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October 2006

October 2006 was a month that began on a Sunday.

The month was marked by a nuclear test by North Korea that prompted that
passing of Resolution 1718 by the United Nations Security Council.
Also at the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon was elected to succeed Kofi Annan
as the secretary-general and Belgium, Indonesia, Italy and South Africa
were elected to two-year terms on the Security Council; the four nations and
Ban Ki-moon began their tenures in January 2007. A fifth temporary on the
Security Council was still up for grabs at the end of the month.
The Nobel Prizes for the year were awarded, with Muhammad Yunus and the
Grameen Bank receiving the Nobel Peace Prize. Lesotho adopted a new flag,
Several national elections took place around the world during October 2006
and a scandal involving former United States Congressman Mark Foley was
at the forefront just ahead of November elections in the United States.
Microsoft Corporation released version 7 of its Internet Explorer internet
browser software.

The following events also occurred during the month:


• October 01, 2006 (Sunday) edit history watch

• General elections are held in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BBC)


• A BBC investigation finds that, before he became Pope, Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger enforced the Catholic Church's secret policy on
Crimen sollicitationis to cover up child sex abuse cases involving the
clergy. (BBC) (BBC)
• The Social Democratic Party of Austria has won today's election in
Austria. (International Herald Tribune)
• Georgia-Russia spying dispute:
o Russian President Vladimir Putin has said Georgia's arrest of
four Russian army officers for spying was "an act of state
terrorism with hostage-taking". (BBC)
• General Elections 2006 in Brazil are taking place.
• Incumbent President of Zambia Levy Mwanawasa is in the lead in
early results in the Presidential election, according to the Electoral
Commission of Zambia.
• General Surayud Chulanont is appointed interim prime minister of
Thailand by the ruling military regime, following the recent coup.
(Channel News Asia)
• A superbug, Clostridium difficile, is said to have killed at least 49
people at hospitals in Leicester, England, according to a National
Health Service investigation. Another 29 similar cases are being
investigated by coroners. (BBC)
• The last Israeli troops leave Lebanon in accordance with UN Resolution
1701, two months after occupying the territory. UNIFIL officials,
however, claim that they still occupy the border village of Ghajar.
(Reuters)

• New laws against age discrimination in the workplace - officially titled


the Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006 - come into force in
the United Kingdom. (BBC)
• October 02, 2006 (Monday) edit history watch

• South Korea's Foreign Minister, Ban Ki-Moon, wins a crucial informal


poll for the next United Nations Secretary-General with no opposition
from any of the five veto-bearing Security Council members. (Reuters)
• Zambia's President, Levy Mwanawasa, is re-elected, according to the
Zambian Electoral Commission. (BBC)
• At least five pupils, a teacher's aide, and a gunman are dead after an
Amish school shooting in Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania, United States.
Some reports have the number of dead at six. (The Guardian) (ABC)
(CNN) (BBC)
• Željko Komšić, Nebojša Radmanović and Haris Silajdžić are elected
new members of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the
country's collective head of state. (ABC)
• Georgia-Russia spying dispute:
o Four Russian officers arrested as spies in Georgia leave for
Moscow after being released. (BBC)
o Russia suspends all transport and postal links with Georgia. (The
New York Times)
• Two schools in the Las Vegas metropolitan area, Nevada, United
States, are locked down, after a former student reportedly brought an
AK-47 or other automatic weapons to school. (Wikinews) (KVBC)
• Casino company Harrah's Entertainment receives an $81-per-share
cash offer from private-equity firms Apollo Management and Texas
Pacific Group. (Associated Press via Examiner.com)
• Former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, under FBI investigation for e-mail
exchanges with teenage congressional pages, has checked himself
into rehabilitation facility for alcoholism treatment. (Associated Press
via Examiner.com)
• Andrew Fire and Craig Mello win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine for their work in controlling the activity of genes. (ABC)

• Canada's Meteorological Service issues a tropical storm warning for


the Avalon Peninsula in southeastern Newfoundland, including the
cities of Cape Race and St John's, due to Hurricane Isaac. (CNN)
• October 03, 2006 (Tuesday) edit history watch

