April 26 – Avengers: Endgame is released in theaters, breaking many box-office records, including becoming the highest grossing movie of all time. April 28 The 2019 Spanish general election takes place, for all 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of the 266) seats in the Senate. The PSOE, under Pedro Sánchez, wins the most seats, but not an outright majority.[89] Victor Vescovo achieves the deepest dive of any human in history, as he reaches Challenger Deep within the Mariana Trench, at a depth of 10,928 m (35,853 ft).[90][91] April 29 – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the elusive leader of the Islamic State terrorist organization, appears in undated footage released by the group, his first appearance on video since 2014. In the video, he references the 2019 Sri Lanka Easter bombings, indicating it was filmed very recently.[92] April 30 Emperor Akihito of Japan abdicates from his throne, the first abdication by a Japanese monarch in almost two centuries. The abdication ends the Heisei era of Japan and ushers in the Reiwa era with new emperor Naruhito ascending the throne on 1 May.[93][94] 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Venezuelan opposition leader and disputed interim President Juan Guaidó leads an attempted uprising against President Nicolás Maduro.[95] May[edit] May 1 King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand marries his personal bodyguard Suthida Tidjai – a commoner – in a surprise ceremony, making her queen consort of Thailand.[96] Russian President Vladimir Putin signs into law a controversial "sovereign internet" bill that allows Russian authorities to better monitor internet routing and to steer Russian internet traffic away from foreign servers. Proponents of the bill say it ensures Russian internet security and decreases dependence on foreign servers while critics argue it gives new censorship powers to the government and is a part of a global trend of cyber-balkanization.[97] May 3 – The number of deaths from the Kivu Ebola outbreak exceeds 1,000. It is the second deadliest Ebola outbreak in history, only surpassed by the West African Ebola virus epidemic of 2013–2016.[98] May 3–6 – May 2019 Gaza–Israel clashes: The Gaza–Israel conflict escalates after the Israeli military launches airstrikes into Gaza killing more than 20 Palestinians including a pregnant woman and a toddler following the injury of two soldiers from Gazan sniper fire. May 4–6 – Coronation of King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand. May 5 – Aeroflot Flight 1492 crash-lands and bursts into flames at Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, killing 41 of the 78 people on board.[99] May 6 In its first report since 2005, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) warns that biodiversity loss is "accelerating", with over a million species now threatened with extinction; the decline of the natural living world is "unprecedented" and largely a result of human actions, according to the report.[100][101] Syrian Civil War: The Syrian Army launches a major ground offensive against one of the last rebel strongholds in the country.[102] May 8 – A British teenager, Isabelle Holdaway, 17, is reported to be the first patient ever to receive a genetically modified phage therapy to treat a drug-resistant infection.[103][104] May 10 – Amid ongoing negotiations, the United States’ 25 percent tariff hike on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports takes effect, escalating tensions between the two nations in the ongoing China–United States trade war.[105] May 12 – May 2019 Gulf of Oman incident: Four commercial ships, including two Saudi Aramco oil tankers, are damaged near the port of Fujairah in the Gulf of Oman.[106] The United Arab Emirates claims the incident was a "sabotage attack", while an early United States assessment reportedly blames Iran for the attack. The incident occurs during a time of regional tensions between the U.S. and Iran, with the U.S. just weeks prior deploying strategic bombers, a carrier strike group and other military assets to the Persian Gulf following intelligence reports of an alleged plot by Iran to attack U.S. forces in the region.[107] May 13 The 2019 Philippine general election takes place, for all 297 seats in the House of Representatives and 12 seats in the Senate. Prosecutors in Sweden reopen the rape allegation investigation against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Swedish prosecutors mention their intent to seek extradition of Assange from the United Kingdom after he has served his 50-week prison sentence for skipping bail.[108] May 14–18 – The Eurovision Song Contest 2019 takes place in Tel Aviv, Israel, and is won by Dutch entrant Duncan Laurence with the song "Arcade". May 17 Taiwan’s parliament becomes the first in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage.[109] Ibiza affair: A corruption scandal involving the Vice-Chancellor of Austria Heinz-Christian Strache and deputy leader of the Freedom Party Johann Gudenus offering to fix state contracts with a woman posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch at a 2017 meeting in Spain leads to the collapse of the coalition government and calls for snap elections.[110] May 18 – 2019 Australian federal election: Scott Morrison’s Liberal/National Coalition Government is narrowly re-elected,[111] defeating the Labor Party led by Bill Shorten. May 19 Eleven people are killed in a shooting at a bar in Belém, Brazil.[112] China–United States trade war: Google pulls Android update support for Huawei phones, as well as the Google Play Store and Gmail apps, after the Chinese technology company was blacklisted by the United States.[113] May 20 – The redefinition of the SI system of measurement adopted by the majority of countries in the world takes effect.[114] May 23–26 – The 2019 European Parliament election takes place. The election has a 51 percent voter turnout, the highest since the first direct elections in 1979. May 23 2019 Indian general election: Narendra Modi secures a landslide win, with his party BJP alone gaining 303 of the 543 seats in parliament, and his political alliance winning 353 seats of the 543.[115][116][117] Botswana lifts its five-year prohibition on elephant hunting.[118] May 24 British Prime Minister Theresa May announces her resignation as Conservative leader, effective June 7, 2019. A prison riot in Acarigua, Venezuela, leaves 29 prisoners dead and 19 guards injured.[119] May 26–27 – Amazonas prison massacres: More than 50 prisoners are killed in a series of riots at four different prisons in Amazonas, Brazil.[120] May 27 – U.S. President Donald Trump, during an official state visit to Japan, is the first foreign leader to meet with Japanese emperor Naruhito.[121] May 29 Former European Court of Justice judge Egils Levits is elected the 10th President of Latvia. Sinking of Hableány: The Hableány, a sightseeing river cruise ship on the Danube in Budapest, Hungary, collides with another vessel and sinks with two Hungarian crew members and 33 South Korean tourists on board. At least 25 people have been found dead and 3 others remain missing.[122] Less than two months after the April 9 Israeli legislative elections, the Israeli Knesset dissolves itself and votes to hold new elections in September 17, after Benjamin Netanyahu failed to assemble a coalition government within the allotted time.[123] May 30 – July 14 – The 2019 Cricket World Cup is held in England and Wales, and is won by England. May 30 – South Korean newspaper The Chosun Ilbo reports that North Korea executed nuclear envoy Kim Hyok-chol and four other diplomats in March after the failed February Hanoi summit with the United States. The newspaper also reports that Kim Yong-chol, a top aide to Kim Jong-un, was sentenced to hard labor during the purge.[124] June[edit] June 2 Nearly five years after abdication, King Juan Carlos I of Spain retires from public life.[125] 2019 San Marino referendum: Sammarinese voters vote to end discrimination based on sexual orientation and initiate a popular legislative initiative for the reform of the electoral system.[126] June 3 – Khartoum massacre: More than 100 people are killed when Sudanese troops and Janjaweed militiamen storm and open fire on a protest camp outside of a military headquarters in Khartoum, Sudan.[127] June 3–5 – U.S. President Donald Trump makes a state visit to the United Kingdom, meeting with Queen Elizabeth II and outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May. It is the first official state visit to the U.K. by a sitting U.S. president since 2011. Trump also attends D-Day commemorative ceremonies.[128] June 5–8 – Chinese President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to Russia, where he also attends the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.[129] June 5 – The 2019 Danish general election takes place, for all 179 seats in the Folketing. June 6 2018–19 Sudanese protests: The African Union suspends Sudan’s membership "with immediate effect" after the Khartoum massacre.[130] Following results from the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election, a new government is formed consisting of 58 percent women.[131] June 7 – British Prime Minister Theresa May resigns as leader of the Conservative Party. June 7 – July 7 – The 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup is held in France and is won by the United States. June 9 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Over 1 million people in Hong Kong protest against proposed legislation regarding extradition to China. It is the largest protest in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover.[132] A large explosive eruption of Mount Sinabung in Indonesia sends a 7,000-meter ash column, generating a pyroclastic flow 3–3.5 kilometers long towards the south and southeast of the mountain.[133][134] June 11 – Botswana decriminalizes homosexuality.[135] June 12 The Supreme Court of Ecuador rules in favor of same-sex marriage, making it legal throughout the country.[136] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: The Hong Kong government and police controversially declare that the protest has "turned into a riot".[137][138][139] June 13 – June 2019 Gulf of Oman incident: Two oil tankers are attacked near the Strait of Hormuz while transiting the Gulf of Oman amid heightened tension between Iran and the United States, with the latter blaming the former for the incident.[140] June 14 – Jane Goodall, British primatologist, is awarded the 2019 Luxembourg Prize for Outstanding Environmental Peace.[141][importance?][unreliable source?] June 15 – 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong announces it will indefinitely suspend the controversial extradition bill, but protests continue, this time calling for the total withdrawal of the bill and the resignation of Chief Executive Carrie Lam.[142] June 16 – A large-scale power outage hits Argentina, Uruguay and parts of Paraguay, affecting nearly 50 million people.[143] June 17 – A triple suicide blast kills 30 and injures 40 in Borno, Nigeria, at a hall where people were watching a football match. June 18 – The U.S. sends an additional 1,000 troops to the Middle East as tensions build with Iran.[144] June 19 – Four men are charged with murdering the 298 passengers and crew of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, the airliner shot down while flying over Ukraine in July 2014.[145] June 20–21 – Chinese President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to North Korea. It is his first visit to the country as president and the first visit to North Korea by a Chinese leader since Hu Jintao’s visit 14 years prior.[146] June 20 – June 2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone: Iran shoots down a United States RQ-4 Global Hawk surveillance drone over the Strait of Hormuz after claiming it violated their airspace. The U.S. claims it was shot down in international airspace in an "unprovoked attack".[147] June 22 – 2019 Amhara Region coup d’état attempt: In the Amhara Region of Ethiopia, regional president Ambachew Mekonnen and national-military chief of staff Se’are Mekonnen are assassinated.[148] June 27 – Angara Airlines Flight 200 overruns the runway during landing and collides with a building, killing the captain and flight engineer, and injuring a further 22 people. Only 45 people survive the crash at Nizhneangarsk Airport, Russia.[149] June 30 – During a trilateral gathering at the Panmunjom Truce Village between South Korean President Moon Jae-in, North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un and United States President Donald Trump, Trump becomes the first sitting U.S. president to cross the Korean Demilitarized Zone and enter North Korea. Trump and Kim also agree to restart stalled denuclearization negotiations.[150] July[edit] July – The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reports, on August 15, that July 2019 was the hottest month on record globally, at 0.95 °C (1.71 °F) above the 20th-century average.[151][152][153] July 1 Japan resumes commercial whaling after a 30-year moratorium, following its withdrawal from the International Whaling Commission.[154][155] Japan announces tightening high-tech exports to South Korea, thus begin the trade dispute between the two countries.[156] The International Atomic Energy Agency confirms that Iran has breached the limit on its stockpile of enriched uranium.[157] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: During the annual July 1 protests that mark the anniversary of the British handover of the city to China, a group of a few hundred protesters stormed the Hong Kong legislature, defacing various portraits and destroying furniture before being dispersed by police using tear gas.[158] A fire on the Russian deep-diving submarine Losharik kills 14 crew members. Submarine commander Denis Dolonsky was among those killed.[159] July 2 – A total solar eclipse occurs over South America. It is the 58th solar eclipse from Saros cycle 127.[160][161] July 3 – 2019 Tajoura migrant center airstrike: An airstrike by Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army hits the Tajoura Detention Center outside Tripoli, Libya, while hundreds of people are inside the facility, killing at least 53 of them and injures 130 others.[162] July 7 – The 2019 Greek legislative election takes place. Leader of the Opposition Kyriakos Mitsotakis, from New Democracy, wins the election and is sworn in Prime Minister as left-wing incumbent Alexis Tsipras falls to second place.[163] July 10 – The last Volkswagen Beetle rolls off the line in Puebla, Mexico. The last of 5,961 "Special Edition" cars will be exhibited in a museum.[164] July 12 – Asasey Hotel attack: A car bomb and a gun attack kill at least 26 people, including two prominent journalists and nine foreigners, in Kismayo, Somalia. Islamist group al-Shabaab claims responsibility.[165] July 13 – Hurricane Barry strikes the Gulf Coast, killing one and causing over $500 million (2019 USD) in damages. July 16 – The European Parliament elects Ursula von der Leyen as the new President of the European Commission. Succeeding Jean-Claude Juncker, she will be sworn in on December 1, 2019. She is the first female to be elected to this office in EU history.[166][167] July 17 Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, former head of the Sinaloa Cartel, which became the biggest supplier of drugs to the U.S., is sentenced to life in prison plus 30 years.[168] The World Health Organization (WHO) declares the Kivu Ebola epidemic to be a public health emergency of international concern.[169] July 18 – At least 35 people are killed and more than 30 others injured after an arson attack at an animation company in Kyoto, Japan.