2000s and
José Manuel Barroso , the first
African-American president of the
United States, and Russian president
Dmitry Medvedev after signing the
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty • 1998–2003 – The
Second Congo War continued into the early 21st century. A 1999 ceasefire quickly broke down and a UN peacekeeping mission,
MONUC, was unable to control the fighting. Troops from
Rwanda and
Uganda continued to support rebel groups against the
Democratic Republic of the Congo and rifts also grew between Rwanda and Uganda as they accused each other of supporting rival rebel groups as well.
Laurent Kabila, president of the DRC, was assassinated in January 2001 and his son,
Joseph Kabila, took power. Throughout 2002 steps were made towards peace and Rwanda and Uganda both removed their troops from the country. On
December 17, 2002, a massive treaty officially ended the war. However, the DRC only holds power in less than half of the country, with most of the eastern and northern portions still controlled by rebel groups, where there is still significant infighting. In addition, Rwanda still supports anti-DRC rebels and anti-Rwandan rebels continue to operate from the DRC. The war killed an estimated 3.9 million people, displaced nearly 5.5 million, and led to a widespread and ongoing famine that continues to result in deaths. Severe human rights violations continue to be reported. • 2000–2005 – The
Second Intifada, a major Palestinian uprising against
Israel, is estimated to have led to the deaths of approximately 3,000 Palestinians and 1,000 Israelis.
2001 •
January 20: •
George W. Bush is
inaugurated as the 43rd president of the United States. He is the second president from the
Bush family, after
his father. • President
Joseph Estrada of the
Philippines is ousted in the
Second EDSA Revolution. •
January 26 – An
earthquake strikes
Gujarat,
India, on
Republic Day, resulting in more than 20,000 deaths. •
April 1 – The
Netherlands becomes the first country in the world to legalize
same-sex marriage. •
May 13 – Conservative media magnate
Silvio Berlusconi wins the
general election in Italy, becoming the country's
Prime Minister. Berlusconi would go on to dominate Italian politics for the rest of the decade. •
June 1 – The
Nepalese royal massacre occurs at a house on the grounds of the
Narayanhity Royal Palace, the residence of the Nepalese monarchy. Ten members of the family were killed during a party or monthly reunion dinner of the royal family in the house. The dead included
King Birendra of Nepal and
Queen Aishwarya. •
July 20–
22 – More than 200,000
anti-globalization protesters march in
Genoa, during the
27th G8 summit. Two demonstrators are killed by the
Italian police. On
July 21, a group of
Carabinieri attacked the school Armando Diaz, critically injuring many peaceful protesters. •
September 11 –
September 11 attacks: 19
al-Qaeda terrorists
hijack four
commercial airliners and
crash two of them into the
World Trade Center, one into
the Pentagon and one into a field in
Shanksville, Pennsylvania, of the United States on 11 September, killing nearly 3,000 people. The president
George W. Bush subsequently declares the
war on terror. •
October 23 –
Steve Jobs introduces the first
iPod. •
December 11 – After 15 years of negotiations, the
People's Republic of China becomes a member of the
World Trade Organization (WTO). • 2001–2014 – The
Northern Alliance and
NATO-led
ISAF invades Afghanistan on
October 7, 2001, and overthrows the Al-Qaeda-supportive
Taliban government. Troops remained to install a democratic government, fight a slowly escalating insurgency, and to hunt for Al-Qaeda leader
Osama bin Laden who would be
killed by
American troops nearly 10 years later, on
May 2, 2011. On
December 24, 2014, NATO forces officially ended combat operations in Afghanistan, but forces remained until
August 30, 2021, followed by a quick withdrawal of all troops.
2002 •
January 1: • The
Open Skies mutual
surveillance treaty, initially signed in
1992, officially enters into force. • The
Euro is the official currency introduced in the
Eurozone countries. The former currencies of all the countries that use the Euro ceased to be legal tender on February 28. •
January 6 –
The Boston Globe publishes results of an investigation leading to the
criminal prosecutions of five Roman Catholic priests and bringing widespread attention to the
sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy. •
January 17 –
Mount Nyiragongo erupts in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, displacing an estimated 400,000 people. •
January 18 – The
Sierra Leone Civil War comes to a conclusion with the defeat of the
Revolutionary United Front by government forces. •
February 6 –
Queen Elizabeth II of the
Commonwealth realms celebrates her
Golden Jubilee, marking 50 years since her accession to the thrones of the
United Kingdom,
Canada,
Australia and
New Zealand. •
February 8–
24 – The
2002 Winter Olympics are held in
Salt Lake City, Utah. •
February 12 – The
trial of Slobodan Milošević, the former president of
Yugoslavia, begins at the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in
The Hague. •
February 14 – The
State of Bahrain is declared a
constitutional monarchy and becomes the
Kingdom of Bahrain. •
February 19 –
NASA's
2001 Mars Odyssey space probe begins to map the surface of
Mars using its thermal emission imaging system. •
February 20 –
2002 El Ayyat railway accident: A train fire in
El Ayyat, Egypt kills at least 370 people. •
February 22: •
UNITA guerrilla leader
Jonas Savimbi is killed in clashes against government troops led by
Angolan President José Eduardo dos Santos in
Moxico Province,
Angola. • The government of Sri Lanka and the
Tamil Tigers agree to a ceasefire, temporarily ending the
Sri Lankan Civil War. It would last until the resumption of hostilities in 2008. •
February 27 – A mob
attacks a train near
Godhra, India, killing approximately 59 people. The state of Gujarat breaks out into
riots, including the
Gulbarg Society massacre on February 28 that kills approximately 69 people. •
March 14 –
SpaceX is founded by
Elon Musk. •
May 20 – After a long period of
occupation by Indonesia,
East Timor's independence is recognized by
Portugal and the
UN. •
July 1 – The
International Criminal Court (ICC) is established. •
September 10 –
Switzerland, a
neutral country, becomes a member of the
United Nations. •
October 12 –
Jemaah Islamiyah, a violent Islamist group, claims responsibility for the
detonation of three bombs in the tourist district of
Kuta on the
Indonesian island of
Bali. The attack killed 202 people and left 209 people injured. •
November 15 –
Hu Jintao becomes the
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, making him the
paramount leader of
China after
Jiang Zemin.
