This Day in History — October 26
Today is the 299th day of 2017. There are 66 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
1917: Brazil declares war against Germany in World War I.
OTHER EVENTS
1795: The first jackasses arrive in America through Boston Harbour as a gift from the King of Spain to US President George Washington, so they could be mated with mares and produce America’s first native mules.
1896: Italy concedes Ethiopia’s independence by Treaty of Addis Ababa after a crushing defeat at Adwa earlier in the year.
1955: Republic of South Vietnam is proclaimed under Ngo Dinh Diem.
1975: Anwar Sadat becomes the first Egyptian president to pay an official visit to the United States.
1979: South Korea’s President Park Chung-Hee is slain by his lifelong friend Kim Jae Kyu, the head of the Korean intelligence agency.
1987: US President Ronald Reagan announces an embargo on all US imports from Iran because of its “unprovoked attacks” on American military forces and merchant ships.
1994: Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin of Israel and Prime Minister Abdel Salam Majali of Jordan sign a peace treaty ending 46 years of hostility.
1997: Angola promises to withdraw its troops from Brazzaville, capital of the Republic of Congo, where they helped rebels oust elected President Pascal Lissouba.
1998: Days after signing a peace accord with the Palestinians, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu beats a no-confidence vote in Parliament.
1999: Britain’s House of Lords votes to end the right of hereditary peers to sit and vote in Britain’s Upper Chamber of Parliament.
2000: Supporters of Ivory Coast’s president-elect and his political rival fight bloody clashes in Abidjan over a demand for new presidential elections.
2001: US President George W Bush signs a sweeping anti-terrorism Bill into law, giving police and intelligence agencies vast new powers.
2002: Elite Russian counterterrorism forces storm a theatre in Moscow, bringing an end to a hostage crisis that had begun with the theatre’s seizure by more than 50 Chechen guerrillas. At least 119 of the 750 hostages die.
— AP
2009: One of Fidel Castro’s sisters says in a memoir that she collaborated with the CIA against her brother, starting shortly after the United States’ failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961.
2010: A volcanic eruption and a tsunami kill scores of people hundreds of miles (kilometres) apart in Indonesia — spasms from the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” which spawns disasters from deep within the Earth.