[170] It is one of the deadliest massacres in the country’s history since the end of World War II and the deadliest building fire in the country in 18 years, since the Myojo 56 building fire in 2001.[171] July 19 – The Iranian Navy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps captures British tanker Stena Impero and temporarily seizes British-operated and Liberian-flagged tanker Mesdar in the Persian Gulf. The British Foreign Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, warns there will be "serious consequences" if Iran does not release the tanker.[172][173][174] July 24 – Boris Johnson becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom after defeating Jeremy Hunt in a leadership contest, succeeding Theresa May.[175] July 26 – August 11 – The 2019 Pan American Games are held in Lima, Peru. July 30 – India bans triple talaq.[176] August[edit] August 1 – Danish polar research institution Polar Portal reports a large spike in Greenland ice loss, with 11 billion tons melted in one day and 197 gigatonnes during the month of July.[177] August 2 The United States officially withdraws from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty established with Russia in 1987.[178] 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute: Japan announces the removal of South Korea from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on August 28.[179] August 3 – A mass shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, United States, leaves 22 people dead and 24 others injured.[180] August 4 2019 Cairo bombing: A car crashes into three other cars causing an explosion outside the National Cancer Institute Egypt in Cairo, Egypt, killing at least 20 people and injuring 47 others.[181] 2019 Dayton shooting: Ten people, including the perpetrator, are killed and 27 others injured in a mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio, United States, just 13 hours after the mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.[182] August 5 Revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir: India revokes the part of its constitution that gives Indian-administered Kashmir special status in an unprecedented move.[183][184] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Amid ongoing protests, Hong Kong is hit by the first general strikes of their kind since 1967.[185] August 7 – The Singapore Convention on Mediation, also known as the UN Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation, comes into effect with 46 countries ratifying it. States that have ratified the treaty will have to ensure that international commercial settlement agreements are enforced by their courts.[186] August 8 – Nyonoksa radiation accident: Reports indicate that there may have been a nuclear explosion at the Nyonoksa weapons-testing site in Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia. At least five people were killed and three others injured in the blast, with radiation levels in Severodvinsk, 29 miles (47 km) away from the site, being 20 times above normal levels temporarily.[187] August 10 Morogoro tanker explosion: A fuel tanker truck explodes in Morogoro, Tanzania, killing at least 89 people and injuring dozens more.[188][189] 32 are killed and 1,000,000 evacuated as Typhoon Lekima makes landfall in Zhejiang, China. Earlier it had caused flooding in the Philippines.[190] August 10–25 – 2019 Canary Islands wildfires: A number of forest fires break out in the Canary Islands of Gran Canaria, Tenerife and Lanzarote. The fires on the island of Gran Canaria were the most severe, resulting in the loss of large areas of the island’s forests and leading to the evacuation of thousands of residents from a number of towns and villages.[191][192] August 11 – 2019 Indian floods: At least 114 people, including 57 in Kerala, 30 in Karnataka and 27 in Maharashtra, are reported to have died in monsoon-related floods in India. At least 227 died across India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Pakistan.[193] August 12 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong International Airport is closed due to protests.[194] 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute: South Korea announces the removal of Japan from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on September 18.[195][196][197] The Trump administration announces it will delay its proposal for 10 percent tariffs slated to take effect from September 1 on certain consumer goods from China while exempting other products — less than two weeks after Trump announced the new proposed tariffs.[198] August 13 – The main yield curve for U.S. Treasury bonds inverts, as the yield rate for 2-year bonds rises higher than the yield rate for 10-year bonds.[199] August 14 – The Dow Jones plunges more than 500 points, due to concerns over the yield curve inversion.[200][201][202] August 15 – The European Central Bank shuts down PNB Banka after ruling it had become insolvent; this bank, previously called Norvik Banka, was Latvia’s sixth-largest lender, and was a critic of the Baltic country’s financial authorities.[203] August 18 – 100 activists, officials, and other concerned citizens in Iceland hold a funeral for Okjökull glacier, which has completely melted after once covering six square miles (15.5 km2).[204] August 19 – 2019 Papua protests erupt, mainly across Indonesian Papua, in response to an incident in Surabaya where a group of Papuan students were arrested for alleged disrespect of the Indonesian flag. In Jayapura, Sorong, Fakfak, Timika and Manokwari, protests turned violent, with various private buildings and public facilities being damaged or burned. The protests and unrest were described by Reuters as "the most serious civil unrest in years over perceived racial and ethnic discrimination."[205] August 21 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires: Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE) reports fires burning in the Amazon rainforest at a record rate, with more than 36,000 in the year to date, while smoke reaches São Paulo more than 1,700 miles (2,700 km) away.[206] Giuseppe Conte offers his resignation as Prime Minister of Italy in order to avoid a no-confidence motion.[207] August 23 – German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron describe the widespread Amazon fires as an international emergency, urging the matter to be discussed at the weekend’s G7 summit.[208][209] August 25 – 2019 Beirut drone crash: According to Lebanese officials, two Israeli drones attack Beirut, Lebanon. One crashed into the roof of the Hezbollah Media Center, about 45 minutes before the second exploded in the air and damaged the building.[210] It was the first such incident between Israel and Lebanon since the 2006 Lebanon War.[211] September[edit] September 1 – Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on The Bahamas, with sustained wind speeds of 185 mph.[212] 43 deaths are reported.[213] September 2 Sinking of MV Conception: 34 people are killed following a fire and subsequent sinking of a dive boat near Santa Cruz Island, California, United States.[214] It is the worst maritime disaster in California in more than 150 years.[215] An Iranian woman named Sahar Khodayari sets herself on fire after being arrested for attending a soccer game in Iran. She dies a week later.[216] September 4 – 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announces the official withdrawal of the controversial Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2019, and setting up of an independent study to probe social and economic inequality within the territory.[217] September 6 – Chandrayaan-2, India’s second lunar probe, was successful to put the orbit in lunar orbit, but the lander Vikram crashes into the surface of the moon.[218] September 7 Afghan peace process: U.S. President Donald Trump announces he "called off" planned peace talks with the Taliban at Camp David after they claimed responsibility for the September 2 and 5 bombings in Kabul which killed a U.S. soldier, among others.[219] Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov and 66 others are released in a prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia.[220] September 10 – The Parliament of the United Kingdom is prorogued amid unprecedented protests from opposition MPs, who hold up signs in the House of Commons and refuse to back the shutdown.[221] September 11 – Astronomers announce the detection of water in the atmosphere of exoplanet K2-18b, the first such discovery for an exoplanet in the habitable zone around a star.[222] September 14 – 2019 Abqaiq–Khurais attack: Two Saudi Aramco oil refineries in Abqaiq and Khurais, Saudi Arabia, are attacked by drones, resulting in fires. Houthi militants claim responsibility, saying that they used ten drones for the attack. Aramco’s oil exports and production are disrupted by five million barrels a day, close to half of the entire Saudi Arabian oil exports.[223] September 16 – A gas explosion in Koltsovo, Novosibirsk Oblast, Russia sets off a fire in a bioweapons plant that houses viruses including smallpox, ebola and anthrax.[224] September 17 – Israel holds legislative elections for the second time in 2019, after the 21st Knesset voted to dissolve itself due to Benjamin Netanyahu’s failure to cobble a parliamentary coalition. September 19 – 30 Afghan nut farmers are killed and 40 injured in a U.S. drone attack in Nangarhar Province.[225] September 20 – An international strike and protest led by young people and adults is held three days before the latest UN Climate Summit, to demand action be taken to address the climate crisis. The event is one of the largest climate mobilizations in history.[226][227] September 20 – November 2 – The 2019 Rugby Union World Cup is held in Japan; the South Africa Springboks defeat the England national rugby union team 32–12.[228] September 21 – U.S. President Donald Trump approves deployment of several hundred troops and military equipment to Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates following the September 14 attack on Saudi oil refineries.[229][230] Both Saudi Arabia and Iran vow to defend themselves.[231] September 22 – Nearly three weeks after Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on The Bahamas, the official death toll stands at 52 and 1,300 are reported missing. Rescuers report the widespread stench of rotting bodies in the rubble.[232] September 23 One of the largest and oldest travel firms, Thomas Cook, goes bankrupt as last-minute rescue negotiations fail, stranding 600,000 tourists worldwide.[233] Russia formally adopts the Paris climate agreement.[234] September 24 The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom unanimously rules that the September 2019 prorogation of Parliament was unlawful and void.[235] The Supreme Court of Spain unanimously rules in favour of the exhumation of the remains of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco from the Valle de los Caídos.[236] He was finally exhumed on 24 October, being re-inhumed in a private crypt with his wife.[237] U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi announces the start of a formal impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump.[238] September 27 – 500,000 people march in a climate change protest led by activist Greta Thunberg and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Montreal, Canada.[239] 4,000,000 go on strike around the world.[240] September 28 The 2019 Afghan presidential election takes place. Hurricane Lorenzo becomes the furthest northeast Category 5 hurricane on record.[241] September 30 – The Republic of Ireland promises to plant 440 million trees in twenty years to combat climate change.[242] October[edit] October 1 2019 Hong Kong protests: A protester is shot in the chest with a live round of ammunition and critically injured.[243][244] The Nanfang’ao Bridge, the only steel single-arch bridge in Taiwan, collapses, killing six people and injuring more than twenty others.[245] October 2 – 25 soldiers are killed and 60 missing following attacks on two army camps in Boulkessi and Mondoro, Mali.[246] October 3 Paris police headquarters stabbing: A man stabs five officers at the central police headquarters in Paris, France, killing four of them. The attacker, shot dead by other officers, was an administrative intelligence employee at the station.[247] The European Court of Justice rules that Facebook must take down a post about Austrian politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek. The post originated in Ireland and the court ruled that the post defamed and insulted the politician and must be removed all over the world.[248] European Commission spokesperson Daniel Rosario threatens retaliatory measures if the United States imposes a US$7.5-billion (approximately €6.8-billion) tariff on products such as olives, whiskey, wine, cheese, yogurt, and airplanes. The tariffs are scheduled to take place on October 18.[249] October 4 – 2019 Hong Kong protests: Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam and the Chief Executive in Council invokes the Emergency Regulations Ordinance and banning the face mask in public gatherings with immediate effect.[250] October 5 – 2019 Iraqi protests: 91 people are killed by police during a week of demonstrations in Iraq.[251][importance?] October 6 – The 2019 Portuguese legislative election takes place, for all 230 seats to the Assembly of the Republic. October 8 2019 Ecuadorian protests: The Government of Ecuador, headed by President Lenín Moreno, moves to Guayaquil as the Carondelet Palace in Quito is overtaken by protesters and chaos persists in the capital.[252] About 200 Extinction Rebellion activists block the gates of Leinster House (parliament) in the Republic of Ireland.[253] October 9 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria: President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey announces a military invasion of north-eastern Syria, targeting the SDF and other Kurdish militias.[254] The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and the U.N. Human Rights Office issue a report that says that U.S. bombings in Nimroz and Farah Province, Afghanistan, that killed 39 civilians are unlawful. The U.S. said the attacks were against drug labs that fund the Taliban.[255] October 12 – Typhoon Hagibis makes landfall in Japan, the biggest storm to hit the region in decades, with over seven million people urged to evacuate.[256] October 13 – The 2019 Polish parliamentary election takes place, for all 460 seats in the Sejm and all 100 seats in the Senate. October 14 Trial of Catalonia independence leaders: The Supreme Court of Spain sentences nine Catalan independence movement leaders to 9 to 13 years of prison for sedition and misuse of public funds. Three others are disqualified for 1 year and 8 months for disobedience. Violent protests erupt across Catalonia.[257][unreliable source?][258] A New York Times investigation reveals that Russian planes have bombed at least 50 hospitals and clinics in opposition-held Idlib, Syria.[259][unreliable source?] October 17 – Shootouts erupt in Culiacán, Mexico, after the arrest of El Chapo’s son, Ovidio Guzmán López, on an arrest warrant for drug dealing in the United States.[260] Eight people are killed and 56 convicts escape from prison; 7 are recaptured by October 18. Guzmán López is released in an effort to restore peace and to prevent more bloodshed.[261] October 19 – An estimated one million people march through London in a protest organised by People’s Vote, to demand a second referendum on Brexit.[262] October 20 – 2019 Bolivian general election: Evo Morales defeated his nearest rival by 10%, but after multiple allegations of irregularities the Organization of American States said it had found "clear manipulations" of Bolivia’s voting system; Morales called for a new election.