2003 •
January 10 – North Korea announces its withdrawal from the
Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. •
February 4 – The
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia is renamed to "Serbia and Montenegro" (after its two constituent states) after its leaders reconstitute the country into a loose state-union between
Montenegro and
Serbia, ending the 73-year-long use of the name "Yugoslavia" by a sovereign state. • 2003–2020 – On February 26, 2003, a conflict in
Darfur,
Sudan begins and escalates into
full-scale war. By 2008 it was believed that up to 400,000 people had been killed and over 2.5 million displaced. In 2005, the ICC decided that Darfur war criminals would be tried, and on
July 14, 2008, Sudanese president
Omar al-Bashir was charged with 5 accounts of
crimes against humanity and 2 accounts of war crimes, even though the ICC had no power to enforce such charges. The war ends following a peace agreement on August 31, 2020. • 2003–2010 – The
U.S.-led coalition invades Iraq on March 20, 2003, and overthrows the government of
Saddam Hussein (who is executed by the Iraqi government on December 30, 2006). Coalition troops remain in the country to install a democratic government and fight an escalating insurgency. In addition to an insurgency against the American presence, Iraq also suffered from a
civil war for several years. The war was soon seen as the central front of the war on terror by many governments, despite growing international dissatisfaction with the war. The
total death toll has been estimated at near 150,000 but these estimations are highly disputed, with one highly disputed study guessing even over 1 million. After the U.S.-led coalition initiated a
troop surge in 2007, casualty numbers have decreased significantly. Combat ended, at least officially, in August 2010. •
April 14 – The
Human Genome Project is completed, with 99% of the human
genome sequenced to 99.99% accuracy. •
August 27 –
Mars makes its
closest approach to Earth in over 60,000 years. •
November 3–
23 –The
Rose Revolution occurs in
Georgia. •
November 17 –
Arnold Schwarzenegger becomes
Governor of California. •
December 19 – Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafi announces that Libya would voluntarily eliminate all
weapons of mass destruction.
2004 •
February 4 – TheFacebook, later renamed to
Facebook, is formed by
Mark Zuckerberg,
Andrew McCollum,
Eduardo Saverin,
Dustin Moskovitz, and
Chris Hughes. •
March 11 –
Ten explosions occur at the
Cercanías commuter train system of
Madrid,
Spain, killing 191 people and injuring around 2,000. •
May 1 – The
European Union expands by 10 countries (including eight former communist countries, plus
Malta and
Cyprus). •
May 10 –
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is
re-elected as President of the Philippines, marking the first time a woman was re-elected to the position in the country. •
June 5 – Former U.S. president
Ronald Reagan dies at the age of 93, after suffering nearly a decade from
Alzheimer's disease. •
September 1 – A group of Chechen rebels
invade a school in Beslan, keeping thousands of hostages during three days. A series of shootings and bombings kills 334 people and injured 750. • 2004–2005 – Beginning on November 22, 2004, and ending on January 23, 2005, the
Orange Revolution occurs in
Ukraine. •
November 11 –
Palestinian leader and Chairman of the
Palestine Liberation Organization Yasser Arafat dies in France, at the age of 75, from hemorrhagic stroke. •
November 18 –
Massachusetts becomes the first
U.S. state to
legalize same-sex marriage. •
December 26 –
2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami leaves 227,898 dead.
2005 •
January 1 – Jeanna Giese becomes the first person to ever survive
rabies without a vaccination. •
January 5 –
Eris, the most massive known
dwarf planet in the
Solar System, is discovered by a team led by
Michael E. Brown using images originally taken on October 21, 2003, at the
Palomar Observatory. •
January 12 –
Deep Impact is launched from
Cape Canaveral with the purpose of studying the
comet Tempel 1. •
January 14 – The
Huygens spacecraft lands on
Titan, the largest moon of
Saturn. •
January 20 – The most intense
solar particle event in recorded history is observed. •
February 14 –
YouTube is founded by
Jawed Karim,
Chad Hurley and
Steve Chen. •
February 14 –
April 27 –
Cedar Revolution occurs in
Lebanon. •
February 16 – The
Kyoto Protocol comes into effect. •
March 22 –
April 11 –
Tulip Revolution occurs in
Kyrgyzstan. •
April 19 – After the death of
Pope John Paul II on
April 2,
Joseph Ratzinger of Germany is
elected as Pope Benedict XVI. •
July 7 – Four Islamic extremist
suicide bombers
set off three bombs in London; 56 people are killed, including the four suicide bombers. •
November 22 –
Angela Merkel becomes the first elected female
Chancellor of Germany.
2006 •
January 16 –
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf becomes President of
Liberia, and thus Africa's first elected female head of state. •
March 21 –
Twitter is founded by
Jack Dorsey,
Noah Glass,
Biz Stone, and
Evan Williams. •
April 23 –
Spotify is founded by
Daniel Ek and
Martin Lorentzon. •
May 21 –
June 3 – The
State Union of Serbia and Montenegro is peacefully dissolved and
Serbia and
Montenegro emerge as independent and sovereign nations. •
July 12 –
Hezbollah crosses the border of
Lebanon and captures two Israeli soldiers. Israel
responds by sending troops across the border and bombing Hezbollah strongholds, while Hezbollah fires missiles on towns in northern Israel, approximately 6 each day. At the end of the war 1,200 Lebanese civilians, 500 Hezbollah fighters, 44 Israeli civilians and 121 Israeli soldiers die. A ceasefire is signed on
August 14, after which Israeli troops withdrew from Lebanon. •
October 9 –
North Korea conducts its
first nuclear test. This was preceded by years of political wrangling with the U.S. over the status of
their nuclear program.
2007 •
January 1 –
Bulgaria and
Romania join the
European Union. •
January 9 – Apple CEO
Steve Jobs introduces the original
iPhone at a Macworld keynote in
San Francisco, starting the new era of smartphones with this invention. •
January 25 – A
civil war escalates in the
Gaza Strip throughout June, which would result in the
Hamas driving most
Fatah-loyal forces out from the Strip. In reaction, Palestinian president
Mahmoud Abbas dismisses Hamas Prime Minister
Ismail Haniyeh and dissolves the Hamas-ruled parliament. Scattered conflict continues. •
January 31 – Boston faces a
hoax bomb scare, as a result of
LED placards of
Ignignokt and Err from
Aqua Teen Hunger Force being mistaken as an
improvised explosive device •
July 25 –
Pratibha Patil becomes the first woman to be elected
President of India. •
December 13 – 27 EU member states sign the
Treaty of Lisbon, with the treaty coming into effect on
December 1, 2009. • 2007–2008 –
Crisis follows the
Kenyan presidential election of 2007, leading to the formation of a coalition government, with
Mwai Kibaki as president and
Raila Odinga as prime minister.
2008 •
January 1 –
Cyprus and
Malta adopt the
euro currency. •
January 14 – At 19:04:39
UTC, the uncrewed
MESSENGER space probe is at its closest approach during its first flyby of the planet
Mercury. •
January 21: • Stock markets around the world plunge amid growing fears of a U.S.
