Portal:Current events/August 2019

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

August 2019 was the eighth month of that common year. The month, which began on a Thursday, ended on a Saturday after 31 days.

Portal:Current events

This is an archived version of Wikipedia's Current events Portal from August 2019.

Armed conflicts and attacks

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Armed conflicts and attacks

Business and economy
  • 2019 Japan–South Korea trade dispute
    • Japan announces the removal of South Korea from its list of most trusted trading partners, effective on August 28. (Marketwatch)

International relations

Law and crime

Politics and elections

Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks

International relations

Politics and elections
  • 2019 Sudanese transition to democracy
  • Several hundred people are detained by Russian police at unauthorized protests in Moscow. The protests occurred because several opposition candidates were disqualified from running in the upcoming Moscow City legislative election. (RT)

Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • 2019 Cairo bombing
    • A car drives into three other cars causing an explosive crash outside the
      National Cancer Institute Egypt campus in central Cairo, killing 20 people and injuring 47 others. The Interior Ministry says that the car that hit the others contained explosives and was to be used in a terrorist operation. The driver fled the scene before the explosion. The minister accuses the Islamist Hasm Movement of being behind the attack. (Reuters)

International relations

Law and crime

Science and technology

Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • Second Libyan Civil War

Business and economy

Disasters and accidents

International relations

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Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks

International relations

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Politics and elections
  • Crisis in Venezuela
    • The Argentine government says it has already received "hundreds" of reports of human rights abuses and criminal accusations against the Venezuelan government, days after Argentina invited Venezuelans in the country to file reports against the Venezuelan government. (La Nación)

Science and technology
Armed conflicts and attacks
Disaster and accidents
  • The death toll of the heat wave in Japan rises to 57, while 18,347 others are hospitalized. (Japan Times)
Law and crime
  • 2019 California stabbing rampage
    • A Garden Grove, California, man stabs and kills four people and wounds two others in a two-hour crime spree at a series of Orange County locations. Both injured victims are expected to survive. The motive of the 33-year-old suspect, who was arrested at the last scene, appears to be robbery as well as "anger and hate." (CNN) (AP via KESQ-TV)
Politics and elections
Armed conflicts and attacks

Disasters and accidents

Health and environment

Law and crime

Politics and elections
Business and economy

Disasters and accidents

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Armed conflicts and attacks

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International relations

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Armed conflicts and attacks
  • Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen
  • Israeli–Palestinian conflict
    • Israeli riot police clash with Palestinians at the Al-Aqsa Mosque and Temple Mount site in East Jerusalem. With holidays coincidentally falling on the same day (11 August) this year for both Judaism and Islam, some Palestinians began protesting the admittance of Jewish visitors to the site, despite a longstanding agreement barring Jewish visitors. Following the agreement, the Al-Aqsa police barred Jews from the site. Israeli forces then fired rubber bullets and tear gas at people inside. The Jews were then admitted, which caused further tensions on both sides of the dispute. (Al Jazeera)
Arts and culture
Politics and elections
Business and economy

Disasters and accidents

International relations

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Business and economy

Disasters and accidents
  • According to Interfax, the governor of Arkhangelsk Oblast dismisses as "complete nonsense" the advice by authorities in Severodvinsk to residents of Nyonoksa to evacuate on August 14. This follows the accidental explosion on Thursday of what is speculated to be a nuclear-powered missile. Russian nuclear agency Rosatom says the failed test involved a "nuclear isotope power source" for a liquid-propelled rocket engine. (The Independent) (CBS News)
  • Venezuelan migrant crisis
    • A new poll from Consultores 21 suggests that at least 4.7 million Venezuelans are living outside of the country, with the range going up to 6 million — 19% of the nation's entire population in 2017. (Miami Herald)
Law and crime

International relations

Politics and elections
  • Presidency of Jair Bolsonaro
    • Hundreds of thousands of students, schoolteachers and university professors hold demonstrations across Brazil against sweeping cuts in the education budget. Protestors also voice opposition to the government's plan to delegate the administrative and financial management of federal universities and institutes to a privately-held fund. (Agência Brasil) (Telesur English)
    • Earlier in the day, over a thousand Indigenous Brazilian women, representing over 100 ethnic groups, march on Brasília after an overnight occupation of the headquarters of the Ministry of Health's Special Secretariat of Indigenous Health. Protestors chanted against the government's recent attempts at municipalization and privatization of the Indigenous health subsystem, and called for stricter environmental regulations. (BBC News) (Telesur English)