[263] October 21 – The 2019 Canadian federal election takes place, for all 338 seats in the House of Commons of Canada. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party win a narrow victory to form a minority government. October 23 The bodies of 39 people are found in a truck container in Essex, England. A 25-year-old man from Northern Ireland is arrested on suspicion of murder.[264] Google announces that its 53-qubit "Sycamore" processor has achieved quantum supremacy.[265][266][267][268] IBM disputes the claim.[269] October 25 – Tourists visit the summit of Uluru (also known as Ayers Rock) for the last time, as a ban on climbing the famous rock in Australia’s Northern Territory comes into effect.[270] October 26 – The Amazon Catholic bishops synod proposes that married men be ordained as priests, which would reverse the Church’s centuries-old discipline of celibacy.[271] October 27 U.S. President Donald Trump announces that the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was killed in a U.S. special forces operation. It was reported that al-Baghdadi detonated a suicide vest after being chased into a tunnel.[272][273] The 2019 Argentine general election takes place. Peronist candidate Alberto Fernández is elected President getting 48% of the vote, defeating President Mauricio Macri. Former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is elected Vice President. The 2019 Uruguayan general election takes place. October 30 Social media website Twitter bans all political advertising worldwide.[274] An earthquake of 6.6. Mw[importance?] rocks the Philippine island of Mindanao two days after an earthquake killed eight and left 12,000 people homeless.[275][unreliable source?] October 31 A fire destroys much of the 500-year-old Japanese Shuri Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[276] A train catches fire near Rahim Yar Khan in Pakistan. The blaze, sparked by gas used by passengers cooking on board, kills at least 74 people.[277] Heavy rain and flooding leave 3 dead and 200,000 people are homeless in Beledweyne, Somalia. Meanwhile, 29 are dead and 29,000 homeless due to flooding in nearby Kenya.[278] November[edit] November 2 – Pirates take nine crew members from Norwegian ship MV Bonita, owned by J. J. Ugland, near Cotonou, Benin.[279] November 3 – The Archdiocese of Russian Orthodox churches in Western Europe officially reunited with the Russian Orthodox Church. November 4 LeBarón family massacre: Nine Americans are killed when Mexican gang members open fire on their vehicles while driving to a wedding about 70 miles (110 km) south of the Mexico–United States border.[280] Amnesty International alleges that Bangladesh killed 466 people in 2018 under the guise of an anti-drugs campaign in what appears to be a wave of extrajudicial executions.[281] The United States formally begins process to pull out of the Paris Agreement on climate change.[282] November 5 11,000 scientists from around the world publish a study in the journal BioScience, warning "clearly and unequivocally that planet Earth is facing a climate emergency".[283][284][285] Air pollution in parts of India hits record levels.[286] November 6 – 2019 Fada N’gourma attack: At least 37 people are killed and 60 others injured when gunmen attack a Canadian gold mining company convoy on a road in Burkina Faso.[287] November 7 – Former Congolese rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda is sentenced to 30 years in prison for war crimes and crimes against humanity, the longest sentence ever handed down by the International Criminal Court.[288] November 9 The Supreme Court of India awards a holy site in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh to Hindus, rejecting a Muslim claim. The move is likely to spur sectarian disputes.[289][importance?] Cyclone Bulbul kills seven in West Bengal, India and seven in Bangladesh. 2,000,000 people are evacuated.[290] November 10 The November 2019 Spanish general election takes place, for all 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of the 266) seats in the Senate. 2019 Bolivian protests: President Evo Morales resigns after calling for a re-vote in the disputed elections. November 11 – A transit of Mercury occurs. November 13 Public impeachment hearings against U.S. President Donald Trump begin in the House of Representatives.[291][292] The Chinese University of Hong Kong officially announces a premature end to the semester as a result of large-scale protests and civil unrest. Besides CUHK, several Hong Kong universities switch to online learning and suspend on-campus class. The Education Bureau in Hong Kong officially announces to close all schools in Hong Kong due to the ongoing protests.[293][294] November 14 – Italy declares a state of emergency in Venice following record flooding.[295] November 17 – 2019 Hong Kong protests: Police use tear gas and water cannons against protesters who try to break through cordons and reach Polytechnic University, which is at the center of a week-long standoff between demonstrators and law enforcement. Protesters fight back with Molotov cocktails, arrows, and bricks.[296] November 19 – Google enters the video game market with the launch of Google Stadia. Predicted and scheduled[edit] November 23 – 2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum. November 30 – December 11 – The 2019 Southeast Asian Games are scheduled to be held in the Philippines. December 2–13 – The 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference is scheduled to take place in Madrid, Spain, after Chilean President Sebastián Piñera announced his country could not do so due to political unrest in the country.[297] December 12 – 2019 United Kingdom general election, for all 650 seats in the House of Commons. December 17 – The CHEOPS space telescope, whose mission is to study the formation of extrasolar planets, is expected to be launched.[298] December 26 – An annular solar eclipse will be visible from South Asia. The eclipse will be a part of Saros 132.[299] Date unknown[edit] The European Spallation Source is expected to go into operation in Lund, Sweden.[300] SpaceX expects to perform suborbital hop tests of their Starship prototype. Births[edit] May 6 – Archie Mountbatten-Windsor, first child of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and seventh in the line of succession to the British throne[301] Deaths[edit] Deaths January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November Further information: Category:2019 deaths January[edit] Main article: Deaths in January 2019
Pegi Young
Bob Einstein
Michael Atiyah
Carol Channing
Henry Sy
Tibor Baranski January 1 Ivan Dimitrov, Bulgarian footballer (b. 1935)[302] Pegi Young, American singer-songwriter, educator, and philanthropist (b. 1952)[303][importance?] January 2 Paulien van Deutekom, Dutch world champion speed skater (b. 1981)[304] Daryl Dragon, American musician (b. 1942)[305] Bob Einstein, American actor and comedian (b. 1942)[306] Gene Okerlund, American wrestling announcer (b. 1942)[307] January 3 – Herb Kelleher, American businessman (b. 1931)[308] January 5 Bernice Sandler, American women’s rights activist (b. 1928)[309] Dragoslav Šekularac, Serbian footballer and manager (b. 1937)[310] January 6 – José Ramón Fernández, Cuban revolution leader (b. 1923)[311] January 7 – Moshe Arens, Lithuanian-born Israeli aeronautical engineer, diplomat, and politician (b. 1925)[312] January 9 – Verna Bloom, American actress (b. 1938)[313] January 10 – Theo Adam, German opera singer (b. 1926)[314] January 11 Michael Atiyah, British-Lebanese mathematician and academic (b. 1929)[315] Fernando Luján, Mexican actor (b. 1939)[316] January 12 Bonnie Guitar, American country singer-songwriter (b. 1923)[317] Jaime Rosenthal, Honduran politician (b. 1936)[318] January 13 – Phil Masinga, South African footballer (b. 1969)[319] January 14 – Paweł Adamowicz, Polish politician (b. 1965)[320] January 15 – Carol Channing, American actress (b. 1921)[321] January 17 Babiker Awadalla, 8th Prime Minister of Sudan (b. 1917)[322] Windsor Davies, Welsh actor (b. 1930)[323] Mary Oliver, American poet (b. 1935)[324] January 19 Nathan Glazer, American sociologist (b. 1923)[325] Henry Sy, Chinese-Filipino business magnate (b. 1924)[326] January 20 Tibor Baranski, Hungarian-American educator (b. 1922)[327] Andrew G. Vajna, Hungarian-American film producer (b. 1944)[328] January 21 Kaye Ballard, American actress (b. 1925)[329] Henri, Count of Paris, Head of the House of Orléans (b. 1933)[330] Emiliano Sala, Argentine footballer (b. 1990)[331] January 23 Jonas Mekas, Lithuanian-born American filmmaker, poet, and artist (b. 1922)[332] Oliver Mtukudzi, Zimbabwean musician, businessman, and philanthropist (b. 1952)[333] January 24 Fernando Sebastián Aguilar, Spanish cardinal (b. 1929)[334] Rosemary Bryant Mariner, American naval aviator (b. 1953)[335] January 25 Florence Knoll, American architect and furniture designer (b. 1917)[336] Dušan Makavejev, Serbian film director (b. 1932)[337] Krishna Sobti, Indian Hindi-language fiction writer and essayist (b. 1925)[338] January 26 Jean Guillou, French composer, organist, and pianist (b. 1930)[339] Michel Legrand, French composer (b. 1932)[340] January 27 – Yvonne Clark, American engineer (b. 1929)[341] January 28 Humberto Akʼabal, Guatemalan K’iche’ Maya poet (b. 1952)[342] Susan Hiller, American artist (b. 1940)[343] January 29 – James Ingram, American R&B musician (b. 1952)[344] January 30 – Dick Miller, American actor (b. 1928)[345] February[edit] Main article: Deaths in February 2019
Julie Adams
Albert Finney
Bruno Ganz
Karl Lagerfeld
Peter Tork
André Previn February 2 – Carol Emshwiller, American author (b. 1921)[346] February 3 Julie Adams, American actress (b. 1926)[347] Detsl, Russian musician (b. 1983)[348] Kristoff St. John, American actor (b. 1966)[349] February 4 Matti Nykänen, Finnish Olympic-winning ski jumper and singer (b. 1963)[350] Leonie Ossowski, German writer (b. 1925)[351] Izzy Young, American-Swedish folklorist and author (b. 1928)[352] February 6 Manfred Eigen, German Nobel Prize winning biophysical chemist (b. 1927)[353] Rosamunde Pilcher, British author (b. 1924)[354] February 7 Albert Finney, English actor (b. 1936)[355] Jan Olszewski, 3rd Prime Minister of Poland (b. 1930)[356] Frank Robinson, American baseball player, coach, and manager (b. 1935)[357] February 8 – Walter Munk, Austrian-American oceanographer (b. 1917)[358] February 9 Shelley Lubben, American author, activist, singer, and pornographic actress (b. 1968)[359] Maximilian Reinelt, German rower and doctor (b. 1988)[360] Tomi Ungerer, French illustrator (b. 1931)[361] Patricia Nell Warren, American novelist, poet, and journalist (b. 1936)[362] February 10 Carmen Argenziano, American actor (b. 1943)[363] Jan-Michael Vincent, American actor (b. 1945)[364] February 11 – Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, Afghani politician (b. 1925)[365] February 12 Betty Ballantine, British-born American book publisher (b. 1919)[366] Gordon Banks, English footballer (b. 1937)[367] Pedro Morales, Puerto Rican professional wrestler (b. 1942)[368] February 13 – Idriz Ajeti, Kosovar Albanologist (b. 1917) February 14 – Andrea Levy, English novelist (b. 1956) February 15 – Lee Radziwill, American socialite (b. 1933) February 16 Bruno Ganz, Swiss actor (b. 1941)[369] Li Rui, Chinese politician, historian and dissident (b. 1917)[370] February 17 – Šaban Šaulić, Serbian folk singer (b. 1951) February 18 Wallace Smith Broecker, American geophysicist (b. 1931)[371] Alessandro Mendini, Italian architect and designer (b. 1931)[372] Bob Van Der Veken, Belgian actor (b. 1928)[373] Peter Wells, New Zealand writer and filmmaker (b. 1950)[374] February 19 – Karl Lagerfeld, German fashion designer (b. 1933)[375] February 20 – Dominick Argento, American composer (b. 1927)[376] February 21 Stanley Donen, American film director (b. 1924)[377] Peter Tork, American musician and actor (b. 1942)[378] Hilde Zadek, German operatic soprano (b. 1917)[379] February 22 Brody Stevens, American comedian and actor (b. 1970)[380] Morgan Woodward, American actor (b. 1925)[381] February 23 – Katherine Helmond, American actress (b. 1929)[382] February 24 Antoine Gizenga, 21st Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (b. 1925)[383] Donald Keene, American-born Japanese scholar, historian, and writer (b. 1922)[384] February 25 – Waldo Machado, Brazilian footballer (b. 1934)[385] February 26 – Christian Bach, Argentine-Mexican actress and producer (b. 1959)[386] February 27 – France-Albert René, Seychellois politician, 2nd President of Seychelles (b. 1935)[387] February 28 – André Previn, German-American pianist, conductor and composer (b. 1929)[388] March[edit] Main article: Deaths in March 2019
Zhores Alferov
Keith Flint
Luke Perry
Vladimir Etush
Dick Dale
Scott Walker
Agnès Varda March 1 Zhores Alferov, Soviet and Russian Nobel physicist (b. 1930)[389] Kumar Bhattacharyya, British-Indian engineer, educator, and government advisor (b. 1940)[390] Eusebio Pedroza, Panamanian boxer (b. 1956)[391] Kevin Roche, Irish-born American architect (b. 1922)[392] March 2 Yannis Behrakis, Greek photojournalist (b. 1960)[393] Med Hondo, Mauritanian film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor (b. 1936)[394] March 4 King Kong Bundy, American professional wrestler (b. 1957)[395] Juan Corona, Mexican serial killer (b. 1934)[396] Keith Flint, English musician, singer, and dancer (b. 1969)[397] Klaus Kinkel, German politician (b. 1936)[398] Ted Lindsay, Canadian professional ice hockey player (b. 1925)[399] Luke Perry, American actor (b. 1966)[400] March 5 – Jacques Loussier, French pianist and composer (b. 1934)[401] March 6 José Pedro Pérez-Llorca, Spanish politician and diplomat (b. 1940)[402] Carolee Schneemann, American visual artist (b. 1939)[403] March 7 – Guillaume Faye, French journalist and writer (b. 1949)[404] March 8 – Michael Gielen, Austrian conductor and composer (b. 1927)[405] March 9 Bernard Binlin Dadié, Ivorian novelist and playwright (b. 1916)[406] Vladimir Etush, Soviet and Russian actor (b. 1922)[407] March 10 İrsen Küçük, 6th Prime Minister of Northern Cyprus (b. 1940)[408] Victims of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 plane crash: Pius Adesanmi, Nigerian-Canadian professor and writer (b. 1972)[409] Sebastiano Tusa, Italian archaeologist and politician (b. 1952)[410] March 11 – Hal Blaine, American drummer (b. 1929)[411] March 13 – Andrea Pollack, German swimmer (b. 1961)[412] March 14 Godfried Danneels, Belgian cardinal (b. 1933)[413] Charlie Whiting, British motorsports director (b. 1952)[414] March 15 W. S. Merwin, American poet (b. 1927)[415] Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Louly, 3rd Head of State of Mauritania (b. 1943)[416] March 16 Dick Dale, American guitarist and surf music pioneer (b. 1937)[417] Barbara Hammer, American filmmaker (b. 1939)[418] Alan Krueger, American economist (b. 1960)[419] March 17 – Tunku Puan Zanariah, Malaysian royal, Raja Permaisuri Agong (b. 1940)[420] March 19 – Marlen Khutsiev, Georgian-born Soviet and Russian filmmaker (b. 1925)[421] March 20 Donald Kalpokas, 2nd Prime Minister of Vanuatu (b. 1943)[422] Mary Warnock, British philosopher (b. 1924)[423] March 22 Frans Andriessen, Dutch politician (b. 1929)[424] Scott Walker, American-born British singer-songwriter (b. 1943)[425] March 23 Larry Cohen, American film director and screenwriter (b. 1936)[426] Rafi Eitan, Israeli intelligence officer and politician (b. 1926)[427] March 24 Nancy Gates, American actress (b. 1926)[428] Fred Malek, American business executive, political advisor and philanthropist (b. 1936)[429] March 27 Valery Bykovsky, Soviet and Russian cosmonaut (b. 1934)[430] Bruce Yardley, Australian cricketer (b. 1947)[431] March 29 – Agnès Varda, Belgian-born French filmmaker (b. 1928)[432] March 31 – Nipsey Hussle, American rapper (b. 1985)[433] April[edit] Main article: Deaths in April 2019