Great Recession, fueled by the 2007
subprime mortgage crisis. •
Online activist group
Anonymous initiates
Project Chanology, after a
leaked interview of
Tom Cruise by the
Church of Scientology is published on
YouTube, and the Church of Scientology issued a
"copyright infringement" claim. In response, Anonymous sympathizers took to the streets to
protest outside the church (after February 10), while the church's websites and centres were getting
DoS attacks,
phone line nukes, and
black faxes. •
February 16 –
Kosovo unilaterally declares independence from
Serbia. Serbia refuses to recognize it and considers Kosovo as part of its territory. •
February 18 –
WikiLeaks releases
allegations of
illegal activities carried out by the
Cayman Islands branch of
Swiss banking corporation
Julius Baer; a subsequent
lawsuit against WikiLeaks prompts a
temporary suspension of the website, but uproar about violations of
freedom of speech causes WikiLeaks to be brought back online. •
May 2 –
Cyclone Nargis kills 133,000 in
Myanmar. •
May 12 –
Magnitude 8.0 earthquake occurs in Wenchuan, China, causing almost 90,000 people to die or go missing. •
May 28 – The
1st Nepalese Constituent Assembly declares
Nepal a
republic, ending its
monarchy. •
August 1–
12 –
An armed conflict is fought between
Georgia and the
Russian Federation together with
Ossetian and
Abkhazian separatists on the other. Russia officially
recognizes the independence of
Abkhazia and
South Ossetia. •
November 4 –
Barack Obama is
elected as the first African-American
president of the United States. He is
sworn into office on January 20, 2009. •
November 26–
29 – The financial capital of
India,
Mumbai, is
attacked by ten Pakistani terrorists belonging to
Lashkar-e-Taiba, resulting in 175 deaths (including nine attackers). One gunman, named
Ajmal Amir Kasab, is captured alive by Mumbai Police and executed on 21 November 2012. •
December 11 – Following the release of its beta version on
September 2,
Google Chrome 1.0 is released.
2009 outside
UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles •
January 3 – The
cryptocurrency Bitcoin is launched. •
January 15 –
US Airways Flight 1549 ditches in the
Hudson River in an accident that becomes known as the "Miracle on the Hudson", as all 155 people on board are rescued. •
April 1 –
Albania and
Croatia join
NATO. •
April 5 –
North Korea launches a rocket from its
Tonghae Satellite Launching Ground, which it says is carrying the
Kwangmyŏngsŏng-2 satellite, prompting an emergency meeting of the
United Nations Security Council. •
April 7 –
April 2009 Moldovan parliamentary election protests – In protests that spurred across Moldova, claiming a fraudulent election had occurred, 4 people died and 270 were injured. •
April 21 –
UNESCO launches the
World Digital Library. •
June 13 –
Protests erupt in
Iran, following the
presidential election, against
Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. •
June 16 –
BRIC is formed by
Brazil,
Russia,
India, and
China, as an economic bloc. •
June 25 – American pop star
Michael Jackson dies at the age of 50. His death triggers an outpouring of worldwide grief; online reactions to the event cripple several major websites and services, as the abundance of people accessing the
web addresses pushes
internet traffic to unprecedented and historic levels. •
November 23 – At least
58 people are abducted and killed in the then-province of
Maguindanao (now
Maguindanao del Sur,
Philippines, in what the
Committee to Protect Journalists called the single deadliest attack on journalists in history.
2010s was sworn in as the first female
Prime Minister of Australia in 2010. in front of the
White House in Poland, 2016 ,
Euromaidan, people protesting in favor of
Ukraine's European way , Ukraine rally in support of President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, 22 July 2016 protest in
Parkland, Florida, 2018 ,
India 2010 •
February 25 –
Kamla Persad-Bissessar becomes the first female Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago. •
April 10 –
Polish President Lech Kaczyński dies in an
airplane crash near the city of
Smolensk, Russia, along with his wife and 94 other people on board. •
May 10 –
Benigno Aquino III is the first bachelor
President of the Philippines and the second to be the child of a
previous president. •
June 11 –
July 11 –
South Africa becomes the first country in
Africa to host the
FIFA World Cup. •
June 24 –
Julia Gillard becomes the first female
Prime Minister of Australia. •
October 3 –
Dilma Rousseff is
elected as the first female
president of Brazil. She serves as the president until
her impeachment and removal from office on
August 31, 2016. •
November 13 –
Burmese opposition leader and
1991 Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi is released from house arrest, after being incarcerated since 1989. •
December 17 – The
Arab Spring, a
revolutionary wave, begins
in Tunisia, and eventually spreads across the
Middle East and the
Arab world, with widespread
protests,
demonstrations,
riots and
civil wars for
free elections and
human rights.
2011 •
March 11 – The
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and subsequent
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in
Japan leave 15,899 people dead. •
May 2 –
Al-Qaeda leader
Osama bin Laden, the mastermind behind the
9/11 attacks, is
killed in a raid at
his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan by the U.S. Navy's SEAL Team 6 (DEVGRU). •
July 10 – Britain's largest
tabloid newspaper, the
News of the World, shuts down after 168 years in print due to the
2009 phone hacking scandal. •
July 14 –
South Sudan, following the
January 2011 independence referendum, becomes a member of the
United Nations. •
September 17 – The
Occupy movement, an international protest movement against
social and
economic inequality, takes shape. It is partially inspired by the Arab Spring and is one of the first significant global protest movements to occur in the age of
social media. •
October 20 – Deposed dictator
Muammar Gaddafi is
captured and killed by the
National Liberation Army of Libya, during the
Libyan Civil War. •
November 16 – Italy's long-term Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi resigns amid public protests, financial crisis and
sexual scandals. •
December 15 – The
Iraq War is formally declared over. •
December 17 –
Kim Jong-il,
General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea and
supreme leader of North Korea,
dies. He is succeeded by his son
Kim Jong-un.
2012 has been the
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party since 2012. •
November 15 –
Xi Jinping becomes the
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, making him the
paramount leader of
China after
Hu Jintao. •
December 10 –
Séléka rebels seize power in the
Central African Republic, ousting the President and government and beginning a
civil war. •
December 19 –
Park Geun-hye is
elected President of South Korea, the first woman to hold the position.
