By Paul Arhewe
The outgoing year, like previous ones, witnessed its share of
awful and gloomy moments and some instances for jubilation, merriment and
pageantry.
Syrian war
The Arab spring crisis which began in December 2010 in Tunisia
continued in Syria war as a full blown war that has claimed more than 44,000
lives. The conflict began in this Arab country in March 2011 with peaceful
protests, before degenerating into a large-scale deadly conflict.
The Syrian president Bashar al-Assad tenaciously held on to
power, even when some of his generals had fled to the rebel side. Many efforts
to bring peace to the country has failed, as world powers divided over what has
become an majorly sectarian strife between mostly Sunni Muslim rebels and
Assad's security forces, drawn primarily from his Shi'ite-rooted Alawite
minority.
By December 12, United States and other western countries
like United Kingdom, France, Turkey and some Gulf states recognised the
opposition coalition as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people.
US Presidential
election
The United States’ 2012 general election, no doubt was one
remarkable event at the international for the outgoing year.
President, Barack Obama, beats his Republican presidential
opponent, Mitt Romney, to clench his second term for another four years as
leader of the world’s leading economy in the November 6 general polls. Obama
won 332 electoral votes to Romney's 206.
The 2012 election was adjudged to be the most expensive in
US electoral history.
Obama and Biden and their families celebrating |
Obama questioned Romney’s lack of a specific plan for
reviving the economy while branding the challenger a candidate who changed his
positions to suit the shifting political winds.
Romney, 65, went after the president’s economic policies touting his own success in business as the skill most needed in tough times. He also sought to portray Obama as weak on foreign policy but neither strategy pried enough of the nation’s independent voters to his side.
Hurricane Sandy
The United States’ East Coast region was battered when
Hurricane Sandy makes landfall on October 29. At least 128 people were killed
and more than $71 billion worth of destruction was recorded.
The ‘superstorm’, with its torrential wind and rain knocked
out power in major US cities. More than 8.1 million peoples in 17 states were
left in the dark at the aftermath of the storm.
In terms of its outage impact, hurricane Sandy was roughly
on par with hurricane Irene, which in August 2011 knocked out power to more
than 9.3 million customers along the East Coast and in Puerto Rico – about 6
million in 13 East Coast states.
But Sandy's impact was more concentrated than Irene's, doing
the bulk of its damage in fewer but more heavily populated states. Most of the
outages were in eight states: New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Ohio, and West Virginia – some 7.4 million.
Costa Concordia
The fatal accident for year 2012 began when Costa Concordia,
a 950-foot luxury ocean liner struck a rock and ran aground off the island of
Giglio in Italy on January 13. The accident claimed 32 lives.
Francesco Schettino, the captain of the ship, was criticized
for leaving the vessel before all the passengers were safely ashore. Among his
accusers was Coast Guard officer Gregorio de Falco, who ordered the captain
back to his ship. Schettino, who admitted he took the $570 million ship within
a few hundred feet of the island to perform a "maritime salute"
(perhaps to impress a blond Moldovan passenger), faces possible charges of
manslaughter.
In October, the raising of the Costa Concordia began in
earnest, with more than 450 workers attempting what's been called the biggest
sea salvage effort of all time. The $400 million operation is expected to take
at least eight months.
UK’s Queen Elizabeth
Diamond Jubilee
The United Kingdom Queen Elizabeth II this year marked 60
years of her accession to throne upon her father King George VI demise on 6
February, 1952. Celebration marking the diamond jubilee occurred throughout the
year.
UK royal family |
Protest against
anti-Prophet Muhammad film
The low budget US film ‘Innocence of Muslims’ which mocked
the Prophet Muhammed sparked a violence international response, especially for
Muslim countries.
The 14-minute film trailer was posted on YouTube, prompting
riots throughout Muslim communities. Libyan protesters were said to have
exploited the situation after the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi was attacked by
al-Qaida terrorists on September 11. The US ambassador in Libya, Chris Stevens
was among four Americans killed in Benghazi.
According to the Wall Street Journal, a man identifying
himself as Sam Bacile, a 52-year-old California real estate developer said he
had made the film. The Associated Press, though, said "Sam Bacile"
was an alias for Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, aka Mark Basseley Youssef. Using an
alias was a violation of Nakoula's probation for a check fraud conviction, and
he was jailed. The Egyptian-born Coptic Christian and others involved in the
film were sentenced to death in Egypt, a largely symbolic gesture.
Attempted
assassination of Pakistani teen human rights activist
Yousafzai |
And in November, Time magazine nominated Malala as one of
its 2012 "Person of the Year" candidates. Malala, Time said,
"has become an inspiration not only in her native Pakistan—where the
culture wars over women's rights and religious diversity have taken many
violent turns—but all around the globe."
WikiLeaks founder
takes refuge in Ecuadorean embassy
Assange |
"I ask President Obama to do the right thing,"
said Assange, who has been staying in what accounts describe as poor, dark
quarters in the embassy since June. "The United States must renounce its
witch hunt against WikiLeaks."
The White House declined to comment.
Mali’s crisis and
Tuareg, Islamist rebels’ insurgency
Mali’s government was thrown into dilemma when on March 22
President Amadou Toumani Toure was ousted in a coup detat over manner he
handled the conflict in the northern part of the country where Tuareg fighters
and Islamist group Ansar Dine had seized part of the country from the control
of government.
Mutineer soldiers, under the banner of the National
Committee for the Restoration of Democracy and State, (CNRDR) suspended the
constitution of Mali, although this move was reversed on 1 April.
The Islamist group Ansar Dine, too, began fighting the
government in later stages of the conflict, claiming control of vast swathes of
territory, albeit disputed by the MNLA. As a consequence of the instability
following the coup, Northern Mali's three largest cities—Kidal, Gao and
Timbuktu—were overrun by the rebels on three consecutive days. On 5 April,
after the capture of Douentza, the MNLA said that it had accomplished its goals
and called off its offensive. The following day, it proclaimed Azawad's
independence from Mali.
After the end of hostilities with the Malian Army, however,
Tuareg nationalists and Islamists struggled to reconcile their conflicting
visions for the intended new state.
Members of the sub regional body have proposed and offered
troops to intervene in restoring peace in this volatile West African country.
Ghanaian President
Attah Mills dies
On July 25, Africa and the rest of the world were dazed with
the sudden death of Ghanaian president John Evans Atta Mills. The Ghanaian
leader was 68 years and died of cardiac arrest at a military hospital in Accra.
He was buried August 10.
Atta Mills became third president of Ghana in 2009 after
losing twice. He previously served as vice president. He was inaugurated on 7 January 2009, having
defeated the ruling party candidate Nana Akufo-Addo in the 2008 election. He
was Vice-President from 1997 to 2001 under President Jerry Rawlings, and stood
unsuccessfully in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections as the candidate of
the National Democratic Congress (NDC).
The incumbent Ghanaian leader who took over from Mills after
his demise, John Dramani Mahama was elected December 10, 2012 in a closely
fought presidential poll.
1 comment:
a victorious win... still excited
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