David J. Thouless
Bibi Andersson
Alan García
Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg
Jean-Pierre Marielle
Peter Mayhew April 1 Vonda N. McIntyre, American science fiction author (b. 1948)[434] Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio, Spanish writer (b. 1927)[435] April 2 – Jamshid Mashayekhi, Iranian actor (b. 1934)[436] April 4 – Georgiy Daneliya, Soviet and Russian film director and screenwriter (b. 1930)[437] April 5 Anandavally, Indian actress (b. 1952)[438] Sydney Brenner, South African Nobel biologist (b. 1927)[439] Gianfranco Leoncini, Italian footballer (b. 1939)[440] April 6 – David J. Thouless, British Nobel physicist (b. 1934)[441] April 7 Seymour Cassel, American actor (b. 1935)[442] Cho Yang-ho, South Korean businessman (b. 1949)[443] April 9 Elwyn Berlekamp, American mathematician (b. 1940)[444] Charles Van Doren, American writer and editor (b. 1926)[445] April 10 Earl Thomas Conley, American singer-songwriter (b. 1941)[446] Estrella Zeledón Lizano, Costa Rican politician and First Lady of Costa Rica (b. 1929)[447] April 12 Georgia Engel, American actress (b. 1948)[448] Tommy Smith, English footballer (b. 1945)[449] April 13 Tony Buzan, English author and educational consultant (b. 1942)[450] Neus Català, Spanish political activist and Holocaust survivor (b. 1915)[451] Paul Greengard, American Nobel neuroscientist (b. 1925)[452] Lydia Wideman, Finnish cross-country skier (b. 1920)[453] Yvette Williams, New Zealand track-and-field athlete (b. 1929)[454] April 14 Bibi Andersson, Swedish actress (b. 1935)[455] Mirjana Marković, Serbian politician and First Lady of Yugoslavia (b. 1942)[456] Gene Wolfe, American science fiction and fantasy writer (b. 1931)[457] April 16 – Fay McKenzie, American actress and singer (b. 1918)[458] April 17 – Alan García, 61st and 64th President of Peru (b. 1949)[459][460] April 18 – Lyra McKee, Northern Irish journalist (b. 1990)[461] April 19 – Patrick Sercu, Belgian cyclist (b. 1944)[462] April 20 – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Iranian artist (b. 1922)[463] April 21 – Ken Kercheval, American actor (b. 1935)[464] April 22 Lê Đức Anh, Vietnamese politician, 4th President of Vietnam (b. 1920)[465] Billy McNeill, Scottish footballer and manager (b. 1940)[466] April 23 Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg (b. 1921)[467] David Winters, English-American actor, choreographer, and director (b. 1939)[468] April 24 – Jean-Pierre Marielle, French actor (b. 1932)[469] April 25 – John Havlicek, American basketball player (b. 1940)[470] April 26 – Ellen Schwiers, German actress (b. 1930)[471] April 27 – Negasso Gidada, Ethiopian politician, 4th President of Ethiopia (b. 1943)[472] April 28 – John Singleton, American film director, screenwriter and producer (b. 1968)[473] April 29 Les Murray, Australian poet (b. 1938)[474] Josef Šural, Czech footballer (b. 1990)[475] April 30 Anémone, French actress (b. 1950)[476] Beth Carvalho, Brazilian samba singer (b. 1946)[477] Peter Mayhew, English-American actor (b. 1944) May[edit] Main article: Deaths in May 2019
Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba
Doris Day
Bob Hawke
Murray Gell-Mann
Prem Tinsulanonda May 2 Red Kelly, Canadian professional ice hockey player and coach (b. 1927)[479] Ali Mroudjaé, 9th Prime Minister of the Comoros (b. 1939)[480] May 3 – Goro Shimura, Japanese mathematician (b. 1930)[481] May 5 – Norma Miller, American dancer, actress and author (b. 1919)[482] May 6 John Lukacs, Hungarian-American historian (b. 1924)[483] Seymour Nurse, Barbadian cricketer (b. 1933)[484] May 7 – Jean Vanier, Canadian Catholic philosopher (b. 1928)[485] May 8 Sprent Dabwido, 13th President of Nauru (b. 1972)[486] Yevgeny Krylatov, Soviet and Russian film composer (b. 1934)[487] May 9 – Alvin Sargent, American screenwriter (b. 1927)[488] May 10 – Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, Spanish politician (b. 1951)[489] May 11 Peggy Lipton, American actress and model (b. 1946)[490] Silver King, Mexican professional wrestler (b. 1968)[491] May 12 Machiko KyW
Posted by UK & Beyond on 2014-06-15 23:37:36
Tagged: , Simply Aroma , Wine , Glass , Aroma , Graphic , French , Pepper , Smell Taste Receptors , holding a wine glass , simply , Wine Poster , Brexit Wine , VOTE REMAIN IN , Trump , Clinton , Boris Johnson , Volatile , Volatility , Ester , Esters , Palatte , Smell Receptors , Neverendum , Clinton Win , Clinton Victory , Russian Hacking Trump Victory
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North Cornwall Coast
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2019 (MMXIX) is the current year, and is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2019th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 19th year of the 3rd millennium, the 19th year of the 21st century, and the 10th and last year of the 2010s decade.
Skip to topSkip to bottom 2019 has been assigned as International Year of the Periodic Table of Chemical Elements by the United Nations General Assembly[1] given that it coincides with the 150th anniversary of its creation by Dmitri Mendeleev in 1869.
Events
January
January 1 All works published in 1923 except sound recordings (see 2022 scheduled events) enter the public domain in the United States, the first works to do so since the passage of the 1998 Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.[2] Jair Bolsonaro begins his four-year term as President of Brazil. Unmanned space probe New Horizons makes a close approach of the Kuiper belt object (KBO) 486958 Arrokoth at 05:33 UTC. Qatar withdraws from OPEC. Same-sex marriage becomes legal in Austria.[3] January 2 – Great Belt Bridge rail accident: A DSB express passenger train is hit by a semi-trailer from a passing cargo train on the western bridge of the Great Belt Fixed Link in Denmark, killing eight people and making it the deadliest rail accident in the country since 1988.[4] January 3 – Chinese probe Chang’e 4 becomes the first human-made object to land on the far side of the Moon.[5] January 5 – Bartholomew I of Constantinople issues a formal decree granting independence to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine from the Russian Orthodox Church.[6] January 6 – Muhammad V of Kelantan abdicates the federal throne as the 15th monarch of Malaysia, making him the first Malaysian monarch to do so.[7] January 7 – A faction of the Armed Forces of Gabon announces a coup d’état. Gabon’s government later declares that it has reasserted control. January 10 – Venezuela enters a constitutional crisis as Juan Guaidó and the National Assembly declare incumbent President Nicolás Maduro "illegitimate" and start the process of attempting to remove him.[8] January 15 – Nairobi DusitD2 complex attack: A terrorist attack at an upscale hotel and office complex in Nairobi, Kenya, kills 21 people (including 5 attackers) and injures 28 more.[9] January 17 – A vehicle-bound suicide bomb attack in Bogotá, Colombia, kills 22 people and injures 68 others, making it the deadliest attack on the Colombian capital since 2003.[10] January 18 – Fuel thieves rupture a pipeline in Tlahuelilpan, Mexico, and a subsequent explosion kills at least 137 people and injures dozens more.[11] January 19 – A magnitude 6.7 earthquake hits Tongoy, Coquimbo Region in Chile, causing two deaths and as many as 200,000 people left without power.[12] Despite its moderate magnitude, since it was an intraplate earthquake, it caused some serious damage in La Serena and nearby cities. January 21 – 2019 Piper PA-46 Malibu crash: An aircraft carrying new Cardiff City F.C. footballer Emiliano Sala and pilot David Ibbotson en route from Nantes, France, to Cardiff, Wales, goes missing over the English Channel. Sala’s body is recovered on February 7.[13] January 23 – 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Thousands of people protest in favor of disputed interim President Juan Guaidó. Several people are killed, and President Maduro severs diplomatic ties with the United States.[14] January 25 – A mine tailings dam breaks in the Brazilian city of Brumadinho, in the state of Minas Gerais. At least 248 people are killed, with 22 missing.[15] January 27 – Two bombs at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Jolo, Philippines, kill at least 20 people and leave more than 100 others injured.[16] January 28 – The U.S. Justice Department charges Chinese tech firm Huawei with multiple counts of fraud, raising U.S.–China tensions.[17] February[edit] February 1 – U.S. President Donald Trump confirms that the U.S. will leave the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty of 1987.[18] The next day, Russia follows suit with suspension of its obligations to the treaty.[19] February 3 – Pope Francis arrives in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, becoming the first pope to visit the Arabian Peninsula.[20] February 5 – The Taliban kills at least 47 people in attacks while Afghan–Taliban peace talks are taking place in Moscow. 12 others are injured.[21] February 6 – The Freedom House NGO states that Hungary was no longer a free country, making it the first such country in the European Union to be so.[22] February 7 – 2019 Haitian protests: Anti-government protests demanding the resignation of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse begin in several cities across the country.[23] February 12 – The Republic of Macedonia renames itself the Republic of North Macedonia, ending a decades-old dispute with Greece, paving the way for its integration into NATO and the European Union.[24] February 13 – A suicide bomb attack on a vehicle kills at least 27 Revolutionary Guards in southeastern Iran.[25] It is one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Iran in years.[26] February 14 – A suicide bomb attack on a vehicle convoy in Indian-administered Kashmir kills at least 40 Indian security personnel, making it the deadliest attack on India’s security personnel in Kashmir in three decades.[27] February 20 – A major fire in Dhaka, Bangladesh kills at least 78 people.[28] February 21 – SpaceIL launches the Beresheet probe, the world’s first privately financed mission to the Moon.[29][30] February 23 2019 Nigerian general election, for the President; all 360 seats in the House of Representatives and all 110 seats in the Senate. 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: President Maduro severs diplomatic ties with Colombia as humanitarian aid attempts to enter the country across the border.[31] February 26–27 – The Indian Air Force launches airstrikes on purported militant camps in Balakot, Pakistan; according to Indian claims, "a very large number of … terrorists, trainers, senior commanders and groups of jihadis" were killed,[32] although Pakistan denied the claims[33] and a number of neutral sources suggest that this was not the case.[34][35] The following day, Pakistan retaliated, leading to the shooting down of an Indian MiG-21 fighter, whose pilot was repatriated on March 1.[36] The incidents led to the 2019 India–Pakistan standoff. February 27 – Ramses Station rail disaster: A train smashes into a barrier inside Ramses Station in Cairo, Egypt, causing an explosion and a fire, killing 25 people and injuring 40 others.[37] February 27–28 – The 2019 North Korea–United States summit is held in Hanoi, Vietnam. It is the second summit between United States President Donald Trump and the North Korean Chairman Kim Jong-un. March[edit] March 3 An unmanned demonstration flight of the new crew capable version of the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, intended to carry American astronauts into space, achieves successful autonomous docking with the International Space Station.[38] The 2019 Estonian parliamentary election takes place, for all 101 seats in the Riigikogu.[39] March 5 – A second case of sustained remission from HIV is reported, ten years after the Berlin Patient.[40][41] March 6 – 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Venezuela expels German ambassador Daniel Kriener for his alleged meddling in internal affairs.[42] March 10 – Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302, a Boeing 737 MAX 8 bound for Nairobi, crashes shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa killing all 157 people on board.[43] All Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are subsequently grounded worldwide.[44] March 12 – Cargo ship Grande America sinks after it caught fire on March 10 in the Bay of Biscay, approximately 200 kilometres (120 mi) west of France, causing a 2,200-tonne oil spill.[45] March 13 March 2019 North American blizzard: A winter storm completes its explosive intensification over the Southern Rocky Mountains region, which began the day before, becoming a powerful "bomb cyclone" and triggering severe blizzard conditions across much of the Southwestern and Central United States.[46][47] Australian Cardinal George Pell is sentenced to six years in prison for sexually abusing two choirboys in 1996.[48] March 15 51 people are killed and 50 others injured in terrorist attacks on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand: Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre, both of which were the target of shootings by Australia-born Brenton Harrison Tarrant. It is the deadliest mass shooting and terrorist attack in New Zealand history and described by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as "one of New Zealand’s darkest days".[49] Subsequently, Facebook announced they had disabled 1.5 million videos of the gunman’s rampage.[50] Cyclone Idai makes landfall on Mozambique, causing at least 1,073 fatalities, as well as causing mass flooding and power outages in southern Africa.[51] March 19 Nursultan Nazarbayev resigns as President of Kazakhstan after 29 years in office and appoints Kassym-Jomart Tokayev as acting president.[52] Astana is renamed Nur-Sultan the following day in his honor.[53] American Karen Uhlenbeck is the first woman to win the Abel Prize for outstanding contributions to mathematics.[54][55] March 20 Europe’s antitrust regulators fine Google 1.49 billion euros ($1.7 billion) for freezing out rivals in the online advertising business. The ruling brings to nearly $10 billion the fines imposed against Google by the European Union.[56] Disney acquires the rights to 21st Century Fox leaving out a few assets to be spun-off to the newly formed Fox Corporation.[importance?] March 21 – A major explosion at a chemical plant in Xiangshui, Jiangsu, China, kills at least 78 people and injures more than 600 others. Its powerful impact registered as an artificial earthquake.[57] March 23 The final territory of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, located in Al-Baghuz Fawqani, Syria, is liberated.[58] An estimated 400,000 people march in central London in protest against Brexit.[59][60] March 24 The 2019 Thai general election takes place, for all 500 seats in the House of Representatives. A four-page summary of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report into U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign is published by the U.S. Attorney General William Barr. It concludes that there was no collusion with Russia – the basis of the investigation – but on the issue of obstruction of justice states: "While this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him".[61] March 26 – The European Parliament votes by 348 to 278 in favour of the EU Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market, which expands legal liability for websites and includes the controversial Article 13.