This Day in History – April 17
Today is the 107th day of 2013. There are 258 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
2000: Paul Kagame, former rebel leader whose forces stopped the 1994 genocide, is selected president of Rwanda — the nation’s first Tutsi leader since independence in 1962.
OTHER EVENTS
1492: Spain agrees to finance Christopher Columbus’ voyage of discovery; Columbus signs a contract with a representative of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, giving him a commission to seek a westward ocean passage to Asia.
1521: Martin Luther appears before the Holy Roman Emperor at Worms, Germany, and is cross-examined about his thoughts on religious reform. Luther goes into hiding soon after.
1524: Giovanni da Verrazano discovers New York harbor.
1824: Russia and the US define respective rights in the Pacific Ocean and on northwest coast of America.
1895: China and Japan, by Treaty of Shimonoseki, recognise independence of Korea; China opens seven new ports and cedes Formosa (Taiwan), Port Arthur and the Liao Tung Peninsula to Japan.
1946: Last French troops leave Syria, which becomes independent.
1961: Cuba is invaded at “Bay of Pigs” by a US supported invasion force of 1,500 Cuban exiles, who are defeated by Fidel Castro’s forces.
1964: The Ford Motor Co unveils its new Mustang model; Jerrie Mock of Columbus, Ohio, becomes the first woman to complete a solo airplane flight around the world.
1969: Czechoslovak Communist Party chairman Alexander Dubcek is deposed.
1971: Egypt, Syria and Libya sign agreement to confederate.
1975: Phnom Penh falls to communist insurgents, ending Cambodia’s five-year war.
1993: A federal jury in Los Angeles convicts two former police officers of violating the civil rights of beaten motorist Rodney King; two other officers are acquitted.
1995: Turkey announces it has started to withdraw some of the 35,000 troops it sent into northern Iraq to fight Kurdish guerrillas.
1997: The South Korean Supreme Court upholds verdicts sentencing former president Chun Doo Hwan to life in prison and his successor, Roh Tae Woo, to 17 years. They were accused of abuse of power and corruption.
1998: The UN withdraws the team investigating mass killings of Rwandan Hutus in Congo, complaining of a “total lack of cooperation” by the Congolese government.
1999: The Indian nationalist coalition government of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee resigns after a vote of no confidence in parliament.
2001: Jury selection begins in Brussels in the landmark trial of four Rwandans, including two Roman Catholic nuns, who faced charges of aiding and abetting the murder of Tutsis during the 1994 genocide.
2005: Communist rebels in southern Nepal drag at least 10 people from their homes and gun them down for refusing to take up arms with the guerrilla movement. The guerrillas, who claim to be inspired by Chinese revolutionary Mao Zedong, began fighting in 1996 to overthrow Nepal’s monarchy and establish a communist state.
2008: A suicide bomber strikes the funeral of two anti-al-Qaeda Sunni tribesmen in a town north of Baghdad, killing at least 50 people and wounding dozens.
2010: Some 100,000 Poles fill Warsaw’s biggest public square, joining together for a memorial and funeral Mass for the 96 people killed in a plane crash in Russia a week earlier.
2011: The operator of Japan’s crippled nuclear plant lays out a blueprint for stopping radiation leaks and stabilising damaged reactors within the next six to nine months as a first step toward allowing some of the tens of thousands of evacuees to return to the area.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Henry Vaughan, English poet (1622-1695); Samuel Chase, US jurist/signer of the Declaration of Independence (1741-1811); J Pierpont Morgan, US financier (1837-1913); Isak Dinesen, Danish writer (1885-1962); Thornton Wilder, US novelist/playwright (1897-1975); Nikita Khrushchev, Soviet statesman (1894-1971); Liz Phair, US singer (1967-); Jennifer Garner, US actress (1972-); Victoria Adams Beckham, British singer (1974-).
—AP