This Day in History — July 31
Today is the 212th day of 2018. There are 153 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
2011: Syrian security forces backed by tanks and snipers launch a ferocious assault on defiant cities and towns, killing at least 70 people and possibly many more as the regime raced to crush dissent ahead of Ramadan.
OTHER EVENTS
1498: During his third voyage to the Western Hemisphere, Christopher Columbus arrives at the island of Trinidad.
1658: Aurangzeb is proclaimed Mogul Emperor in India.
1789: Austrian and Russian troops under Francis Duke of Coburg and Count Alexander Suvorov defeat Turks at Focshani in Romania.
1812: Venezuelan Republic falls to Spanish forces, and Francisco de Miranda is arrested.
1919: Germany adopts Weimar Constitution.
1926: Afghanistan signs non-aggression pact with Soviet Union.
1944: US troops break through the German lines around the Normandy beach head, opening the way to liberating the rest of France.
1951: French Brigadier General Charles Marie Chanson and Governor Thai Lap Thanh, of French-backed South Vietnam, are killed 97 kilometres (60 miles) south of Saigon by a Communist suicide bomber.
1956: Britain and West Germany sign 10-year agreement on nuclear cooperation.
1962: Britain agrees to establish wider Malaysian federation.
1964: US Ranger 7 spacecraft transmits to Earth first close-up pictures of the moon.
1971: Two US Apollo 15 astronauts begin three days of moon exploration in an electric car.
1974: Ceasefire takes effect between Turkey and Greece in fighting on Cyprus.
1978: Gunman shoots his way into Iraqi embassy in Paris and holds hostages for several hours before surrendering to French police.
1980: Eleven people are executed in Tehran, Iran, after being convicted of participating in an attempted anti-government coup earlier in the month. Ten of them were members of the armed forces.
1986: Britain’s cabinet unanimously supports Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s resistance to stiff sanctions against South Africa.
1988: Pier jammed with thousands of festival travellers collapses at ferry terminal in northwest Malaysia, killing at least 30 people and injuring about 370.
1989: Thousands of residents flee Beirut, Lebanon, as fierce shelling continues.
1990: US Government panel approves use of gene therapy for first time in treatment of human disease.
1991: US President George Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev sign a long-range nuclear weapons reduction pact at Moscow summit.
1992: A Thai Airways jetliner crashes into a Himalayan mountain minutes after the pilot reports a technical problem, killing all 113 people on board.
1993: Truce ends weeklong Israeli offensive against guerrillas in southern Lebanon that killed 140 people and sent 500,000 fleeing north.
1994: UN Security Council approves possible US-led invasion of Haiti.
1995: Hundreds of Israeli police and soldiers drag Jewish settlers away from an encampment on a West Bank hilltop where they protested the emerging Israel-Palestine Liberation Organisation accord.
1996: African leaders agree to impose sanctions on Burundi for the July 25 military coup that ousted the country’s fragile coalition government.
1997: As Israelis bury the 13 dead from the worst terrorist bombing in more than a year, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatens to send troops into the autonomous Palestinian areas.
1998: South Africa ends the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s public exploration of apartheid’s horrors after two years of hearings that laid bare decades of massacres, beatings and torture.
1999: Two years after devastating earthquakes, 17th-century church of St Francis of Assisi reopens in central Italy.
2002: US Senate Foreign Relations Committee holds hearings on US plans to attack Iraq and oust Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
2003: The Vatican issues a 12-page document strongly urging Roman Catholic lawmakers worldwide to reject legislation sanctioning same-sex civil unions and adoption rights.
2004: World Trade Organisation members approve a plan to end export subsidies on farm products and cut import duties across the world, a key step toward a comprehensive global accord that has been discussed since 2001, trade officials say.
2005: Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora visits Syria in an attempt to repair relations damaged after Damascus was forced to end its 29-year military presence in Lebanon.
2006: The UN Security Council passes a resolution giving Iran one month to suspend uranium enrichment or face the threat of economic and diplomatic sanctions.
2007: Deployment of British troops to support Northern Ireland police, codenamed Operation Banner, officially ends after 38 years.
2008: Haitian lawmakers ratify Michele Pierre-Louis to be the country’s prime minister, ending more than three months of political bickering and deadlock in Parliament.
2009: A string of bombings targets Shiite worshippers in the Baghdad area, killing at least 29 people in an apparently coordinated attack against followers of an anti-US cleric who were blamed for some of Iraq’s worst sectarian violence.
2010: The death toll in the massive flooding in Pakistan surges past 800 as floodwaters receded in the hard-hit northwest. The threat of disease looms as some evacuees arrive in camps with fever, diarrhea and skin problems.
2012: New Delhi’s metro shut down and hundreds of coal miners were trapped underground after three Indian electric grids collapse in a cascade, cutting power to 620 million people in the world’s biggest blackout.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Augustus, leader of Protestant Germany (1526-1586), John Ericsson, Swedish-born inventor (1803-1889); Milton Friedman, US economist (1912-2006); Henri Brisson, French statesman (1835-1912), Primo Levi, Italian writer/chemist (1919-1987); Whitney Young, US civil rights leader (1921-1971); Wesley Snipes, US actor (1962- ); J K Rowling, British author of Harry Potter books (1965- ); Dean Cain, US actor (1966- )
— AP