Science and technology
Armed conflicts and attacks

Business and economy

Health and environment

Law and crime

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International relations

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International relations
  • Proposed United States purchase of Greenland
  • Israel–United States relations
    • According to Israel's Interior ministry, U.S. Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib sends a letter to Israeli Interior Minister Aryeh Deri, asking for permission to visit her elderly grandmother in the West Bank. Tlaib's request was approved on the condition that she "not advance boycott activities for the duration of her visit". Tlaib later declines to come, saying she won't let Israel impose "oppressive conditions" on her. (CNN)
Law and crime
  • Death of Jeffrey Epstein
    • The death of accused sexual trafficker Jeffrey Epstein is ruled a suicide by hanging by the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. Epstein's attorneys say they will be conducting their own investigation into his death. (CNN)
Armed conflicts and attacks

Politics and elections

Science and technology
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • War in Afghanistan

International relations

Politics and elections
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • 2019 Northwestern Syria offensive
  • War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)
    • 66 people, including children, have been wounded after a series of ten explosions in restaurants and public squares hit the eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad, as the country marked the 100th anniversary of its independence from British rule. No group claimed responsibility for the bombings. Even if many bombs exploded and several people were injured, no one died in the attacks. (Al Jazeera)
  • Insurgency in the Maghreb
    • Suspected Islamist militants launch an attack on a Burkina Faso Armed Forces unit, killing 24 Burkinabé soldiers and wounding 7 others, the heaviest loss for the army in its fight to contain Islamist terrorism. The army said it had launched a land and air operation in response to the attack. (Reuters)

Disasters and accidents
  • 2019 Brazil wildfires
    • After fifteen days of raging fires in the
      Amazon Forest in Rondônia, thick smoke clouds cover the Brazilian city of São Paulo in darkness. Street lamps had to be lit in the city around 2PM. The fires, suspected to be intentional, are still burning the forest. (G1)

International relations

Law and crime

Politics and elections

Science and technology
Armed conflicts and attacks

Health and environment

International relations

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Science and technology

Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks

Business and economy

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Armed conflicts and attacks

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Science and technology
Armed conflicts and attacks
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International relations

Politics and elections

Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks

Disasters and accidents

Politics and elections
Armed conflicts and attacks

Disasters and accidents

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Politics and elections
Armed conflicts and attacks

Business and economy

International relations

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Armed conflicts and attacks
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Politics and elections
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Sports
Armed conflicts and attacks
Disasters and accidents
Health and environment
  • New Zealand bans tourists from swimming with bottlenose dolphins, saying dwindling numbers are linked to excessive interaction with tourists, as the animals choose socialising with people over necessary biological functions. Authorities say the species risks "being loved into extinction". (The Independent)
International relations
Law and crime
Politics and elections
Science and technology
  • Archaeologists in Huanchaco, Peru unearth 227 sets of human remains aged between five and fourteen, and believed to be sacrificed over 500 years prior. The discovery is the largest known child sacrifice in history. (BBC News)
Armed conflicts and attacks

Disasters and accidents

Health and environment

International relations

Law and crime

Politics and elections

Science and technology
  • An
    Imam Khomeini Spaceport in southeastern Iran. This is Iran's third failed attempt to reach orbit this year following launches in January and February. (NPR)
Armed conflicts and attacks

International relations
  • Pope Francis sends a video message to the people of Mozambique before his visit to the African country next week. He stresses reconciliation after years of conflict. The Pontiff says that “although I will be unable to travel beyond the capital, my heart reaches out and embraces you all, with a special place for those who live in difficulty.” (Holy See Press Office)

Law and crime
Politics and elections

Armed conflicts and attacks

  • American-led intervention in the Syrian Civil War
    • Around 40 people are killed by an American
      Huras al-Din base in Syria's rebel-held Idlib Governorate, where the Syrian government earlier began a unilateral ceasefire. (BBC News) (Reuters)
  • 2018–19 Gaza border protests
    • The Hamas-run Health Ministry of Gaza says a 25-year-old man died in hospital there today after being struck by an Israeli bullet during protests at the Gazan-Israeli border yesterday. It further says Israeli soldiers wounded 42 protesters. Israel says Palestinians threw grenades at the fence, damaging a vehicle and injuring a soldier. (Yahoo!)
  • War in Afghanistan

Disasters and accidents

Health and environment

Law and crime

Sports

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