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June 2010

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June 2010 was the sixth month of the current year. It began on a Tuesday and ended after 30 days on a Wednesday.

International holidays

(See Holidays and observances, on sidebar at right, below)

Portal:Current events

This is an archived version of Wikipedia's Current events Portal from June 2010.

Current events of 1 June 2010 (2010-06-01) (Tuesday) edit history watch
  • Flying in an orbit 100 kilometers above the moon, the CE-2 is tasked to collect data for a soft-landing designed for its successor, the Chang'e-3. China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), said at the Global Lunar Conference held in Beijing. (Global Times)
  • Judith Osburn, a Binghamton attorney, discussed same-sex marriage in New York and its complexity. (The Ithaca Journal)
  • As climate talks get under way in Bonn, Thomas Hale and Scott Moore call for a radical new approach to cutting emissions that sidesteps intergovernmental deadlock and unites eager players, from Wal-Mart to city halls. (China Dialogue)
  • Lee Murray, the mastermind of the Securitas depot robbery in Kent, England, is jailed for 10 years in Morocco BBC
  • The trial of London-based multi-national oil trading firm Trafigura for illegally exporting hazardous waste to Ivory Coast in 2006 begins in Amsterdam. (BBC) (The Guardian)
  • Poland publishes the transcript of flight data recorders from the fatal 2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash which killed 96 officials and intellectuals on 10 April. (BBC) (China Daily) (Aljazeera)
  • Five opposition candidates, including Burundi's ex-rebel leader Agathon Rwasa, withdraw from forthcoming presidential polls. (BBC)
  • The Nanjing Metro opens its Line 2, extending its route length from 22km to 85km, and the number of stations from 16 to 57. (Railway Gazette)
  • Three judges are shot dead at a court in Hunan, China; the gunman later kills himself. (China Daily) (BBC)
  • Three Namibian women sue the state after they are sterilised without their informed consent after being diagnosed as HIV positive. (BBC) (UPI)
  • Tropical Storm Agatha:
  • At least 5 people are killed in an attack on the Lahore hospital in Pakistan where many of the injured in Friday's attack on members of the Ahmadis sect, as well as one of the captured militants, are undergoing treatment. (Geotv) (The Hindu) (USA Today) (CNN)
  • Al-Qaeda's top leader in Afghanistan, and Osama bin Laden's third in command, Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, is reported killed. (The Australian) (CNN)
  • Another UK minister, the new Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, who was appointed after the resignation of fellow Liberal Democrat David Laws, is embroiled in the ongoing expenses scandal after admitting to having avoided paying capital gains tax when he sold his taxpayer-funded second home at a profit. (The Australian)
  • America's Obama administration warns that BP's oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico could continue until August. (The Australian)
  • The Iranian ambassador in Baghdad says the recent release of two Iranians from Iraqi custody is not an indication of any impeding deal to free three Americans held in Tehran on spying charges since their capture in July 2009 while hiking in northern Iraq's mountainous Kurdish region. (USA Today)
  • The United States insists any Afghan peace deal must ensure women's rights as Afghanistan prepares to open a peace conference aimed at persuading Taliban leaders to put down their weapons. (USA Today)
  • Former Vice President of the United States Al Gore and his wife Tipper announce their separation. (USA Today)
  • Aftermath of the Gaza flotilla raid:
    • Survivors of the Israeli assault on the Gaza-bound international aid flotilla return to Greece and Turkey, providing the first eyewitness accounts of the attack. (The Guardian) (BBC)
    • Israel announces it has imprisoned an official figure of 487 of the people it captured in its commando raid on the Gaza-bound international aid flotilla, while 48 others will be officially expelled after being brought into Israel by Israeli authorities yesterday. (The Sydney Morning Herald) (AFP)
    • Israel's ambassador to Denmark, Arthur Avnon, announces that the Israeli military had received rumours of a report which asserted a link between the flotilla and Al-Qaida. (FOX News) (News24)
    • Hundreds of Israelis gather outside the Turkish embassy in Tel Aviv in protest against Turkey's involvement in the Gaza flotilla. (Ynetnews)
    • Turks protest for a second day, marching in front of Istanbul's Israeli consulate, and several are arrested in Ankara after encountering police in front of the Israeli Embassy there. (ABC News)
    • Coalition parties in the Northern Ireland Assembly clash over the Israeli commando attack on the aid convoy. (The Belfast Telegraph)
    • Reports are released regarding the nationalities of those captured after the flotilla raid. (Asia One News) (The Age)
    • Reports are also released expressing concern for captured international journalists, including those from Aljazeera and Astro Awani, while media organisations are asked to act for the release of all journalists in Israeli custody and to request their freedom to practice their profession without pressure and harassment. (ArabNews) (NDTV)
    • Egypt announces that it will temporarily open its border with Gaza for aid. (AP via Fox News)
    • Turkey calls for sanctions against Israel. The United States, a permanent member of the UN Security Council, acts to mitigate the language of the Security Council's draft statement which condemned Israel's action "in the strongest terms", opting instead for one that requests an "impartial" investigation of the deaths and condemns the "acts" that led to it. (The Times)