2013 •
January 11 –
France intervenes with its army in the
Northern Mali conflict, defeating the Islamists who had taken control of the country. •
February 28 –
Pope Benedict XVI resigns, becoming the first pope to do so since 1415. Benedict takes the title
pope emeritus. At the subsequent
papal conclave, Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina is elected pope on
March 13, becoming the first Latin American pope. Bergoglio takes the name of
Pope Francis. •
March 5 – President of Venezuela
Hugo Chávez dies due to prostate cancer and is succeeded by
Nicolás Maduro. •
March 21 – Convicted Kurdish leader
Abdullah Ocalan puts an end to the armed revolt against
Turkey. •
April 8 –
British politician and former
Prime Minister of the UK Margaret Thatcher dies at the age of 87, from a stroke. •
July 1 –
Croatia becomes the
28th member of the
European Union. •
September 14 –
Syria avoids an American intervention on its soil during the
Syrian Civil War, accepting to
destroy all
chemical weapons stocks owned. •
November –
China declares an "
Air Defense Identification Zone" in the
East China Sea, including over the
Senkaku Islands, a group of islands
held by Japan, but claimed by both Japan and China, and the
Socotra Rock, claimed by both China and South Korea. •
December 5 –
South African political and civil leader
Nelson Mandela dies at the age of 95, from natural causes. •
December 15 – The
South Sudanese Civil War breaks out. •
Iran allows international inspections on its nuclear policy in exchange of the removal of the sanctions and the right to produce a small amount of low-grade enriched uranium, thus marking an apparent new policy towards the
United Nations under
Hassan Rohani's presidency. • 2013–2014 – A
political crisis in Thailand breaks out and the government declares
martial law.
2014 •
February 22 – Pro-Russian
President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovich is ousted amidst the
Euromaidan revolution. The
Russian Federation annexes Crimea in response, and a "low intensity"
war in Donbas breaks out between the Ukrainian government and Russian-backed separatists. •
May 26 –
Narendra Modi becomes 14th Prime Minister of
India, winning a clear majority in
the election. •
September 18 –
Scotland votes to remain
part of the
United Kingdom during the
2014 Scottish independence referendum. •
September–
October – During the
Syrian civil war, the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant rises and seizes territories in northern
Iraq and Syria, near the border with Turkey. The
United States lead a coalition of more than 30 countries
to destroy ISIL. Meanwhile,
Russia leads its own coalition, along with Syria, Iraq and Iran, and
Russia's military action begins on
September 30, 2015. •
October 31 – In
Burkina Faso, President
Blaise Compaoré resigns amidst widespread protests, ending 27 years of leadership. •
December 17 –
President of the United States Barack Obama and
First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Raúl Castro announce the beginning of
a process of normalizing relations between Cuba and the United States, ending a 54-year stretch of hostility between the two nations. Later, on
July 20,
2015, with
full diplomatic relations, the embassies of both countries are opened after five decades.
2015 •
January 7 – Two gunmen, brothers Saïd and Chérif Kouachi, commit
a mass murder at the offices of
Charlie Hebdo in
Paris, killing 12 people. Following the attack, about two million people, including more than 40 world leaders, met in Paris for a
rally of national unity, and 3.7 million people joined demonstrations across the country. The phrase
Je suis Charlie became a common slogan of support at the rallies and in social media. •
March 6 –
NASA's
Dawn probe enters orbit around
Ceres, becoming the first spacecraft to visit a
dwarf planet. •
March 23 –
Singaporean politician and the 1st
Prime Minister of Singapore Lee Kuan Yew dies at the age of 91. •
April 25 –
A magnitude 7.8 earthquake strikes
Nepal and causes 8,857 deaths in Nepal, 130 in
India, 27 in
China and 4 in
Bangladesh with a total of 9,018 deaths. •
April 29 – The
World Health Organization (WHO) declares that
rubella has been eradicated from the
Americas. •
June 26 – The
Supreme Court of the United States determines that
same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry in a landmark case
Obergefell v. Hodges. •
July 14 – The
P5+1 (China, France, Russia, the UK, and the US + Germany) and
Iran agree on final provisions of
Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action in regards to the latter's
nuclear program. •
October – The
Chinese Communist Party announces the end of the
one-child policy after 35 years. •
November 13 –
ISIL claims responsibility of the
November 2015 Paris attacks, which killed 137 and left 416 injured. •
November 24 –
Turkey shoots down a Russian
Sukhoi Su-24M attack aircraft. This is the first case of a
NATO member destroying a Russian aircraft since the
attack on the Sui-ho Dam (during the
Korean War). •
November 30 –
December 12 – During the
UN summit on Climate Change, 193 nations
agree to reduce carbon emissions starting in 2020. • During the
2015 European migrant crisis, around 1.3 million people, most notably
refugees of the wars in
Syria,
Iraq and
Afghanistan, flee to Europe to claim
asylum, leading to considerable political upheaval in the
European Union.
Germany ultimately takes in the majority of the asylum seekers.
2016 •
January 3 – Following
the fallout caused by the
execution of Nimr al-Nimr,
Saudi Arabia and several other countries end their
diplomatic relations with
Iran. •
January 8 –
Joaquín Guzmán, widely regarded as the world's most powerful drug trafficker, is recaptured following his escape from a maximum-security prison in Mexico. •
January 16 • The
International Atomic Energy Agency announces that Iran has adequately dismantled
its nuclear weapons program, allowing the
United Nations to lift sanctions immediately. • In the
general election of the Republic of China (Taiwan), the Democratic Progressive Party, led by
Tsai Ing-wen, secured a majority in the Legislative Yuan, resulting in the first majority by a non-KMT party and the first majority won by the DPP. Tsai become the 14th President for
Taiwan, and also become the first female leader for China. •
January 28 – The
World Health Organization announces an
outbreak of the
Zika virus. •
May 9 –
Rodrigo Duterte becomes the first
Mindanaoan
President of the Philippines and the oldest person ever elected to the presidency. •
June 5 –
Hillary Clinton becomes the
Democratic Party's nominee for president of the United States, making her the first woman to be nominated for president by a major party. •
June 23 – The
United Kingdom votes to
leave the European Union in the
June 2016 membership referendum. •
July 15–
16 – A
coup d'état is attempted in Turkey against state institutions, including but not limited to the government and President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The attempt is carried out by a faction within the
Turkish Armed Forces that organized themselves as the
Peace at Home Council. •
September 2 – 1st President of Uzbekistan
Islam Karimov dies at age of 78, after 25 years in office. •
September 28 – Former
President of Israel and
1994 Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Shimon Peres dies at the age of 93, from a massive stroke. •
October 13 –
Bhumibol Adulyadej, the
longest-reigning Thai monarch dies at the age of 88, from a long illness. •
November 8 –
Donald Trump is
elected as the 45th president of the United States, defeating
Hillary Clinton. •
November 25 –
Cuban political and revolutionary leader
Fidel Castro dies at the age of 90.