[62][63] March 31 – Taiwan scrambles its fighter aircraft after two Chinese jets crossed a maritime border between the two nations. Just the day before, Japan had similarly scrambled its jets when the Chinese flew between two Japanese islands, Miyako and Okinawa.[64] April[edit] April 2 – Abdelaziz Bouteflika resigns as President of Algeria amid widespread protests, after nearly two decades in office.[65] April 4 – Second Libyan Civil War: The Libyan National Army (LNA) launches a surprise offensive in western Libya, moving units towards the Government of National Accord-held capital Tripoli and capturing Gharyan. The LNA says that the operation, ordered by General Khalifa Haftar, is aimed at "cleansing the western zone from terrorist groups".[66][67] April 9 – The April 2019 Israeli legislative election takes place, for all 120 seats in the Knesset. April 10 Scientists from the Event Horizon Telescope project announce the first ever image of a black hole, located in the centre of the M87 galaxy.[68][69] Fossil fragments found in the Callao Cave in the Philippines reveal the existence of the Homo luzonensis species of humans. The species is named after the island where it was discovered, Luzon.[70] April 11 WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange is arrested after seven years in Ecuador’s embassy in London.[71][72] Amid mass protests, Omar al-Bashir is deposed as President of Sudan in a coup d’état, after nearly 30 years in office.[73] The 2019 Indian general election begins, along with elections in six states. Counting takes place on 23 May.[74] April 15 – During Holy Week, a major fire engulfs Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, resulting in the roof and main spire collapsing.[75][76] April 16 – The Howse Peak avalanche kills three noted mountaineers: Austrians Hansjörg Auer and David Lama, and Canadian Jess Roskelley.[77] April 17 The 2019 Indonesian general election takes place; for the President, 575 seats in the People’s Representative Council, and 136 seats in the Regional Representative Council. At least 28 people are killed in a bus crash on the Portuguese island of Madeira.[78] April 18 The full 448-page report on the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 United States Presidential Election (the Mueller Report) is released in redacted form.[79] NepaliSat-1 is launched. It is Nepal’s first ever research satellite to be sent into space.[80][81] April 21 A series of bomb attacks occur at eight locations in Sri Lanka, including three churches, four hotels and one housing complex in Colombo, on Easter Sunday, leaving 259 people dead and over 500 injured.[82][83][84][85] This is the first major terrorist attack in the country since the Sri Lankan Civil War ended in 2009.[86] Comedian Volodymyr Zelensky is elected President of Ukraine in a runoff election. Zelensky previously portrayed a fictional Ukrainian president in the television series Servant of the People.[87] April 25 – North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visits Russia to hold a series of summits with Russian leaders, including President Vladimir Putin.[88] April 26 – Avengers: Endgame is released in theaters, breaking many box-office records, including becoming the highest grossing movie of all time. April 28 The 2019 Spanish general election takes place, for all 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of the 266) seats in the Senate. The PSOE, under Pedro Sánchez, wins the most seats, but not an outright majority.[89] Victor Vescovo achieves the deepest dive of any human in history, as he reaches Challenger Deep within the Mariana Trench, at a depth of 10,928 m (35,853 ft).[90][91] April 29 – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the elusive leader of the Islamic State terrorist organization, appears in undated footage released by the group, his first appearance on video since 2014. In the video, he references the 2019 Sri Lanka Easter bombings, indicating it was filmed very recently.[92] April 30 Emperor Akihito of Japan abdicates from his throne, the first abdication by a Japanese monarch in almost two centuries. The abdication ends the Heisei era of Japan and ushers in the Reiwa era with new emperor Naruhito ascending the throne on 1 May.[93][94] 2019 Venezuelan presidential crisis: Venezuelan opposition leader and disputed interim President Juan Guaidó leads an attempted uprising against President Nicolás Maduro.[95] May[edit] May 1 King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand marries his personal bodyguard Suthida Tidjai – a commoner – in a surprise ceremony, making her queen consort of Thailand.[96] Russian President Vladimir Putin signs into law a controversial "sovereign internet" bill that allows Russian authorities to better monitor internet routing and to steer Russian internet traffic away from foreign servers. Proponents of the bill say it ensures Russian internet security and decreases dependence on foreign servers while critics argue it gives new censorship powers to the government and is a part of a global trend of cyber-balkanization.[97] May 3 – The number of deaths from the Kivu Ebola outbreak exceeds 1,000. It is the second deadliest Ebola outbreak in history, only surpassed by the West African Ebola virus epidemic of 2013–2016.[98] May 3–6 – May 2019 Gaza–Israel clashes: The Gaza–Israel conflict escalates after the Israeli military launches airstrikes into Gaza killing more than 20 Palestinians including a pregnant woman and a toddler following the injury of two soldiers from Gazan sniper fire. May 4–6 – Coronation of King Vajiralongkorn of Thailand. May 5 – Aeroflot Flight 1492 crash-lands and bursts into flames at Sheremetyevo International Airport, Moscow, killing 41 of the 78 people on board.[99] May 6 In its first report since 2005, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) warns that biodiversity loss is "accelerating", with over a million species now threatened with extinction; the decline of the natural living world is "unprecedented" and largely a result of human actions, according to the report.[100][101] Syrian Civil War: The Syrian Army launches a major ground offensive against one of the last rebel strongholds in the country.[102] May 8 – A British teenager, Isabelle Holdaway, 17, is reported to be the first patient ever to receive a genetically modified phage therapy to treat a drug-resistant infection.[103][104] May 10 – Amid ongoing negotiations, the United States’ 25 percent tariff hike on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports takes effect, escalating tensions between the two nations in the ongoing China–United States trade war.[105] May 12 – May 2019 Gulf of Oman incident: Four commercial ships, including two Saudi Aramco oil tankers, are damaged near the port of Fujairah in the Gulf of Oman.[106] The United Arab Emirates claims the incident was a "sabotage attack", while an early United States assessment reportedly blames Iran for the attack. The incident occurs during a time of regional tensions between the U.S. and Iran, with the U.S. just weeks prior deploying strategic bombers, a carrier strike group and other military assets to the Persian Gulf following intelligence reports of an alleged plot by Iran to attack U.S. forces in the region.[107] May 13 The 2019 Philippine general election takes place, for all 297 seats in the House of Representatives and 12 seats in the Senate. Prosecutors in Sweden reopen the rape allegation investigation against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Swedish prosecutors mention their intent to seek extradition of Assange from the United Kingdom after he has served his 50-week prison sentence for skipping bail.[108] May 14–18 – The Eurovision Song Contest 2019 takes place in Tel Aviv, Israel, and is won by Dutch entrant Duncan Laurence with the song "Arcade". May 17 Taiwan’s parliament becomes the first in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage.[109] Ibiza affair: A corruption scandal involving the Vice-Chancellor of Austria Heinz-Christian Strache and deputy leader of the Freedom Party Johann Gudenus offering to fix state contracts with a woman posing as the niece of a Russian oligarch at a 2017 meeting in Spain leads to the collapse of the coalition government and calls for snap elections.[110] May 18 – 2019 Australian federal election: Scott Morrison’s Liberal/National Coalition Government is narrowly re-elected,[111] defeating the Labor Party led by Bill Shorten. May 19 Eleven people are killed in a shooting at a bar in Belém, Brazil.[112] China–United States trade war: Google pulls Android update support for Huawei phones, as well as the Google Play Store and Gmail apps, after the Chinese technology company was blacklisted by the United States.[113] May 20 – The redefinition of the SI system of measurement adopted by the majority of countries in the world takes effect.[114] May 23–26 – The 2019 European Parliament election takes place. The election has a 51 percent voter turnout, the highest since the first direct elections in 1979. May 23 2019 Indian general election: Narendra Modi secures a landslide win, with his party BJP alone gaining 303 of the 543 seats in parliament, and his political alliance winning 353 seats of the 543.[115][116][117] Botswana lifts its five-year prohibition on elephant hunting.[118] May 24 British Prime Minister Theresa May announces her resignation as Conservative leader, effective June 7, 2019. A prison riot in Acarigua, Venezuela, leaves 29 prisoners dead and 19 guards injured.[119] May 26–27 – Amazonas prison massacres: More than 50 prisoners are killed in a series of riots at four different prisons in Amazonas, Brazil.[120] May 27 – U.S. President Donald Trump, during an official state visit to Japan, is the first foreign leader to meet with Japanese emperor Naruhito.[121] May 29 Former European Court of Justice judge Egils Levits is elected the 10th President of Latvia. Sinking of Hableány: The Hableány, a sightseeing river cruise ship on the Danube in Budapest, Hungary, collides with another vessel and sinks with two Hungarian crew members and 33 South Korean tourists on board. At least 25 people have been found dead and 3 others remain missing.[122] Less than two months after the April 9 Israeli legislative elections, the Israeli Knesset dissolves itself and votes to hold new elections in September 17, after Benjamin Netanyahu failed to assemble a coalition government within the allotted time.[123] May 30 – July 14 – The 2019 Cricket World Cup is held in England and Wales, and is won by England. May 30 – South Korean newspaper The Chosun Ilbo reports that North Korea executed nuclear envoy Kim Hyok-chol and four other diplomats in March after the failed February Hanoi summit with the United States. The newspaper also reports that Kim Yong-chol, a top aide to Kim Jong-un, was sentenced to hard labor during the purge.[124] June[edit] June 2 Nearly five years after abdication, King Juan Carlos I of Spain retires from public life.[125] 2019 San Marino referendum: Sammarinese voters vote to end discrimination based on sexual orientation and initiate a popular legislative initiative for the reform of the electoral system.[126] June 3 – Khartoum massacre: More than 100 people are killed when Sudanese troops and Janjaweed militiamen storm and open fire on a protest camp outside of a military headquarters in Khartoum, Sudan.[127] June 3–5 – U.S. President Donald Trump makes a state visit to the United Kingdom, meeting with Queen Elizabeth II and outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May. It is the first official state visit to the U.K. by a sitting U.S. president since 2011. Trump also attends D-Day commemorative ceremonies.[128] June 5–8 – Chinese President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to Russia, where he also attends the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.[129] June 5 – The 2019 Danish general election takes place, for all 179 seats in the Folketing. June 6 2018–19 Sudanese protests: The African Union suspends Sudan’s membership "with immediate effect" after the Khartoum massacre.[130] Following results from the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election, a new government is formed consisting of 58 percent women.[131] June 7 – British Prime Minister Theresa May resigns as leader of the Conservative Party. June 7 – July 7 – The 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup is held in France and is won by the United States. June 9 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Over 1 million people in Hong Kong protest against proposed legislation regarding extradition to China. It is the largest protest in Hong Kong since the 1997 handover.[132] A large explosive eruption of Mount Sinabung in Indonesia sends a 7,000-meter ash column, generating a pyroclastic flow 3–3.5 kilometers long towards the south and southeast of the mountain.[133][134] June 11 – Botswana decriminalizes homosexuality.[135] June 12 The Supreme Court of Ecuador rules in favor of same-sex marriage, making it legal throughout the country.[136] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: The Hong Kong government and police controversially declare that the protest has "turned into a riot".[137][138][139] June 13 – June 2019 Gulf of Oman incident: Two oil tankers are attacked near the Strait of Hormuz while transiting the Gulf of Oman amid heightened tension between Iran and the United States, with the latter blaming the former for the incident.[140] June 14 – Jane Goodall, British primatologist, is awarded the 2019 Luxembourg Prize for Outstanding Environmental Peace.[141][importance?][unreliable source?] June 15 – 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong announces it will indefinitely suspend the controversial extradition bill, but protests continue, this time calling for the total withdrawal of the bill and the resignation of Chief Executive Carrie Lam.[142] June 16 – A large-scale power outage hits Argentina, Uruguay and parts of Paraguay, affecting nearly 50 million people.[143] June 17 – A triple suicide blast kills 30 and injures 40 in Borno, Nigeria, at a hall where people were watching a football match. June 18 – The U.S. sends an additional 1,000 troops to the Middle East as tensions build with Iran.[144] June 19 – Four men are charged with murdering the 298 passengers and crew of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, the airliner shot down while flying over Ukraine in July 2014.[145] June 20–21 – Chinese President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to North Korea. It is his first visit to the country as president and the first visit to North Korea by a Chinese leader since Hu Jintao’s visit 14 years prior.[146] June 20 – June 2019 Iranian shoot-down of American drone: Iran shoots down a United States RQ-4 Global Hawk surveillance drone over the Strait of Hormuz after claiming it violated their airspace. The U.S. claims it was shot down in international airspace in an "unprovoked attack".[147] June 22 – 2019 Amhara Region coup d’état attempt: In the Amhara Region of Ethiopia, regional president Ambachew Mekonnen and national-military chief of staff Se’are Mekonnen are assassinated.[148] June 27 – Angara Airlines Flight 200 overruns the runway during landing and collides with a building, killing the captain and flight engineer, and injuring a further 22 people. Only 45 people survive the crash at Nizhneangarsk Airport, Russia.[149] June 30 – During a trilateral gathering at the Panmunjom Truce Village between South Korean President Moon Jae-in, North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un and United States President Donald Trump, Trump becomes the first sitting U.S. president to cross the Korean Demilitarized Zone and enter North Korea. Trump and Kim also agree to restart stalled denuclearization negotiations.