    • Twenty Israeli trucks deliver cargo from the captured ships to the Gaza Strip via Kerem Shalom crossing. (YnetNews) (YouTube)
  • Israeli–Palestinian conflict:
    • The Israeli Defense Forces kill two Palestinians terrorists in Gaza who were attempting to cross the border fence, after an exchange of gunfire. Israel closes four settlements, Route 323 and schools as a result of the incident. (The Jerusalem Post)
    • The Jerusalem Post reports that Israeli soldiers have engaged and killed what they describe as three "terrorists" who had fired Kassam Rockets into Israeli lands. No injuries were reported from the rocket attacks.(The Jerusalem Post)
    • The head of Gaza emergency services confirms that these three Palestinian bodies were retrieved and brought to a morgue in Gaza City. (Aljazeera)
Current events of 2 June 2010 (2010-06-02) (Wednesday) edit history watch
Current events of 3 June 2010 (2010-06-03) (Thursday) edit history watch
Current events of 4 June 2010 (2010-06-04) (Friday) edit history watch
Current events of 5 June 2010 (2010-06-05) (Saturday) edit history watch
Current events of 6 June 2010 (2010-06-06) (Sunday) edit history watch
Current events of 7 June 2010 (2010-06-07) (Monday) edit history watch
Current events of 8 June 2010 (2010-06-08) (Tuesday) edit history watch
Current events of 9 June 2010 (2010-06-09) (Wednesday) edit history watch
Current events of 10 June 2010 (2010-06-10) (Thursday) edit history watch
Current events of 11 June 2010 (2010-06-11) (Friday) edit history watch
Current events of 12 June 2010 (2010-06-12) (Saturday) edit history watch
Current events of 13 June 2010 (2010-06-13) (Sunday) edit history watch
Current events of 14 June 2010 (2010-06-14) (Monday) edit history watch
Current events of 15 June 2010 (2010-06-15) (Tuesday) edit history watch
Current events of 16 June 2010 (2010-06-16) (Wednesday) edit history watch
  • The Jamaican Government orders civilians to keep off the streets for two days in several slums in Kingston because authorities are still hunting for Christopher Coke, alleged by the United States to be a drug lord. (AP)
  • American police in Seattle say they will "review training procedured" following the surfacing of a video which attrated international attention. The video shows a white officer from the Seattle department punching a black teenaged girl in the face when she tried intervene while the officer was confronting another girl about crossing the road at a legally forbidden area. Seattle police deny any wrong doing. (CNN) (BBC) (IOL) (Sky News)
  • The United Nations Human Rights Council says Britain is arranging its third enforced removal of Iraqi asylum applicants to Baghdad despite appeals for it to stop amid safety fears for the individuals concerned. (Aljazeera) (The Guardian) (BBC)
  • Iranian nuclear program sanctions:
  • Gulf of Mexico oil disaster:
    • U.S. President Barack Obama announces that BP will finance a $20 billion fund to compensate people whose livelihoods have been damaged by the devastating oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, and the company's chairman apologized for the worst spill in U.S. history. (USA Today) (The New York Times) (Chicago Tribune)
    • BP begins collecting crude oil from a second containment system that the company hopes will help stem the thousands of barrels escaping from their damaged well, an amount that scientists said could be as high as 60,000 barrels a day. (The New York Times)
  • Middle East:
    • Israel adjourns deciding on whether to ease its three year blockade of the Gaza Strip. (Aljazeera) (The Irish Times)
    • After a heated debate the Parliament of Lebanon proposes to offer basic rights to hundreds of thousands of refugees it has accepted from Palestine during recent decades. (Aljazeera) (The Daily Star)
    • The French broadcasting monitoring agency orders that the official Hamas-run Al-Aqsa TV not be broadcast through French-based satellite provider Eutelsat because it has violated a prohibition on incitement to hatred or violence based on race, religion or nationality; Hamas protests the decision. (CNN) (The Jerusalem Post)
    • Israel Defense Forces soldiers stop three armed men entering Israel from Egypt, 40 kilometers north of the Israeli city of Eilat. One of them is killed, and the other two flee, leaving behind an explosive device. (The Jerusalem Post)
    • An Israeli soldier suspected of killing two women during the Gaza War will face a judicial hearing headed by Advocate General Avichai Mandelblit, and may be prosecuted for manslaughter. (The Jerusalem Post)
    • Hundreds of Haredi Jews rioting in Jaffa clash with the Israel Police and Israel Border Police over the alleged desecration of Jewish graves. Five policemen are injured. Ten rioters are injured, and fifteen are arrested. (Haaretz)
    • The Turkish organization IHH assembles a new six-ship aid flotilla, set to sail in July. (The Jerusalem Post) (Haaretz) (Ynet)
  • At least 49 people are killed during landslides in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, with many swept to their deaths as they slept. (Aljazeera)
  • At least 25 people die during flooding in the Var department of Côte d'Azur, Southern France. (Le Monde) (France24) (BBC) (Sky News) (The Daily Telegraph)
  • A shootout in the Mexican tourist town of Taxco leaves 15 dead. (CNN)
  • Two separate blasts in eastern Baghdad kill 1 person and wound another 8. (asharq-e)
  • 4 Russian policemen are killed in the North Caucasus. (Xinhua)