2017 •
January 21–
22 – In opposition to
Donald Trump's inauguration, millions of people in the US and worldwide join the
Women's March. •
January 27 – U.S. President
Donald Trump signs an
executive order restricting travel and immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries. This order was blocked by the
U.S. federal courts; a second, related order issued by Trump was also blocked by the federal courts. The block of second order was partially removed, by the Supreme Court, in June. The Supreme Court stated they would reconsider the order in October. •
March 10 – The
UN warns that the world is facing the largest
humanitarian crisis since
World War II, with up to 20 million people at risk of starvation and famine in
Yemen,
Somalia,
South Sudan and
Nigeria. •
March 29 – The
United Kingdom triggers
Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty, starting the
Brexit negotiations, the talks for the
United Kingdom to leave the
European Union. •
March 30 –
SpaceX conducts the world's first
reflight of an orbital-class rocket. •
March 31 –
Horacio Cartes presents to Congress his plans of allowing the re-election of the
president of Paraguay for a second term, going against the
Constitution of Paraguay, leading to a
political crisis which ended in the storm of Congress by liberal activists and in the assassination of Rodrigo Quintana by the police. After this, the Congress votes against the re-election project. •
October 27 –
Catalonia declares independence from
Spain, but the declaration is not recognized by the Spanish government or any other sovereign nation.
2018 •
February 6 –
SpaceX successfully conducts the maiden flight of its most powerful rocket, the
Falcon Heavy, from
LC39A at
John F. Kennedy Space Center in
Florida. •
February 9–
25 – The
2018 Winter Olympics are held in
Pyeongchang,
South Korea. •
March 11 – The
National People's Congress of China approves a
constitutional change removing
term limits for its
leaders, granting
Xi Jinping the status of "
leader for life". Xi is the
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (
paramount leader). •
March 19 –
Paula-Mae Weekes becomes the first female
president of Trinidad and Tobago. •
March 24 – In over 900 cities internationally, people participate in demonstrations against gun violence and mass shootings, calling for stronger gun control in the
March for Our Lives, which was a student-led demonstration in response to the
Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in
Parkland, Florida, that took place in
February 14. •
May 9 – The opposition-led
Pakatan Harapan coalition, led by former
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, secures a
parliamentary majority in the
Malaysian Parliament, ending the 61-year rule of the
Barisan Nasional coalition in
Malaysia since
independence in 1957. •
June 12 – President
Donald Trump and
North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un attend a
summit in
Singapore, the first meeting between the leaders of the two countries. •
June 23 –
July 10 –
Tham Luang cave rescue •
October 28 –
Jair Bolsonaro is
elected as the 38th president of
Brazil, after having been stabbed during the election campaign and undergoing three surgeries.
2019 •
January 10 –
Venezuela enters a
presidential crisis after the disputed results of the
2018 Venezuelan presidential election leads to
Juan Guaidó being declared the acting president, disputing
Nicolás Maduro. •
February 27–
28 – President
Donald Trump and North Korean leader
Kim Jong-un meet for the
2019 North Korea–United States Hanoi Summit in
Vietnam. •
March 15: • Over 2 million people in
Hong Kong protest against
proposed legislation regarding
extradition to China. • At the first ever Global
School Strike for Climate, 1.4 million people in about 2,200 protests across 125 countries gathered urging decision-makers to take responsibility and stop the
climate crisis. •
March 23 – Most of the territory formerly held by the
Islamic State in Syria
collapses amidst the
Syrian Civil War. After years of global
push back, the extremist group transitions from a
proto-state into an
insurgency as it retains offshoots and influence in regions across the globe. •
April 11 – Amid
mass protests,
Omar al-Bashir is deposed as
President of Sudan in
a coup d'état, after nearly 30 years in office. •
April 15 –
Notre-Dame fire. •
April 21 –
A series of Islamist 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. It is the deadliest terrorist attack in the country since the
Sri Lankan Civil War ended in 2009. •
April 28 –
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). •
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 to the throne on
May 1. •
July 16 – The
European Parliament elects
Ursula von der Leyen as the new
president of the European Commission. •
September 20 – Likely the largest in world history, the
September 2019 climate strikes included protests in 4,500 locations across over 150 countries and gathered roughly 6 million people, many of them schoolchildren. •
December 10 –
Sanna Marin, at the age of 34, becomes the world's youngest serving prime minister after being selected to lead
Finland's
Social Democratic Party. •
December 18 – President
Donald Trump is
impeached by the
United States House of Representatives. •
December 31 – The first known case of
COVID-19 is reported in
Wuhan,
China; the disease would rapidly proliferate into a
global pandemic throughout the next three months.
2020s in Miami during the
COVID-19 pandemic in June 2020 following the
death of Elizabeth II 2020 •
January 2 – The
Royal Australian Air Force and
Navy are deployed to
New South Wales and
Victoria to assist mass evacuation efforts amidst the
2019–20 Australian bushfire season. •
January 5 –
2019–20 Croatian presidential election – The second round of voting is held and
Zoran Milanović of the
Social Democratic Party of Croatia defeats
incumbent president Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović. •
January 10 –
Haitham bin Tariq succeeds
Qaboos bin Said as the
Sultan of Oman. •
January 11 –
Presidential and
legislative elections are held in
Taiwan.
Incumbent president Tsai Ing-wen is reelected and the
Democratic Progressive Party wins a majority of 67 out of 113 seats in the
Legislative Yuan. •
January 31 – The
United Kingdom becomes the first member state to
leave the
European Union. •
March 11 – The
World Health Organization declares
COVID-19 to be a pandemic. •
May 26 –
Protests break out following the
murder of George Floyd across
hundreds of cities in the United States and even smaller ones
outside the US.
Derek Chauvin, the officer responsible for Floyd's murder, would ultimately be
convicted on two counts of murder and one of manslaughter in the wake of the protests. •
June 30 –
China passes the controversial
Hong Kong national security law, allowing China to crack down on opposition to Beijing at home or abroad. •
August 11 –
Kamala Harris becomes the Democratic Party's nominee for vice-president of the United States, making her the first
African-American, the first
Asian-American and the third female vice presidential running mate on a major party ticket. •
August 18 – A mutiny in a military base by soldiers of the
Malian Armed Forces develops into
a coup d'état.
President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta and
Prime Minister Boubou Cissé, among other senior governmental and military officers, are forced to resign. •
August 28 –
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the
longest-serving prime minister in the
history of Japan, announces his pending resignation from office, citing ill health, he was replaced by
Yoshihide Suga and
Fumio Kishida. •
September 4 –
Kosovo and Serbia announce that they will
normalize economic relations. •
September 29 – The
Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah al-Sabah dies at the age of 91. Crown Prince
Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah is named his successor. •
November 3 –
Joe Biden is
elected as the 46th president of the United States, and
Kamala Harris is elected as vice-president. Biden is the oldest person elected to a first term. •
November 15: •
President of Kyrgyzstan Sooronbay Jeenbekov resigns from office after weeks of
massive protests in the wake of the
October 2020 parliamentary election; opposition leader
Sadyr Japarov assumes office as both the acting president and
Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan. • The
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) is signed by 15
Asia-Pacific countries to form the world's largest free-trade bloc, covering a third of the world's population. •
December 11 – The
European Union agrees to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 55% over the next decade.