[150] July[edit] July – The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reports, on August 15, that July 2019 was the hottest month on record globally, at 0.95 °C (1.71 °F) above the 20th-century average.[151][152][153] July 1 Japan resumes commercial whaling after a 30-year moratorium, following its withdrawal from the International Whaling Commission.[154][155] Japan announces tightening high-tech exports to South Korea, thus begin the trade dispute between the two countries.[156] The International Atomic Energy Agency confirms that Iran has breached the limit on its stockpile of enriched uranium.[157] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: During the annual July 1 protests that mark the anniversary of the British handover of the city to China, a group of a few hundred protesters stormed the Hong Kong legislature, defacing various portraits and destroying furniture before being dispersed by police using tear gas.[158] A fire on the Russian deep-diving submarine Losharik kills 14 crew members. Submarine commander Denis Dolonsky was among those killed.[159] July 2 – A total solar eclipse occurs over South America. It is the 58th solar eclipse from Saros cycle 127.[160][161] July 3 – 2019 Tajoura migrant center airstrike: An airstrike by Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army hits the Tajoura Detention Center outside Tripoli, Libya, while hundreds of people are inside the facility, killing at least 53 of them and injures 130 others.[162] July 7 – The 2019 Greek legislative election takes place. Leader of the Opposition Kyriakos Mitsotakis, from New Democracy, wins the election and is sworn in Prime Minister as left-wing incumbent Alexis Tsipras falls to second place.[163] July 10 – The last Volkswagen Beetle rolls off the line in Puebla, Mexico. The last of 5,961 "Special Edition" cars will be exhibited in a museum.[164] July 12 – Asasey Hotel attack: A car bomb and a gun attack kill at least 26 people, including two prominent journalists and nine foreigners, in Kismayo, Somalia. Islamist group al-Shabaab claims responsibility.[165] July 13 – Hurricane Barry strikes the Gulf Coast, killing one and causing over $500 million (2019 USD) in damages. July 16 – The European Parliament elects Ursula von der Leyen as the new President of the European Commission. Succeeding Jean-Claude Juncker, she will be sworn in on December 1, 2019. She is the first female to be elected to this office in EU history.[166][167] July 17 Joaquín "El Chapo" Guzmán, former head of the Sinaloa Cartel, which became the biggest supplier of drugs to the U.S., is sentenced to life in prison plus 30 years.[168] The World Health Organization (WHO) declares the Kivu Ebola epidemic to be a public health emergency of international concern.[169] July 18 – At least 35 people are killed and more than 30 others injured after an arson attack at an animation company in Kyoto, Japan.[170] It is one of the deadliest massacres in the country’s history since the end of World War II and the deadliest building fire in the country in 18 years, since the Myojo 56 building fire in 2001.[171] July 19 – The Iranian Navy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps captures British tanker Stena Impero and temporarily seizes British-operated and Liberian-flagged tanker Mesdar in the Persian Gulf. The British Foreign Secretary, Jeremy Hunt, warns there will be "serious consequences" if Iran does not release the tanker.[172][173][174] July 24 – Boris Johnson becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom after defeating Jeremy Hunt in a leadership contest, succeeding Theresa May.[175] July 26 – August 11 – The 2019 Pan American Games are held in Lima, Peru. July 30 – India bans triple talaq.[176] August[edit] August 1 – Danish polar research institution Polar Portal reports a large spike in Greenland ice loss, with 11 billion tons melted in one day and 197 gigatonnes during the month of July.[177] August 2 The United States officially withdraws from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty established with Russia in 1987.[178] 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute: Japan announces the removal of South Korea from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on August 28.[179] August 3 – A mass shooting at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, United States, leaves 22 people dead and 24 others injured.[180] August 4 2019 Cairo bombing: A car crashes into three other cars causing an explosion outside the National Cancer Institute Egypt in Cairo, Egypt, killing at least 20 people and injuring 47 others.[181] 2019 Dayton shooting: Ten people, including the perpetrator, are killed and 27 others injured in a mass shooting in Dayton, Ohio, United States, just 13 hours after the mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.[182] August 5 Revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir: India revokes the part of its constitution that gives Indian-administered Kashmir special status in an unprecedented move.[183][184] 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Amid ongoing protests, Hong Kong is hit by the first general strikes of their kind since 1967.[185] August 7 – The Singapore Convention on Mediation, also known as the UN Convention on International Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation, comes into effect with 46 countries ratifying it. States that have ratified the treaty will have to ensure that international commercial settlement agreements are enforced by their courts.[186] August 8 – Nyonoksa radiation accident: Reports indicate that there may have been a nuclear explosion at the Nyonoksa weapons-testing site in Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia. At least five people were killed and three others injured in the blast, with radiation levels in Severodvinsk, 29 miles (47 km) away from the site, being 20 times above normal levels temporarily.[187] August 10 Morogoro tanker explosion: A fuel tanker truck explodes in Morogoro, Tanzania, killing at least 89 people and injuring dozens more.[188][189] 32 are killed and 1,000,000 evacuated as Typhoon Lekima makes landfall in Zhejiang, China. Earlier it had caused flooding in the Philippines.[190] August 10–25 – 2019 Canary Islands wildfires: A number of forest fires break out in the Canary Islands of Gran Canaria, Tenerife and Lanzarote. The fires on the island of Gran Canaria were the most severe, resulting in the loss of large areas of the island’s forests and leading to the evacuation of thousands of residents from a number of towns and villages.[191][192] August 11 – 2019 Indian floods: At least 114 people, including 57 in Kerala, 30 in Karnataka and 27 in Maharashtra, are reported to have died in monsoon-related floods in India. At least 227 died across India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Pakistan.[193] August 12 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong International Airport is closed due to protests.[194] 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute: South Korea announces the removal of Japan from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on September 18.[195][196][197] The Trump administration announces it will delay its proposal for 10 percent tariffs slated to take effect from September 1 on certain consumer goods from China while exempting other products — less than two weeks after Trump announced the new proposed tariffs.[198] August 13 – The main yield curve for U.S. Treasury bonds inverts, as the yield rate for 2-year bonds rises higher than the yield rate for 10-year bonds.[199] August 14 – The Dow Jones plunges more than 500 points, due to concerns over the yield curve inversion.[200][201][202] August 15 – The European Central Bank shuts down PNB Banka after ruling it had become insolvent; this bank, previously called Norvik Banka, was Latvia’s sixth-largest lender, and was a critic of the Baltic country’s financial authorities.[203] August 18 – 100 activists, officials, and other concerned citizens in Iceland hold a funeral for Okjökull glacier, which has completely melted after once covering six square miles (15.5 km2).[204] August 19 – 2019 Papua protests erupt, mainly across Indonesian Papua, in response to an incident in Surabaya where a group of Papuan students were arrested for alleged disrespect of the Indonesian flag. In Jayapura, Sorong, Fakfak, Timika and Manokwari, protests turned violent, with various private buildings and public facilities being damaged or burned. The protests and unrest were described by Reuters as "the most serious civil unrest in years over perceived racial and ethnic discrimination."[205] August 21 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires: Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE) reports fires burning in the Amazon rainforest at a record rate, with more than 36,000 in the year to date, while smoke reaches São Paulo more than 1,700 miles (2,700 km) away.[206] Giuseppe Conte offers his resignation as Prime Minister of Italy in order to avoid a no-confidence motion.[207] August 23 – German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron describe the widespread Amazon fires as an international emergency, urging the matter to be discussed at the weekend’s G7 summit.[208][209] August 25 – 2019 Beirut drone crash: According to Lebanese officials, two Israeli drones attack Beirut, Lebanon. One crashed into the roof of the Hezbollah Media Center, about 45 minutes before the second exploded in the air and damaged the building.[210] It was the first such incident between Israel and Lebanon since the 2006 Lebanon War.[211] September[edit] September 1 – Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on The Bahamas, with sustained wind speeds of 185 mph.[212] 43 deaths are reported.[213] September 2 Sinking of MV Conception: 34 people are killed following a fire and subsequent sinking of a dive boat near Santa Cruz Island, California, United States.[214] It is the worst maritime disaster in California in more than 150 years.[215] An Iranian woman named Sahar Khodayari sets herself on fire after being arrested for attending a soccer game in Iran. She dies a week later.[216] September 4 – 2019 Hong Kong anti-extradition bill protests: Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam announces the official withdrawal of the controversial Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2019, and setting up of an independent study to probe social and economic inequality within the territory.[217] September 6 – Chandrayaan-2, India’s second lunar probe, was successful to put the orbit in lunar orbit, but the lander Vikram crashes into the surface of the moon.[218] September 7 Afghan peace process: U.S. President Donald Trump announces he "called off" planned peace talks with the Taliban at Camp David after they claimed responsibility for the September 2 and 5 bombings in Kabul which killed a U.S. soldier, among others.[219] Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov and 66 others are released in a prisoner exchange between Ukraine and Russia.[220] September 10 – The Parliament of the United Kingdom is prorogued amid unprecedented protests from opposition MPs, who hold up signs in the House of Commons and refuse to back the shutdown.[221] September 11 – Astronomers announce the detection of water in the atmosphere of exoplanet K2-18b, the first such discovery for an exoplanet in the habitable zone around a star.[222] September 14 – 2019 Abqaiq–Khurais attack: Two Saudi Aramco oil refineries in Abqaiq and Khurais, Saudi Arabia, are attacked by drones, resulting in fires. Houthi militants claim responsibility, saying that they used ten drones for the attack. Aramco’s oil exports and production are disrupted by five million barrels a day, close to half of the entire Saudi Arabian oil exports.[223] September 16 – A gas explosion in Koltsovo, Novosibirsk Oblast, Russia sets off a fire in a bioweapons plant that houses viruses including smallpox, ebola and anthrax.[224] September 17 – Israel holds legislative elections for the second time in 2019, after the 21st Knesset voted to dissolve itself due to Benjamin Netanyahu’s failure to cobble a parliamentary coalition. September 19 – 30 Afghan nut farmers are killed and 40 injured in a U.S. drone attack in Nangarhar Province.[225] September 20 – An international strike and protest led by young people and adults is held three days before the latest UN Climate Summit, to demand action be taken to address the climate crisis. The event is one of the largest climate mobilizations in history.[226][227] September 20 – November 2 – The 2019 Rugby Union World Cup is held in Japan; the South Africa Springboks defeat the England national rugby union team 32–12.[228] September 21 – U.S. President Donald Trump approves deployment of several hundred troops and military equipment to Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates following the September 14 attack on Saudi oil refineries.[229][230] Both Saudi Arabia and Iran vow to defend themselves.[231] September 22 – Nearly three weeks after Hurricane Dorian makes landfall on The Bahamas, the official death toll stands at 52 and 1,300 are reported missing. Rescuers report the widespread stench of rotting bodies in the rubble.[232] September 23 One of the largest and oldest travel firms, Thomas Cook, goes bankrupt as last-minute rescue negotiations fail, stranding 600,000 tourists worldwide.[233] Russia formally adopts the Paris climate agreement.[234] September 24 The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom unanimously rules that the September 2019 prorogation of Parliament was unlawful and void.[235] The Supreme Court of Spain unanimously rules in favour of the exhumation of the remains of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco from the Valle de los Caídos.[236] He was finally exhumed on 24 October, being re-inhumed in a private crypt with his wife.[237] U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi announces the start of a formal impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump.[238] September 27 – 500,000 people march in a climate change protest led by activist Greta Thunberg and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Montreal, Canada.[239] 4,000,000 go on strike around the world.[240] September 28 The 2019 Afghan presidential election takes place. Hurricane Lorenzo becomes the furthest northeast Category 5 hurricane on record.[241] September 30 – The Republic of Ireland promises to plant 440 million trees in twenty years to combat climate change.[242] October[edit] October 1 2019 Hong Kong protests: A protester is shot in the chest with a live round of ammunition and critically injured.[243][244] The Nanfang’ao Bridge, the only steel single-arch bridge in Taiwan, collapses, killing six people and injuring more than twenty others.[245] October 2 – 25 soldiers are killed and 60 missing following attacks on two army camps in Boulkessi and Mondoro, Mali.[246] October 3 Paris police headquarters stabbing: A man stabs five officers at the central police headquarters in Paris, France, killing four of them. The attacker, shot dead by other officers, was an administrative intelligence employee at the station.[247] The European Court of Justice rules that Facebook must take down a post about Austrian politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek. The post originated in Ireland and the court ruled that the post defamed and insulted the politician and must be removed all over the world.