This Day in History – January 12
Today is the12th day of 2018. There are 353 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
2010: A strong earthquake devastates Haiti, killing 230,000 people, injuring 300,000, and leaving more than one million homeless.
OTHER EVENTS
1543: England’s King Henry VIII marries his sixth and last wife, Catherine Parr, who outlives him.
1773: The first US museum dedicated to the preservation of knowledge is established in Charleston, South Carolina.
1862: US Congress authorises the Medal of Honour.
1912: Textile workers at the Everett Mill in Lawrence, Massachusetts, (most of them immigrant women) walked off the job to protest wage cuts. The “Bread and Roses Strike”, as it came to be known, spread to other mills in Lawrence and lasted until the following March.
1945: German forces retreat in disorder in Battle of the Bulge in Belgium during World War II.
1948: The Supreme Court ruled that state law schools could not discriminate against applicants on the basis of race.
1964: Rebellion in Zanzibar, which is declared a republic, and Sultan is banished.
1967: China’s army pledges support to Mao Tse-Tung during disorder triggered by Chinese cultural revolution.
1968: United States and Cambodia agree on policy to keep Cambodia from becoming embroiled in Vietnam War.
1970: Breakaway Biafra surrenders, ending 32-month-old Nigerian Civil War. Biafra leader General Odumegwu Ojukwu flees with family.
1977: US President Jimmy Carter defends Supreme Court decisions limiting government payments for poor women’s abortions, saying, “There are many things in life that are not fair”.
1987: Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite arrived in Lebanon on his latest mission to win the release of Western hostages; however, Waite ended up being taken captive himself, and wasn’t released until 1991.
1990: Romania’s interim president, Ion Iliescu, announces that the Communist Party is outlawed; Russian republic president Boris Yeltsin shocks the 28th congress of the Soviet Communist Party by announcing he is resigning his party membership.
1991: US Congress grants President George H W Bush authority to use force to drive Iraq from Kuwait.
1993: The leader of Bosnia’s Serbs accepts peace proposals for the war-shattered country, hailed as a breakthrough toward a settlement after nine months of brutal fighting; a 7.8-magnitude earthquake strikes northern Japan, killing 196 people.
1998: Nineteen European nations sign an agreement to prohibit cloning of humans beings; in Ballymoney, Northern Ireland, three young brothers who had been asleep in their beds are burned to death in a sectarian attack.
2002: President Pervez Musharraf announces new measures to curb extremism in Pakistan and groups that exported terrorism, including bans on five militant groups, and to check militancy in the disputed Kashmir region.
2006: Thousands of Muslims surging to complete a stoning ritual before sunset, outside the holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia, stampede after some pilgrims trip over dropped luggage, causing a pile-up that kills at least 360 people.
2008: Taiwan’s Opposition Nationalist Party wins a landslide victory in legislative elections, boosting its policy of closer engagement with China.
2009: Construction workers in northern Poland have unearthed a World War II-era mass grave containing what are believed to be the bodies of 1,800 German men, women and children who disappeared during the Soviet Army’s march to Berlin.
2011: Torrential summer rains tear through Rio de Janeiro state’s mountains, killing at least 140 people in 24 hours.
2012: Pentagon leaders scramble to contain damage from an Internet video purporting to show four Marines urinating on Taliban corpses — an act that appears to violate international laws of warfare and further strains US-Afghan relations.
2013: A raid to free a French intelligence agent held captive in Somalia for three years goes horribly wrong, leaving at least 17 Islamists and one French commando dead.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Andrea Alicati, Italian author (1492-1550); Edmund Burke, Irish-born statesman (1729-1797); Hermann Goering, German Nazi leader (1893-1946); Paul Hermann Muller, Swiss chemist and Nobel laureate, discovered potency of DDT as insecticide (1899-1965); Rush Limbaugh, US radio commentator (1951- ); Howard Stern, US radio/TV personality (1954- ); Kirstie Alley, US actress (1951- ); Broadcast journalist Christiane Amanpour (1958-)
— AP