2021 •
January 1 – The
African Continental Free Trade Area comes into effect. •
January 6 –
Pro-Trump rioters storm the US Capitol, disrupting the Congressional certification of United States President-elect
Joe Biden. Trump is
impeached a second time a week later for his role in the storming, making him the first US federal official to be impeached more than once and the first president to have his
trial occur after his tenure expired. •
January 20 –
Joe Biden and
Kamala Harris are
inaugurated as the 46th and 49th
President and
Vice President of the United States. Harris becomes the first Black, South Asian and female Vice President. •
January 22 – The
Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, the first legally binding international agreement comprehensively to prohibit nuclear weapons, comes into effect. •
January 26 – COVID-19 pandemic: The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases exceeds 100 million worldwide. •
February 1 – A
coup d'état in
Myanmar removes
Aung San Suu Kyi from power and restores
military rule. •
February 18 –
NASA's
Mars 2020 mission (containing the
Perseverance rover and
Ingenuity helicopter drone) lands on
Mars at
Jezero Crater, after seven months of travel. •
April 30 –
June 13 – A
crush during a pilgrimage on
Lag BaOmer, renewed violence during the
2021 Israel-Palestine crisis and continuing problems with the
COVID-19 pandemic in Israel precede the
2021 Israeli presidential election. Amidst the election,
Naftali Bennett and
Yair Lapid agree to a rotation government,
first headed by Bennett, in order to oust
Benjamin Netanyahu as
Prime Minister as the month of crises is the culmination of scandals and corruption, including financial criminal charges, during Netanyahu's record long tenure. •
June 7 – The
Juno spacecraft performs its only flyby of
Jupiter's moon
Ganymede, the first flyby of the moon by any spacecraft in over 20 years. •
July 7: •
Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, is
assassinated in a midnight attack by an unknown group of gunmen. • Beginning of the
Belarus–European Union border crisis. •
August 15 – The Taliban
regain control of Kabul after US forces and the
republican government flee Afghanistan, marking the end of the
War in Afghanistan after nearly 20 years. •
November 30 –
Barbados becomes a republic by replacing
Elizabeth II as Queen with
Sandra Mason as
president in the role of head of state. •
December 25 –
NASA,
ESA, the
Canadian Space Agency and the
Space Telescope Science Institute launch the
James Webb Space Telescope, the successor of the
Hubble Space Telescope.
2022 •
January 2 –
Abdalla Hamdok resigns as
Prime Minister of Sudan amid deadly protests. •
January 4 – The
five permanent members of the UN Security Council—China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States—issue a rare joint statement affirming that "a
nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought." •
February 4–
20 – The
2022 Winter Olympics are held in
Beijing, China, making it the first city ever to host both the
Summer Olympics and
Winter Olympics. •
February 24 – After a prolonged
military buildup, Russia launches an
invasion of Ukraine. •
May 9 –
Bongbong Marcos and
Sara Duterte are
elected the 17th
President and 15th
Vice President of the Philippines in a
landslide victory. •
June 24 – The Supreme Court
rules that the
Constitution of the United States does not confer a right to abortion, thus overruling the 1973 case
Roe v. Wade, and its related 1992 case
Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
Protests erupt across nearly every major city in the United States. •
July 8 – Former
Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe is
assassinated while giving a public speech in the city of
Nara, Japan. •
September 8 –
Elizabeth II, the
longest reigning British monarch and
longest reigning female monarch dies, and is succeeded by
Charles III, her eldest child. •
October 23 – China's leader
Xi Jinping is
re-elected as the
General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party for a third term, that makes Xi the first
CCP leader since
Mao Zedong to be chosen for a third term. •
October 30 –
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is
elected as the 39th president of
Brazil, after defeating incumbent
Jair Bolsonaro, becoming the first Brazilian president to be elected for a third term. awarding a
female soldier in June 2022 •
November 24 – Long-time
opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim is appointed by
Yang di-Pertuan Agong Abdullah as
Prime Minister of Malaysia. •
November 30 –
OpenAI releases
ChatGPT, an
artificial intelligence chatbot able to answer questions and write essays. •
December 7 – The
Congress of
Peru removes
President Pedro Castillo from office and arrests him after he tries to dissolve congress in a
coup attempt, Vice President
Dina Boluarte succeeds him, leading to
large protests against Boluarte and in favor of Castillo to erupt. •
December 19 – At the
UN Biodiversity Conference (COP15), nearly 200 countries agree a landmark deal to protect a third of the planet for nature by 2030. •
December 29 –
Brazilian football legend
Pelé dies at the age of 82. •
December 31 –
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who served from 2005 until his resignation in 2013,
dies at the age of 95.