  • A shallow strong quake with magnitude of 7.1 jolts Papua province in easternmost Indonesia, killing 3 people and causing damage in Serui and Biak, in Yapen district. (Xinhua) (SINA) (ABC) (CNN)
  • Two Sudanese, Abdallah Banda Abakaer Nourain and Saleh Mohammed Jerbo Jamus, surrender to the International Criminal Court in The Hague to be charged on Thursday with "murder", "intentionally directing attacks against peacekeeping personnel" and "stealing property" in relation to a 2007 attack on African Union peacekeepers in Darfur, which killed 12. (BBC) (IOL) (CNN) (Reuters)
  • More than £200 million in health funding to the Zambian government is suspended by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, though some aid is given to non-government groups and the fund's director of communications says life-saving treatments remain unaffected. (BBC)
  • George Osborne scraps Britain's financial regulator and grants new powers to the Bank of England. (Sky News)
  • The National Army of Colombia says an unknown number of informants who aided the rescue of three police officers and a soldier from FARC on Sunday will receive a $1.2 million reward between them. (BBC)
  • Shanghai International Film Festival:
    • Chinese video-sharing websites, like LeTV Entertainment, Sohu.com, and Voole.com, reveals more film investment in SH.(SIFF)
    • 3D films: China is going to digitize 2,000 cinema screens 2010, double the number of 2009. (SIFF)
    • China celebrates Irish Film at Shanghai and Beijing Film Festivals. (Film Ireland)
  • Two Dutch women appear in a South African court over an alleged "ambush marketing" stunt after more than 30 people were ejected from the Johannesburg stadium on Monday during the match between Denmark and the Netherlands in the 2010 FIFA World Cup. (BBC) (Sky News) (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • The annual Dragon Boat Festival starts in Lhasa. (tibet.cn)
  • A six-storey statue of Jesus Christ is struck by lightning and razed to the ground in a city in the US state of Ohio. (The Guardian) (The Money Times) (ITN) (TVNZ)
  • Researchers from four Italian universities identify human remains discovered in a church in Tuscany as "almost certainly" being those of Renaissance artist Caravaggio. (BBC)
  • NCAA (U.S. college) conference realignment:
Current events of 17 June 2010 (2010-06-17) (Thursday) edit history watch
Current events of 18 June 2010 (2010-06-18) (Friday) edit history watch
Current events of 19 June 2010 (2010-06-19) (Saturday) edit history watch
  • Burmese Democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi turns 65, as international and domestic pressure for her release from house arrest intensify. Guards surrounding her home allow her to receive a birthday cake and a bouquet of flowers from political supporters. (Yahoo! News)
  • A gunman shoots 4 people then turns the gun on himself in San Bernardino, California. (AP via Atlanta Journal Constitution)
  • A former Rwandan army chief in exile, Faustin Nyamwasa, is shot in South Africa. (BBC) (News24) (Al Jazeera)
  • At least 48 people are killed in rival clashes between nomadic groups in the Darfur region of Sudan. (BBC) (AFP)
  • Gunfire at a combat post in Afghanistan killed a French soldier and wounded an Afghan translator. (CNN)
  • A drone attack on a militant hideout in North Waziristan in Pakistan, killed at least 13 people and injured six others. (CNN)
  • 5 policemen are killed and 14 others injured in four separate attacks against the police forces in Pakistan. (Xinhua)
  • Four suspected al-Qaida gunmen blast their way into the intelligence headquarters. The attack on the heavily protected security complex kills 18 in the southern port city of Aden, Yemen. (China Daily) (Washington Post)
  • Sweden's Crown Princess Victoria marries Daniel Westling; Westling becomes Duke of Västergötland. (BusinessWeek)
  • 10 Turkish soldiers are killed during clashes with Kurdish rebels on the border of Turkey and Iraq, in Şemdinli township of Hakkari province and in the Gediktepe-Tekeli region. (TRT) (CNN)
  • Roadside bomb blast kills 4, wounds 12 in bus carrying soldiers in Istanbul. (AA)
  • 8 Turkish troops are killed in an attack by Kurdish rebels in southeastern Turkey. In response, Kurdish positions are targeted by Turkish airstrikes in Northern Iraq. Twelve Kurdish rebels are killed. (BBC) (IOL)
  • Nauruan parliamentary election:
  • Flooding in South China kills at least 88 people, and forces nearly 750,000 people to leave their homes. (BBC News) (Le Monde) (nzherald) (ABC)
Current events of 20 June 2010 (2010-06-20) (Sunday) edit history watch
Current events of 21 June 2010 (2010-06-21) (Monday) edit history watch
Current events of 22 June 2010 (2010-06-22) (Tuesday) edit history watch
Current events of 23 June 2010 (2010-06-23) (Wednesday) edit history watch
Current events of 24 June 2010 (2010-06-24) (Thursday) edit history watch
Current events of 25 June 2010 (2010-06-25) (Friday) edit history watch
Jackson was found unconscious in bed at his rented mansion at 100 North Carolwood Drive in the Holmby Hills district of Los Angeles. Attempts at resuscitating him by Conrad Murray, his personal physician, were unsuccessful.[188] Los Angeles Fire Department paramedics received a 911 call at 12:22 (PDT, 19:22 UTC), arriving three minutes later at Jackson's location.[189][190] He was reportedly not breathing and CPR was performed.[191] Resuscitation efforts continued en route to the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, and for an hour after arriving there at 1:13 (20:13 UTC). He was pronounced dead at 2:26 local time (21:26 UTC).[192][193] Jackson's death triggered a global outpouring of grief.[188]
Current events of 26 June 2010 (2010-06-26) (Saturday) edit history watch

