A review of events and their interpretation.
Northern Ireland(2nd) A tentative agreement in Northern Ireland ends the deadlock in the peace process. The IRA will disarm in the near future, and Sinn Fein will be allowed to take its seats in the provicial cabinet. This follows almost a week of non-stop negotiations at Stormont Castle. |
Unrest(5th) Quebec's 47,000 nurses vote on their union's decision to continue their illegal strike. Nurses have been off the job since June 26. (12th) Student rallies in Iran take a violent turn. For the first time since protests began five days ago, police clash with pro-government demonstrators. Many were injured in the clashes outside Tehran university, the worst since the Islamic revolution in 1979. (12th) Striking loggers from Corner Brook paper mill take their picket to the water. The paper mill had used its tug boat to take some guests on a tour of the Bay of Islands. The striking loggers used the opportunity to embarrass the company, unhappy that the tug is being used during the strike. (15th) The Serbian parliament expels an opposition party and another walked out in a stormy session at which a deputy warned the leadership was pushing the country toward a civil war. The New Democracy party, whose five deputies lost their seats at the session, said the move was in revenge for their calls for Slobodan Milosevic, president of Serb-dominated Yugoslavia, to step down. |
Peace, Reconciliation and Normalcy(6th) Israel's new prime minister, Ehud Barak, takes office. He calls on Arab leaders to make a "brave peace" with Israel. The Labour leader who last month beat Benjamin Netanyahu in general elections, leads a coalition government of seven parties. Barak says he wants to end the 100-year conflict in the Middle East, a priority he places above the declining economy and infighting among Israeli Jews. |
This Is Also News(1st) 20 are killed as a cable car to an astronomical observatory crashes 85m to the ground in the French Alps. (10th) A man is arrested after plotting to poison British drinking water. A series of letters was sent by the "Republican Revenge Group", claiming they would drop nasty stuff into resevoirs. The water industry says the threat was credible, but would have caused little damage. (13th) A US court dismisses seven brokerage firms as defendants in a class-action lawsuit brought by shareholders in the failed Bre-X gold mining venture. The main lawsuit against Canada's bankrupt Bre-X Minerals Ltd will go ahead. The suit was filed in the wake of the spectacular collapse of Bre-X in 1997 after it revealed it had faked a gold find in Busang, Indonesia that had been touted as the biggest of the century. Shareholders are seeking damages for $2.6 billion against Bre-X and holding company Bresea as well as eight former Bre-X officers. |
Cricket(1st - 5th, Test 1455) Edgbaston, Birmingham: Eng -v- NZ. A wild, rollercoaster test. New Zealand elect to bat, and are tottering at 104/6 shortly after lunch. Parore makes 73 as the side is dismissed at the end of day 1. Caddick and Tufnell take three apiece. On day 2, England plummet away to 54/7 by lunch, before Caddick and Tudor score 70, taking the total towards respectibility. Three wickets for Nash and Cairns. New Zealand plummet away as well, in a race to see who can score fewest runs in a complete innings. Doull saves the day with 46, Caddick 5/32. Nightwatchman Tudor scores his first-class best, and the best ever by an England nightwatchman, as the home side cruises to victory. Tudor makes 99* as the game ends before tea on the third day. NZ 226 and 107; England 126 & 209/3 - England win by 7 wickets. |
Tennis and Other Sports(2nd) The Wimbledon Quarter-Finals: Women: Alexandra Stephenson defeats Jelena Dokic in three sets; both were qualifiers, Alex becomes the first qualifier to make the semis here since John McEnroe in 1977. She'll face Lindsay Davenport, who downs Natalie Tauziat. Marjana Lucic's progression continues, defeating defending champion Jana Novotna; she'll meet Steffi Graf. |
Passages(1st) Lord Whitelaw, the former Home Secretary, 81. Willie Whitelaw was a defeated candidate in the 1975 Conservative leadership elections, and spend 1979-83 as Home Secretary during a turbulent period in Britain's history. (4th) Married: Victoria Aadams and David Beckham. Posh Spice and Floppy-fringed MUN midfielder get hitched in a ceremony in an Irish castle. Suggestions that they've timed it to distract from the #32 failure of fellow Spice Mel G's new single cannot be confirmed. (6th) Retiring: Boris Yeltsgin. The Russian president says he is prepared to step down when his term expires next summer. Yeltsgin says that new politicians must emerge, and hopes for new ideas in leadership for the post-communist nation. (10th) Recovering: Sir Elton John. The flamboyant singer is fitted with a heart pacemaker after collapsing en route to Posh and Beck's wedding. (12th) Bill Owen, Compo in the BBC's long-running Last of the Summer Wine, dies aged 79. The tales of four old men up to high jinks in the Yorkshire Dales has been a massive hit since debuting in 1975. Owen had previously made his name as a performer of comic songs. |
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