[248] European Commission spokesperson Daniel Rosario threatens retaliatory measures if the United States imposes a US$7.5-billion (approximately €6.8-billion) tariff on products such as olives, whiskey, wine, cheese, yogurt, and airplanes. The tariffs are scheduled to take place on October 18.[249] October 4 – 2019 Hong Kong protests: Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam and the Chief Executive in Council invokes the Emergency Regulations Ordinance and banning the face mask in public gatherings with immediate effect.[250] October 5 – 2019 Iraqi protests: 91 people are killed by police during a week of demonstrations in Iraq.[251][importance?] October 6 – The 2019 Portuguese legislative election takes place, for all 230 seats to the Assembly of the Republic. October 8 2019 Ecuadorian protests: The Government of Ecuador, headed by President Lenín Moreno, moves to Guayaquil as the Carondelet Palace in Quito is overtaken by protesters and chaos persists in the capital.[252] About 200 Extinction Rebellion activists block the gates of Leinster House (parliament) in the Republic of Ireland.[253] October 9 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria: President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan of Turkey announces a military invasion of north-eastern Syria, targeting the SDF and other Kurdish militias.[254] The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan and the U.N. Human Rights Office issue a report that says that U.S. bombings in Nimroz and Farah Province, Afghanistan, that killed 39 civilians are unlawful. The U.S. said the attacks were against drug labs that fund the Taliban.[255] October 12 – Typhoon Hagibis makes landfall in Japan, the biggest storm to hit the region in decades, with over seven million people urged to evacuate.[256] October 13 – The 2019 Polish parliamentary election takes place, for all 460 seats in the Sejm and all 100 seats in the Senate. October 14 Trial of Catalonia independence leaders: The Supreme Court of Spain sentences nine Catalan independence movement leaders to 9 to 13 years of prison for sedition and misuse of public funds. Three others are disqualified for 1 year and 8 months for disobedience. Violent protests erupt across Catalonia.[257][unreliable source?][258] A New York Times investigation reveals that Russian planes have bombed at least 50 hospitals and clinics in opposition-held Idlib, Syria.[259][unreliable source?] October 17 – Shootouts erupt in Culiacán, Mexico, after the arrest of El Chapo’s son, Ovidio Guzmán López, on an arrest warrant for drug dealing in the United States.[260] Eight people are killed and 56 convicts escape from prison; 7 are recaptured by October 18. Guzmán López is released in an effort to restore peace and to prevent more bloodshed.[261] October 19 – An estimated one million people march through London in a protest organised by People’s Vote, to demand a second referendum on Brexit.[262] October 20 – 2019 Bolivian general election: Evo Morales defeated his nearest rival by 10%, but after multiple allegations of irregularities the Organization of American States said it had found "clear manipulations" of Bolivia’s voting system; Morales called for a new election.[263] October 21 – The 2019 Canadian federal election takes place, for all 338 seats in the House of Commons of Canada. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party win a narrow victory to form a minority government. October 23 The bodies of 39 people are found in a truck container in Essex, England. A 25-year-old man from Northern Ireland is arrested on suspicion of murder.[264] Google announces that its 53-qubit "Sycamore" processor has achieved quantum supremacy.[265][266][267][268] IBM disputes the claim.[269] October 25 – Tourists visit the summit of Uluru (also known as Ayers Rock) for the last time, as a ban on climbing the famous rock in Australia’s Northern Territory comes into effect.[270] October 26 – The Amazon Catholic bishops synod proposes that married men be ordained as priests, which would reverse the Church’s centuries-old discipline of celibacy.[271] October 27 U.S. President Donald Trump announces that the leader of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was killed in a U.S. special forces operation. It was reported that al-Baghdadi detonated a suicide vest after being chased into a tunnel.[272][273] The 2019 Argentine general election takes place. Peronist candidate Alberto Fernández is elected President getting 48% of the vote, defeating President Mauricio Macri. Former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is elected Vice President. The 2019 Uruguayan general election takes place. October 30 Social media website Twitter bans all political advertising worldwide.[274] An earthquake of 6.6. Mw[importance?] rocks the Philippine island of Mindanao two days after an earthquake killed eight and left 12,000 people homeless.[275][unreliable source?] October 31 A fire destroys much of the 500-year-old Japanese Shuri Castle, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[276] A train catches fire near Rahim Yar Khan in Pakistan. The blaze, sparked by gas used by passengers cooking on board, kills at least 74 people.[277] Heavy rain and flooding leave 3 dead and 200,000 people are homeless in Beledweyne, Somalia. Meanwhile, 29 are dead and 29,000 homeless due to flooding in nearby Kenya.[278] November[edit] November 2 – Pirates take nine crew members from Norwegian ship MV Bonita, owned by J. J. Ugland, near Cotonou, Benin.[279] November 3 – The Archdiocese of Russian Orthodox churches in Western Europe officially reunited with the Russian Orthodox Church. November 4 LeBarón family massacre: Nine Americans are killed when Mexican gang members open fire on their vehicles while driving to a wedding about 70 miles (110 km) south of the Mexico–United States border.[280] Amnesty International alleges that Bangladesh killed 466 people in 2018 under the guise of an anti-drugs campaign in what appears to be a wave of extrajudicial executions.[281] The United States formally begins process to pull out of the Paris Agreement on climate change.[282] November 5 11,000 scientists from around the world publish a study in the journal BioScience, warning "clearly and unequivocally that planet Earth is facing a climate emergency".[283][284][285] Air pollution in parts of India hits record levels.[286] November 6 – 2019 Fada N’gourma attack: At least 37 people are killed and 60 others injured when gunmen attack a Canadian gold mining company convoy on a road in Burkina Faso.[287] November 7 – Former Congolese rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda is sentenced to 30 years in prison for war crimes and crimes against humanity, the longest sentence ever handed down by the International Criminal Court.[288] November 9 The Supreme Court of India awards a holy site in Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh to Hindus, rejecting a Muslim claim. The move is likely to spur sectarian disputes.[289][importance?] Cyclone Bulbul kills seven in West Bengal, India and seven in Bangladesh. 2,000,000 people are evacuated.[290] November 10 The November 2019 Spanish general election takes place, for all 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies and 208 (of the 266) seats in the Senate. 2019 Bolivian protests: President Evo Morales resigns after calling for a re-vote in the disputed elections. November 11 – A transit of Mercury occurs. November 13 Public impeachment hearings against U.S. President Donald Trump begin in the House of Representatives.[291][292] The Chinese University of Hong Kong officially announces a premature end to the semester as a result of large-scale protests and civil unrest. Besides CUHK, several Hong Kong universities switch to online learning and suspend on-campus class. The Education Bureau in Hong Kong officially announces to close all schools in Hong Kong due to the ongoing protests.[293][294] November 14 – Italy declares a state of emergency in Venice following record flooding.[295] November 17 – 2019 Hong Kong protests: Police use tear gas and water cannons against protesters who try to break through cordons and reach Polytechnic University, which is at the center of a week-long standoff between demonstrators and law enforcement. Protesters fight back with Molotov cocktails, arrows, and bricks.[296] November 19 – Google enters the video game market with the launch of Google Stadia. Predicted and scheduled[edit] November 23 – 2019 Bougainvillean independence referendum. November 30 – December 11 – The 2019 Southeast Asian Games are scheduled to be held in the Philippines. December 2–13 – The 2019 United Nations Climate Change Conference is scheduled to take place in Madrid, Spain, after Chilean President Sebastián Piñera announced his country could not do so due to political unrest in the country.[297] December 12 – 2019 United Kingdom general election, for all 650 seats in the House of Commons. December 17 – The CHEOPS space telescope, whose mission is to study the formation of extrasolar planets, is expected to be launched.[298] December 26 – An annular solar eclipse will be visible from South Asia. The eclipse will be a part of Saros 132.[299] Date unknown[edit] The European Spallation Source is expected to go into operation in Lund, Sweden.[300] SpaceX expects to perform suborbital hop tests of their Starship prototype. Births[edit] May 6 – Archie Mountbatten-Windsor, first child of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and seventh in the line of succession to the British throne[301] Deaths[edit] Deaths January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November Further information: Category:2019 deaths January[edit] Main article: Deaths in January 2019
Pegi Young
Bob Einstein
Michael Atiyah
Carol Channing
Henry Sy
Tibor Baranski January 1 Ivan Dimitrov, Bulgarian footballer (b. 1935)[302] Pegi Young, American singer-songwriter, educator, and philanthropist (b. 1952)[303][importance?] January 2 Paulien van Deutekom, Dutch world champion speed skater (b. 1981)[304] Daryl Dragon, American musician (b. 1942)[305] Bob Einstein, American actor and comedian (b. 1942)[306] Gene Okerlund, American wrestling announcer (b. 1942)[307] January 3 – Herb Kelleher, American businessman (b. 1931)[308] January 5 Bernice Sandler, American women’s rights activist (b. 1928)[309] Dragoslav Šekularac, Serbian footballer and manager (b. 1937)[310] January 6 – José Ramón Fernández, Cuban revolution leader (b. 1923)[311] January 7 – Moshe Arens, Lithuanian-born Israeli aeronautical engineer, diplomat, and politician (b. 1925)[312] January 9 – Verna Bloom, American actress (b. 1938)[313] January 10 – Theo Adam, German opera singer (b. 1926)[314] January 11 Michael Atiyah, British-Lebanese mathematician and academic (b. 1929)[315] Fernando Luján, Mexican actor (b. 1939)[316] January 12 Bonnie Guitar, American country singer-songwriter (b. 1923)[317] Jaime Rosenthal, Honduran politician (b. 1936)[318] January 13 – Phil Masinga, South African footballer (b. 1969)[319] January 14 – Paweł Adamowicz, Polish politician (b. 1965)[320] January 15 – Carol Channing, American actress (b. 1921)[321] January 17 Babiker Awadalla, 8th Prime Minister of Sudan (b. 1917)[322] Windsor Davies, Welsh actor (b. 1930)[323] Mary Oliver, American poet (b. 1935)[324] January 19 Nathan Glazer, American sociologist (b. 1923)[325] Henry Sy, Chinese-Filipino business magnate (b. 1924)[326] January 20 Tibor Baranski, Hungarian-American educator (b. 1922)[327] Andrew G. Vajna, Hungarian-American film producer (b. 1944)[328] January 21 Kaye Ballard, American actress (b. 1925)[329] Henri, Count of Paris, Head of the House of Orléans (b. 1933)[330] Emiliano Sala, Argentine footballer (b. 1990)[331] January 23 Jonas Mekas, Lithuanian-born American filmmaker, poet, and artist (b. 1922)[332] Oliver Mtukudzi, Zimbabwean musician, businessman, and philanthropist (b. 1952)[333] January 24 Fernando Sebastián Aguilar, Spanish cardinal (b. 1929)[334] Rosemary Bryant Mariner, American naval aviator (b. 1953)[335] January 25 Florence Knoll, American architect and furniture designer (b. 1917)[336] Dušan Makavejev, Serbian film director (b. 1932)[337] Krishna Sobti, Indian Hindi-language fiction writer and essayist (b. 1925)[338] January 26 Jean Guillou, French composer, organist, and pianist (b. 1930)[339] Michel Legrand, French composer (b. 1932)[340] January 27 – Yvonne Clark, American engineer (b. 1929)[341] January 28 Humberto Akʼabal, Guatemalan K’iche’ Maya poet (b. 1952)[342] Susan Hiller, American artist (b. 1940)[343] January 29 – James Ingram, American R&B musician (b. 1952)[344] January 30 – Dick Miller, American actor (b. 1928)[345] February[edit] Main article: Deaths in February 2019
Julie Adams
Albert Finney
Bruno Ganz
Karl Lagerfeld
Peter Tork
André Previn February 2 – Carol Emshwiller, American author (b. 1921)[346] February 3 Julie Adams, American actress (b. 1926)[347] Detsl, Russian musician (b. 1983)[348] Kristoff St. John, American actor (b. 1966)[349] February 4 Matti Nykänen, Finnish Olympic-winning ski jumper and singer (b. 1963)[350] Leonie Ossowski, German writer (b. 1925)[351] Izzy Young, American-Swedish folklorist and author (b. 1928)[352] February 6 Manfred Eigen, German Nobel Prize winning biophysical chemist (b. 1927)[353] Rosamunde Pilcher, British author (b. 1924)[354] February 7 Albert Finney, English actor (b. 1936)[355] Jan Olszewski, 3rd Prime Minister of Poland (b. 1930)[356] Frank Robinson, American baseball player, coach, and manager (b. 1935)[357] February 8 – Walter Munk, Austrian-American oceanographer (b. 1917)[358] February 9 Shelley Lubben, American author, activist, singer, and pornographic actress (b. 1968)[359] Maximilian Reinelt, German rower and doctor (b. 1988)[360] Tomi Ungerer, French illustrator (b. 1931)[361] Patricia Nell Warren, American novelist, poet, and journalist (b. 1936)[362] February 10 Carmen Argenziano, American actor (b. 1943)[363] Jan-Michael Vincent, American actor (b. 1945)[364] February 11 – Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, Afghani politician (b. 1925)[365] February 12 Betty Ballantine, British-born American book publisher (b. 1919)[366] Gordon Banks, English footballer (b. 1937)[367] Pedro Morales, Puerto Rican professional wrestler (b. 1942)[368] February 13 – Idriz Ajeti, Kosovar Albanologist (b. 1917) February 14 – Andrea Levy, English novelist (b. 1956) February 15 – Lee Radziwill, American socialite (b. 1933) February 16 Bruno Ganz, Swiss actor (b. 1941)[369] Li Rui, Chinese politician, historian and dissident (b. 1917)[370] February 17 – Šaban Šaulić, Serbian folk singer (b. 1951) February 18 Wallace Smith Broecker, American geophysicist (b. 1931)[371] Alessandro Mendini, Italian architect and designer (b. 1931)[372] Bob Van Der Veken, Belgian actor (b. 1928)[373] Peter Wells, New Zealand writer and filmmaker (b. 1950)[374] February 19 – Karl Lagerfeld, German fashion designer (b. 1933)[375] February 20 – Dominick Argento, American composer (b. 1927)[376] February 21 Stanley Donen, American film director (b. 1924)[377] Peter Tork, American musician and actor (b. 1942)[378] Hilde Zadek, German operatic soprano (b. 1917)[379] February 22 Brody Stevens, American comedian and actor (b. 1970)[380] Morgan Woodward, American actor (b. 1925)[381] February 23 – Katherine Helmond, American actress (b. 1929)[382] February 24 Antoine Gizenga, 21st Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (b. 1925)[383] Donald Keene, American-born Japanese scholar, historian, and writer (b. 1922)[384] February 25 – Waldo Machado, Brazilian footballer (b. 1934)[385] February 26 – Christian Bach, Argentine-Mexican actress and producer (b. 1959)[386] February 27 – France-Albert René, Seychellois politician, 2nd President of Seychelles (b. 1935)[387] February 28 – André Previn, German-American pianist, conductor and composer (b. 1929)[388] March[edit] Main article: Deaths in March 2019