A girls birthday was on this date. She turned 12 years old.

Current events of 27 June 2010 (2010-06-27) (Sunday) edit history watch
Current events of 28 June 2010 (2010-06-28) (Monday) edit history watch
Current events of 29 June 2010 (2010-06-29) (Tuesday) edit history watch

Current Events

Science

  • Australian Winter
    • Sydney experiences its coldest June day in 27 years. (The Sydney Morning Herald)
    • Ballarat experiences its coldest day of the decade. (Ballarat Courier)
    • Melbourne experiences its coldest day in 2 years. (The Age) (Herald Sun)
  • At least 21 people die and hundreds are evacuated after major floods in the northeast of Romania. (Yahoo News) (Hindustan Times) (Reuters)
  • Hurricane Alex becomes the first hurricane of the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season with warnings posted from Baffin Bay, Texas south to Mexico. (Canadian Press via Amherst Daily News)
  • 21 suspected cases of swine flu A (H1N1), with one death, have been reported in Thanjavur in India. (EB) (The Times of India) (The Hindu)

Politics and Elections

Current events of 30 June 2010 (2010-06-30) (Wednesday) edit history watch

News

Politics and Elections


Science


  • Ireland officially exits recession. (The Wall Street Journal) (RTÉ) (The Independent) (The Daily Telegraph) (BBC)
  • Rescuers have recovered eight bodies from the ruins of a southwest China village, two days after a devastating rain-triggered landslide destroyed 37 houses and buried 99 villagers under mud. 91 residents of Dazhai Village, Guanling County, Guizhou Province, remained missing. (Xinhua)
  • 13 people are killed during attacks in Iraq: 4 people die in the town of Beiji. (TRT)


Sports

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See also

References

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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/June_2010"


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