2023 •
January 1 –
Croatia adopts the
euro and joins the
Schengen Area, becoming the 20th member state of the
Eurozone and the 27th member of the Schengen Area. This is the first enlargement of the Eurozone since
Lithuania's entry in
2015, and the first enlargement of the Schengen Area since
Liechtenstein's entry in
2011. •
February 6 – Two
earthquakes strike southern
Turkey, the first 7.8 () in Gaziantep Province and the other 7.5 in Kahramanmaraş Province, causing widespread damage and at least 58,000 deaths in
Turkey and
Syria, with more than 120,000 injured. •
February 27 – The United Kingdom and the European Union reach a
new agreement surrounding modifications to the
Northern Ireland Protocol. •
March 10 – The
National People's Congress unanimously re-elects CCP general secretary
Xi Jinping as the
president of the People's Republic of China to an unprecedented third term. •
March 17 – The
International Criminal Court issues
an arrest warrant for Russian president
Vladimir Putin, the first against a
permanent member of the
United Nations Security Council. •
April 4 –
Finland becomes the 31st member of
NATO, doubling its border with Russia. and other South American leaders during the
2023 South American summit in
Brasília, May 2023 •
April 14 –
Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) is launched by the
European Space Agency (ESA) to search for life in the
Jovian system, with an expected arrival date of 2031. •
May 5 –
World Health Organization declares end of the
COVID-19 pandemic global health emergency. •
May 6: The
coronation of Charles III and Camilla as
King and
Queen of the
United Kingdom and the other
Commonwealth realms is held in
Westminster Abbey,
London. •
June 14: Scientists report the creation of the first synthetic
human embryo from
stem cells, without the need for
sperm or
egg cells. •
June 19: The
United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopts the
High Seas Treaty, the first
treaty aimed towards
marine conservation in
international waters. •
June 23 – The
Wagner group launches a
rebellion against the Russian government. •
July 14 –
SAG-AFTRA held its
strike against the major film and TV studios in protest of low compensation, ownership of work, and
generative AI. It was ended on November 9. •
August 18 – The
United States,
Japan, and
South Korea agree to sign a
trilateral pact. •
August 23: • India's
Chandrayaan-3 becomes the first spacecraft to land near the
south pole of the
Moon. •
Wagner Group leader
Yevgeny Prigozhin and founder
Dmitry Utkin are killed when their plane
crashes outside of Moscow, killing eight others. •
August 30 – In the hours following the announcement of incumbent president
Ali Bongo Ondimba's reelection as
President of
Gabon after the
2023 presidential election, the
military launches
a successful coup d'état and creates the
Committee for the Transition and Restoration of Institutions to govern the country, ending the rule of the Bongo family after 56 years in power. •
September 9 – At the
18th G20 summit in
New Delhi, the
African Union is announced as the 21st permanent member of the
G20. •
September 10 –
Storm Daniel, a
Mediterranean tropical-like cyclone makes landfall in
Libya, killing at least 5,000 people, with Libyan authorities announcing between 10,000 and 100,000 missing. In the city of
Derna in
Libya, two dams collapsed, resulting in a quarter of the city being destroyed. •
September 28 –
President of Artsakh Samvel Shahramanyan signs a decree that will dissolve all
state institutions of Artsakh by 1 January 2024, bringing an end to the breakaway state. •
October 7: •
Hamas militants launch a large-scale
attack from the
Gaza Strip, infiltrating southern
Israel and prompting a
full military response from the
Israel Defense Forces. •
A doublet earthquake occurs in
Herat Province in
Afghanistan, killing 2,000 people and injuring over 9,000, with tremors felt in
Iran and
Turkmenistan. The earthquake is the deadliest in the country since
1998. •
October 8 – Israel's
Security Cabinet formally
declares war, for the first time since the
Yom Kippur War in 1973, on
Hamas. in
Toronto, Canada on 28 October 2023 •
October 15 – Twenty-one species in the United States are declared extinct by the
US Fish and Wildlife Service. These are one
mammal, ten
birds, two
fish, and eight
mussels. •
November 1 – The first
AI Safety Summit takes place in the United Kingdom, with 28 countries signing a "world first agreement" on how to manage the riskiest forms of
artificial intelligence. •
November 9 – U.S. surgeons at
NYU Langone Health announce the
world's first whole eye transplant. •
November 24 –
Somalia is admitted as the eighth member of the
East African Community, having applied for membership in 2012. •
December 6 –
Google DeepMind releases the
Gemini Language Model. Gemini will act as a
foundational model integrated into Google's existing tools, including
search and
Bard. •
December 12 – At the
COP28 climate summit in
Dubai, a consensus is reached for countries to "transition away" from fossil fuels, the first such agreement in the conference's 30-year history. •
December 16 –
Emir of Kuwait Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah dies at the age of 86 and is succeeded by his half-brother
Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah.
2024 •
January 1: •
Egypt,
Ethiopia,
Iran,
Saudi Arabia, and the
United Arab Emirates become
BRICS members. • The
Republic of Artsakh is formally dissolved as
Nagorno-Karabakh unifies with
Azerbaijan. •
Ethiopia announces an agreement with
Somaliland to use the port of
Berbera. Ethiopia also says that it will eventually recognize Somaliland's
independence, becoming the first country to do so. • Disney's copyright protection on
Steamboat Willie and the original
Mickey Mouse expires as they
enter the public domain. •
January 8: •
Astrobotic Technology alongside
NASA launch the first commercial Lunar Lander. Seven hours after launch, an anomaly prevents stable orientation due to propulsion issues, resulting in critical fuel loss and the abandonment of the moon landing. •
Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa declares a
state of emergency following the escape of Los Choneros drug cartel leader
José Adolfo Macías Villamar, from prison. •
January 13 –
2024 Taiwanese presidential election:
Lai Ching-te of the ruling
Democratic Progressive Party wins with 40% of the votes. •
January 14: •
Queen Margrethe II of
Denmark formally
abdicates as
Queen on the 52nd anniversary of her accession, with her eldest son Frederik succeeding her as
King Frederik X. •
2024 Comorian presidential election: Amid an opposition boycott, incumbent president
Azali Assoumani wins re-election with 62.9% of the vote and only 16.3% voter turnout. •
January 15 – Following a brief political crisis in the aftermath of the
2023 elections,
Bernardo Arévalo is
inaugurated as the 52nd President of Guatemala. •
January 19 – Japan becomes the fifth country to successfully
soft land on the Moon, with its
SLIM mission. •
January 26 –
2024 Tuvaluan general election:
Kausea Natano, the incumbent Prime Minister of Tuvalu, loses reelection to Parliament. A month later,
Feleti Teo is elected prime minister. •
February 4: •
President of Namibia Hage Geingob dies at the age of 82, and is succeeded by his vice-president
Nangolo Mbumba. •
2024 Salvadoran presidential election: Incumbent President
Nayib Bukele wins the election with over 80% of the vote, becoming the first president to be reelected in
El Salvador since
1944. •
February 6 – Former
President of Chile Sebastián Piñera dies in a helicopter crash at the age of 74. •
February 7 –
2024 Azerbaijani presidential election: Amid an opposition boycott, President
Ilham Aliyev is reelected to a fifth term. •
February 8 –
2024 Pakistani general election:
Independent politicians, most of whom are members of the
banned political party
Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, win a plurality of seats in the
National Assembly. •
February 29 –
Flour massacre. •
March 7 –
Sweden officially joins
NATO, becoming its 32nd member. •
March 10 –
2024 Portuguese legislative election: The
Democratic Alliance wins a plurality of seats and forms a minority government amid losses by the incumbent
Socialist Party and major gains by the right-wing
Chega party. •
March 11 – Haitian acting
Prime Minister Ariel Henry announces his pending resignation from both offices amid an ongoing
crisis marked by
gang warfare in the country. •
March 13 – The
Artificial Intelligence Act, the world's first comprehensive legal and regulatory framework for
artificial intelligence, is passed by the
European Union. •
April 1 –
World Central Kitchen aid convoy attack •
May 29 –
2024 South African general election: The
ANC party fails to win a majority of the vote for the first time in South Africa's democratic history. •
June 2 – The
2024 Mexican general election is held, with
Claudia Sheinbaum elected as the first female president of Mexico. •
June 6–
9 – The
2024 European Parliament election is held. The
EPP, of incumbent
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, retains its status as the largest group in
parliament amid notable gains by
far-right political groups. •
July 4 –
2024 United Kingdom general election:
Sir Keir Starmer leads the
Labour Party to a landslide victory, returning the party to government for the first time in 14 years. •
July 13 –
Attempted assassination of Donald Trump in Pennsylvania •
July 31 –
Ismail Haniyeh, the political leader of
Hamas,
is assassinated at his residence in
Tehran. by protesters after the
resignation of Sheikh Hasina, 2024 •
August 5 –
Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina announces her resignation and flees to
India following
nationwide protests. •
September 3 – Dismissed
Bamban mayor
Alice Guo is arrested by the
Directorate General of Immigration in
Tangerang,
Indonesia, after fleeing to the country from the
Philippines amidst an ongoing
Senate inquiry on the
Philippine offshore gaming operator. •
September 17–
18 –
2024 Lebanon electronic device attacks. •
September 23–
30 – Israel launches a
series of airstrikes on Lebanon and Hezbollah. •
October 1 – Israel launches an
invasion of Lebanon. •
October 30 –
2024 Botswana general election: The ruling
Botswana Democratic Party is voted out of power, ending 58 years of uninterrupted governance.