Zhores Alferov
Keith Flint
Luke Perry
Vladimir Etush
Dick Dale
Scott Walker
Agnès Varda March 1 Zhores Alferov, Soviet and Russian Nobel physicist (b. 1930)[389] Kumar Bhattacharyya, British-Indian engineer, educator, and government advisor (b. 1940)[390] Eusebio Pedroza, Panamanian boxer (b. 1956)[391] Kevin Roche, Irish-born American architect (b. 1922)[392] March 2 Yannis Behrakis, Greek photojournalist (b. 1960)[393] Med Hondo, Mauritanian film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor (b. 1936)[394] March 4 King Kong Bundy, American professional wrestler (b. 1957)[395] Juan Corona, Mexican serial killer (b. 1934)[396] Keith Flint, English musician, singer, and dancer (b. 1969)[397] Klaus Kinkel, German politician (b. 1936)[398] Ted Lindsay, Canadian professional ice hockey player (b. 1925)[399] Luke Perry, American actor (b. 1966)[400] March 5 – Jacques Loussier, French pianist and composer (b. 1934)[401] March 6 José Pedro Pérez-Llorca, Spanish politician and diplomat (b. 1940)[402] Carolee Schneemann, American visual artist (b. 1939)[403] March 7 – Guillaume Faye, French journalist and writer (b. 1949)[404] March 8 – Michael Gielen, Austrian conductor and composer (b. 1927)[405] March 9 Bernard Binlin Dadié, Ivorian novelist and playwright (b. 1916)[406] Vladimir Etush, Soviet and Russian actor (b. 1922)[407] March 10 İrsen Küçük, 6th Prime Minister of Northern Cyprus (b. 1940)[408] Victims of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 plane crash: Pius Adesanmi, Nigerian-Canadian professor and writer (b. 1972)[409] Sebastiano Tusa, Italian archaeologist and politician (b. 1952)[410] March 11 – Hal Blaine, American drummer (b. 1929)[411] March 13 – Andrea Pollack, German swimmer (b. 1961)[412] March 14 Godfried Danneels, Belgian cardinal (b. 1933)[413] Charlie Whiting, British motorsports director (b. 1952)[414] March 15 W. S. Merwin, American poet (b. 1927)[415] Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Louly, 3rd Head of State of Mauritania (b. 1943)[416] March 16 Dick Dale, American guitarist and surf music pioneer (b. 1937)[417] Barbara Hammer, American filmmaker (b. 1939)[418] Alan Krueger, American economist (b. 1960)[419] March 17 – Tunku Puan Zanariah, Malaysian royal, Raja Permaisuri Agong (b. 1940)[420] March 19 – Marlen Khutsiev, Georgian-born Soviet and Russian filmmaker (b. 1925)[421] March 20 Donald Kalpokas, 2nd Prime Minister of Vanuatu (b. 1943)[422] Mary Warnock, British philosopher (b. 1924)[423] March 22 Frans Andriessen, Dutch politician (b. 1929)[424] Scott Walker, American-born British singer-songwriter (b. 1943)[425] March 23 Larry Cohen, American film director and screenwriter (b. 1936)[426] Rafi Eitan, Israeli intelligence officer and politician (b. 1926)[427] March 24 Nancy Gates, American actress (b. 1926)[428] Fred Malek, American business executive, political advisor and philanthropist (b. 1936)[429] March 27 Valery Bykovsky, Soviet and Russian cosmonaut (b. 1934)[430] Bruce Yardley, Australian cricketer (b. 1947)[431] March 29 – Agnès Varda, Belgian-born French filmmaker (b. 1928)[432] March 31 – Nipsey Hussle, American rapper (b. 1985)[433] April[edit] Main article: Deaths in April 2019
David J. Thouless
Bibi Andersson
Alan García
Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg
Jean-Pierre Marielle
Peter Mayhew April 1 Vonda N. McIntyre, American science fiction author (b. 1948)[434] Rafael Sánchez Ferlosio, Spanish writer (b. 1927)[435] April 2 – Jamshid Mashayekhi, Iranian actor (b. 1934)[436] April 4 – Georgiy Daneliya, Soviet and Russian film director and screenwriter (b. 1930)[437] April 5 Anandavally, Indian actress (b. 1952)[438] Sydney Brenner, South African Nobel biologist (b. 1927)[439] Gianfranco Leoncini, Italian footballer (b. 1939)[440] April 6 – David J. Thouless, British Nobel physicist (b. 1934)[441] April 7 Seymour Cassel, American actor (b. 1935)[442] Cho Yang-ho, South Korean businessman (b. 1949)[443] April 9 Elwyn Berlekamp, American mathematician (b. 1940)[444] Charles Van Doren, American writer and editor (b. 1926)[445] April 10 Earl Thomas Conley, American singer-songwriter (b. 1941)[446] Estrella Zeledón Lizano, Costa Rican politician and First Lady of Costa Rica (b. 1929)[447] April 12 Georgia Engel, American actress (b. 1948)[448] Tommy Smith, English footballer (b. 1945)[449] April 13 Tony Buzan, English author and educational consultant (b. 1942)[450] Neus Català, Spanish political activist and Holocaust survivor (b. 1915)[451] Paul Greengard, American Nobel neuroscientist (b. 1925)[452] Lydia Wideman, Finnish cross-country skier (b. 1920)[453] Yvette Williams, New Zealand track-and-field athlete (b. 1929)[454] April 14 Bibi Andersson, Swedish actress (b. 1935)[455] Mirjana Marković, Serbian politician and First Lady of Yugoslavia (b. 1942)[456] Gene Wolfe, American science fiction and fantasy writer (b. 1931)[457] April 16 – Fay McKenzie, American actress and singer (b. 1918)[458] April 17 – Alan García, 61st and 64th President of Peru (b. 1949)[459][460] April 18 – Lyra McKee, Northern Irish journalist (b. 1990)[461] April 19 – Patrick Sercu, Belgian cyclist (b. 1944)[462] April 20 – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Iranian artist (b. 1922)[463] April 21 – Ken Kercheval, American actor (b. 1935)[464] April 22 Lê Đức Anh, Vietnamese politician, 4th President of Vietnam (b. 1920)[465] Billy McNeill, Scottish footballer and manager (b. 1940)[466] April 23 Jean, Grand Duke of Luxembourg (b. 1921)[467] David Winters, English-American actor, choreographer, and director (b. 1939)[468] April 24 – Jean-Pierre Marielle, French actor (b. 1932)[469] April 25 – John Havlicek, American basketball player (b. 1940)[470] April 26 – Ellen Schwiers, German actress (b. 1930)[471] April 27 – Negasso Gidada, Ethiopian politician, 4th President of Ethiopia (b. 1943)[472] April 28 – John Singleton, American film director, screenwriter and producer (b. 1968)[473] April 29 Les Murray, Australian poet (b. 1938)[474] Josef Šural, Czech footballer (b. 1990)[475] April 30 Anémone, French actress (b. 1950)[476] Beth Carvalho, Brazilian samba singer (b. 1946)[477] Peter Mayhew, English-American actor (b. 1944) May[edit] Main article: Deaths in May 2019
Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba
Doris Day
Bob Hawke
Murray Gell-Mann
Prem Tinsulanonda May 2 Red Kelly, Canadian professional ice hockey player and coach (b. 1927)[479] Ali Mroudjaé, 9th Prime Minister of the Comoros (b. 1939)[480] May 3 – Goro Shimura, Japanese mathematician (b. 1930)[481] May 5 – Norma Miller, American dancer, actress and author (b. 1919)[482] May 6 John Lukacs, Hungarian-American historian (b. 1924)[483] Seymour Nurse, Barbadian cricketer (b. 1933)[484] May 7 – Jean Vanier, Canadian Catholic philosopher (b. 1928)[485] May 8 Sprent Dabwido, 13th President of Nauru (b. 1972)[486] Yevgeny Krylatov, Soviet and Russian film composer (b. 1934)[487] May 9 – Alvin Sargent, American screenwriter (b. 1927)[488] May 10 – Alfredo Pérez Rubalcaba, Spanish politician (b. 1951)[489] May 11 Peggy Lipton, American actress and model (b. 1946)[490] Silver King, Mexican professional wrestler (b. 1968)[491]
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A recent report from the World Health Organization, drawing on measurements and calculations as of 2016 from air monitoring stations in 4,300 cities, establishes clearly that air pollution is a global problem. A whopping nine in 10 people on Earth breathe highly polluted air, and more than 80 percent of urban dwellers have to endure outdoor pollution that exceeds health standards, according to the WHO’s World Global Ambient Air Quality Database.
But there are certain places on the planet where the air is now consistently, epically terrible.
India, for instance. When you look at the database’s ranking of particulate pollution in cities, 11 of the 12 cities with the highest levels are located there. Kanpur, India, population 3 million, tops the list with a yearly average of 319 micrograms per cubic meter of PM2.5, the most hazardous particle commonly measured. (Bamenda, Cameroon, is the one city outside of India in the top 12.)
Country City PM2.5 (µg/m³)
Country City PM2.5 (µg/m³)
India Kanpur 173 India Faridabad 172 India Varanasi 151 India Gaya 149 India Patna 144 India Delhi 143 India Lucknow 138 Cameroon Bamenda 132 India Agra 131 India Muzaffarpur 120 India Srinagar 113 India Gurgaon 113
World Health Organization
Many different air pollutants can impact health — nitrogen oxide, carbon monoxide, and ozone, among them. But the database classifies air pollution in two ways: by PM2.5, particles smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter, and by PM 10, particles that are 10 microns in diameter. The smaller PM2.5 particles from sources like open flames and diesel exhaust can linger in the air longer and penetrate deeper into the lungs than larger particles, which is why they’re the bigger concern for health officials and a high-priority target for reduction.
Technically, the WHO doesn’t treat its data as a ranking but rather a measurement of where risks are. But it’s clear from the report that India is one of the riskiest countries in the world to breathe, up there with Bangladesh and Georgia. When it comes to comparing PM10 measurements of the world’s largest cities, India’s capital Delhi comes in with an annual average of 292, ahead of Cairo (284), Dhaka (147), Mumbai (104), and Beijing (92), the Washington Post noted.
Frequent unhealthy levels of pollution from sources ranging from vehicles to the burning of coal and wood for cooking, dust storms, or forest fires affect most of the country. India’s hills and mountains also act as basins that trap toxic air over vast swaths of the country, sometimes making the air too dangerous to breathe. Just check out this map of air pollution from May:
A map of air pollution in India on May 7, 2018. Berkeley Earth
But how did it get so bad? Let’s take a closer look.
Though you can find unhealthy air in pretty much any country, the worst pollution these days is accumulating in developing countries with growing populations. The highest-ranking city from an OECD country in the PM2.5 list is Hobart, Australia, coming in at 206.
“Air pollution threatens us all, but the poorest and most marginalized people bear the brunt of the burden,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO’s director general, in a statement.
Cookstoves, heating fuel, and kerosene lighting are all common sources of pollution in big cities in developing countries. Poor governance is also a major factor in pollution since lax enforcement of standards for car exhausts, crop burning, or dust from construction sites leads to more particulates in the air.
Some countries like China are making progress. Cities in China have moved down in the rankings, and the government is seeking reforms to keep pollution in check as dirty air has become an increasingly volatile public concern.
Governing air pollution has proved to be much trickier in India.
Indian schoolchildren wearing pollution masks hold placards as they participate in a march to raise awareness of air pollution levels in New Delhi on November 15, 2017. Prakash Singh/AFP/Getty Images
Delhi, India’s capital region, home to nearly 19 million people, is notorious for choking air that is now turning the iconic white marble walls of the Taj Mahal green.
The city faced a major air quality crisis late last year as the literally off-the-charts pollution forced flight cancellations, caused traffic accidents, closed schools, and sparked protests. One minister described Delhi as a “gas chamber,” and the city declared a public health emergency.
Dozens of other Indian cities are dealing with severe pollution too, but many of the particulates that blanket the metro regions originate in rural areas, and rural areas are just as badly affected by poor air, if not more so. In 2015, about 75 percent of deaths linked to air pollution in India, some 1.1 million people, occurred in rural areas.
Two-thirds of India’s population still lives outside of cities, and 80 percent of these households rely on biomass like wood and dung for cooking and heating. Agricultural practices like burning crop stubble also remain widespread.
This smoke can then waft over major cities such as Chennai and Mumbai, where it commingles with traffic exhaust, factory emissions, and construction dust. It can also get trapped by inland by features like hills and mountains, leaving few areas in the country where Indians can breathe easy.
“This region is land-locked — pollution cannot dissipate quickly — and does not have the advantage of the coast like Mumbai or Chennai,” Anumita Roy Chowdhury, head of the air pollution and clean transportation program at the Delhi-based advocacy organization Center for Science and Environment, told the Indian Express. “Also, a lot of the smaller cities have poor waste management, there is a lot of burning, solid fuel use, they are moving from non-motorised to motorised transport. Chulhas [cookstoves], we know, contribute to 25 percent outdoor pollution in India.”
The other major cause of India’s pollution problem is politics. Kirk Smith, a professor of global environmental health at the University of California Berkeley, observed that there are anti-pollution laws in India but they aren’t enforced well, so while major cities can ban pollution sources like brick kilns from within their boundaries, they can’t stop exhaust from blowing over from the perimeter.
Controlling this kind of pollution requires coordinating across city and provincial boundaries over a geographic basin, but rural politicians and urban politicos in India have vastly different constituencies, making it difficult for urbanites to convince farmers to use less polluting practices or for rural people to ask city dwellers to drive less.
“Outdoor air pollution is pretty much a governance problem,” said Smith.
He also noted that the WHO’s list of most polluted cities should be viewed with caution. Pollution can vary drastically over small areas, and many of the cities on the list are reporting data from just one air quality monitor, which may not be representative of the true picture of pollution in the city.
As for India’s sudden rise in the rankings, a big factor is that pollution in many of these cities is being measured and reported for the first time, meaning the problem may have always been there but hadn’t drawn the same level of attention.
With more measurements and reporting, India’s pollution problems will likely appear worse before they get better. But gathering this information is nonetheless vital for the counteroffensive against poor air quality.
Original Source -> Why India’s air pollution is so horrendous
via The Conservative Brief
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Departure flights from #Kuwait May 16 ( Dhaka - Cairo - Doha) #الكويت https://www.instagram.com/p/CAPhdKdj9nd/?igshid=f0wqlxdhzibr
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aymanmatnews · 4 years
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5416 passengers to depart via 27 flights from #Kuwait to (Cairo - Addis Ababa -Hyderabad - Gaya - Bhubaneswar - Delhi -Indore- Sohag - Asyut- Riyadh- Dhaka - Amman - Tunis -Kozhikode) #الكويت https://www.instagram.com/p/CBL_Hr7lavG/?igshid=1i2ikf6hhsiqu
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aymanmatnews · 4 years
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4475 passengers to depart via 22 flights from #Kuwait to (Cairo - Isfahan -Tiruchirappalli- Delhi- Ivato -Lilongwe- Kolkata-Sohag- Shiraz- Dhaka- Luxor- Doha- Alexandria) #الكويت https://www.instagram.com/p/CBJgRo-loNe/?igshid=2xbfjmpjfn40
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