Duma Boko of the
UDC party is elected
President of Botswana. •
November 5 –
2024 United States presidential election:
Donald Trump, with his running mate
JD Vance, is elected for a second non-consecutive term, defeating incumbent
Vice President Kamala Harris. Trump is the second candidate to do so since
Grover Cleveland in
1892. •
November 27 –
December 8 – The
2024 Syrian opposition offensives culminate in the
fall of the Assad regime. •
December 20 –
2024 Magdeburg car attack. •
December 29 – Former United States president
Jimmy Carter dies at age 100.
2025 •
January 1 –
Popeye enters the public domain. •
January 20 – Donald Trump is inaugurated as President of the United States for his second term. The Chinese Large Language Model
Deepseek is launched. •
January 21 – The United States leaves the
World Health Organization. •
January 29 –
Ne Zha 2 is released in Chinese theaters. •
February 14–
17 –
Argentinian President Javier Milei is accused of fraud after he promotes the memecoin "$LIBRA". •
March 11–
15 –
Leak of US plans to bomb Yemen on a groupchat, after Atlantic writer
Jeffrey Goldberg was unintentionally added. •
March 11 – The former
President of the Philippines,
Rodrigo Duterte, is
arrested in the
Philippines after being served an
arrest warrant from the
International Criminal Court for
crimes against humanity. •
April 16 – The
Supreme court of the United Kingdom rules that the terms "man" and "woman" in the equality act refer to biological sex and not gender identity. •
April 21 –
Pope Francis dies from a stroke. •
April 29 –
Mark Carney wins the Canadian federal election. •
May 3 –
Anthony Albanese is reelected as Australian Prime minister for his second term. •
May 6 –
Friedrich Merz becomes Chancellor of Germany. •
May 8 – Bishop
Robert Francis Prevost becomes the 267th Pope. •
June 14: • United States legislator from Minnesota
Melissa Hortman and her husband are
assassinated in their home. Legislator
John Hoffman and his wife are also shot and seriously injured. • The
No Kings protests are held across the United States to protest the Trump administration. •
July 5 – The government of the United Kingdom declares
Palestine Action a terrorist organization. •
July 15 – Baptist Pastor
John Mcarthur dies at 86. •
August 7: •
David Ellison's company
Skydance purchases Paramount. •
GPT-5 is officially launched, succeeding
GPT-4. •
August 15 –
Putin meets with Trump in Alaska to discuss the Russia-Ukraine conflict. •
August 29 – Thai prime minister
Paetongtarn Shinawatra is removed from office. , Chinese leader
Xi Jinping and North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un at the
Victory Day Parade in China, 3 September 2025 •
September 2 – Xi Jinping meets Vladimir Putin in Beijing, one day before the
military parade. •
September 9 –
Protestors storm the parliament of Nepal, establishing a new government. •
September 10 – American conservative activist and co-founder of
Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk is
assassinated. •
September 12: • Tyler Robinson is detained and charged with the murder of Charlie Kirk in Utah. • Israel
bombs Qatar's capital,
Doha. •
September 16 – The United Nations declares that Israel is committing genocide in the Gaza strip. •
October 1 – The US federal government
shuts down. The shutdown ends on
November 12 after 43 days, the longest government shutdown in US history. •
October 3 – A general strike is held in Italy to protest the
Gaza genocide. •
October 6 – Bari Weiss is made head of CBS. •
October 10 – Right wing Venezuelan opposition leader
Maria Corina Machado wins the Nobel peace prize. •
October 21 – Right wing Japanese politician
Sanae Takaichi becomes prime minister of Japan. She is the first woman to hold the office. •
October 26 –
Timor-Leste becomes the 11th member state of ASEAN, being the first enlargement of ASEAN since
Cambodia's entry in 1999 and comprising all countries of
Southeast Asia. •
October 27 – Paul Biya wins the Cameroon election and becomes President for his 8th term. •
November 4: •
Zohran Mamdani wins the New York general election. •
Typhoon Kalmaegi leaves more than 288 people dead in the
Philippines,
Vietnam, and
Thailand. •
November 12 – 20,000 pages of documents on Jeffrey Epstein are released. They mention
Donald Trump,
Prince Andrew,
Bill Clinton,
Noam Chomsky and others. •
December 14 – Film Director
Rob Reiner and his wife
Michele Reiner are murdered in their home.
2026 •
January 3 – Following their military strike in Venezuela, the United States captures
Maduro and his wife
Cilia Flores and transports them to New York to face trial. •
February 27 -
Warner Brothers agrees to acquisition by
Paramount Skydance. •
February 28 –
Israel and the
United States start a
war against Iran in a series of airstrikes.
Ali Khamenei is killed. •
March 8 –
Mojtaba Khamenei is elected supreme leader of Iran by the
Iranian assembly of experts. •
March 23 – A
constitutional reform to the Italian judicial system proposed by
Giorgia Meloni is rejected in a
referendum by 53%. •
March 29 –
Avi Lewis is elected leader of the
NDP. •
April 1 –
NASA launches the
Artemis II mission. •
April 12 -
Péter Magyar is elected prime minister of Hungary, succeeding
Victor Orban. •
April 16 - Leader of the South African left-wing
Economic Freedom Fighters party
Julius Malema is jailed for firing a rifle into the air at a rally in 2018. •
April 25 - There is a
shooting at the
White House Correspondents' Dinner. •
April 26 - Cole Allen is charged with attempting to assasinate the U.S. president in connection to the White House Correspondents' dinner shooting. •
April 29 - Canada is chosen to host the
Defense, Security and Resilience Bank headquarters. ==Politics, wars, and states==