• Viktor Khristenko, the Russian Industry and Energy Minister, and


Baktykozha Izmukhambetov, the Kazakh Energy and Mineral
Resources' Minister, sign an intergovernmental agreement creating a
joint venture to process gas from the Karachaganak field in West
Kazakhstan. Russian President Vladimir Putin said the agreement was
the solution to "the energy problems of key partners, including those
in Western Europe." (Interfax)
• The United States National Labor Relations Board determines that
workers normally assigned as shift supervisors should not be covered
by a federal law ensuring a right to union membership. (AP via
Houston Chronicle)
• EADS delays delivery of the Airbus A380 jet for the third time in 16
months, due to wiring problems, with the first plane now expected in
late 2007. (Bloomberg)
• North Korea announces plans to conduct a nuclear test. (BBC)
• United States scientists John C. Mather and George Smoot win the
Nobel Prize in physics for research into cosmic microwave background
radiation that helps explain the origins of galaxies and stars.
(Bloomberg)
• Deposed Prime Minister of Thailand Thaksin Shinawatra has resigned
as head of his Thai Rak Thai party due to "changing circumstances".
(Reuters)

• Turkish Airlines Flight 1476, a Turkish Airlines plane carrying 113


people from Tirana, Albania to Istanbul, Turkey, was hijacked, but
lands at Italy's Brindisi Airport. The hijackers surrendered and were
arrested by Italian police. (Fox News)
• October 04, 2006 (Wednesday) edit history watch

• The Dow Jones industrial average reaches another record high close,
rising above 11,850 for the first time. (CBS News)
• A United States Appeals Court in Cincinnati, Ohio rules that the U.S.
government can continue to use its warrantless domestic wiretap
program pending the Justice Department's appeal of a federal judge's
ruling outlawing the program. (Reuters)
• The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Food and Drug
Administration searches two spinach packaging companies in the
Salinas Valley in California for evidence related to a recent outbreak of
E. coli in the United States and Canada that made 200 people sick.
(San Francisco Chronicle)
• The European Union imposes an anti-dumping tarif on leather shoe
imports from the Far East - 16.5% on imports from China and 10% on
imports from Vietnam. China supplies about 1.25 billion pairs of shoes
to the EU each year. (EUobserver.com)
• American Roger Kornberg wins the 2006 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for
describing the essential process of gene copying in cells, research that
can give insight into illnesses such as cancer and heart disease.
(Boston Globe)
• Mark Foley scandal:
o The Drudge Report alleges that one teen with whom Mark Foley
engaged in cybersex during a House vote was 18 years old at
the time of the communications. (Drudge Report)
o A former page states that he was warned of Representative
Foley's advances by a departing page in 1995. Among his claims
are that Foley made him uncomfortable and offered to buy him
ice cream on several occasions. (Chicago Tribune)

o House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert states that he will not resign


from his position in the wake of the scandal. (Chicago Sun-
Times)
• October 05, 2006 (Thursday) edit history watch

• The Dow Jones industrial average closes at a record high for the third
day in a row. (ABC News Australia Online)
• German authorities uncover 51 skeletons from a mass grave at the
village of Menden-Barge in the Sauerland region of the country,
thought to be remains of victims of Nazi atrocities during World War
II. (BBC)
• Mark Foley scandal
o The House Ethics Committee issued four dozen subpoenas to
members of Congress and aides to discover who was aware of
explicit exchanges between former representative Mark Foley
and underage Congressional pages. (MSNBC)
• Reports indicate that Abu Ayyub al-Masri, also known as Abu Hamza
al-Muhajir, the leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq who succeeded Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi after his death, may have been killed in Haditha. A body
initially tentatively identified as his is undergoing DNA analysis but
most government sources are skeptical. (BBC)
• The European Central Bank raises its interest rate from 3% to 3.25%
representing the fifth rise in eleven months. The Bank of England
decides to leave interest rates in the United Kingdom unchanged.
(Marketwatch)
• Edmund Daukoru, a Nigerian oil minister and president of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) flags that the
organization will hold an emergency meeting to cut output. The
Financial Times reports that OPEC has informally agreed to cut output
4% to defend the oil price. (USA Today)
• Post-Soviet Georgia holds the municipal elections seen as a crucial
test for the country’s current government amid the ongoing tensions
with Russia. (International Herald Tribune)
• NTV television in Turkey reports that 260 Turkish soldiers will join the
peacekeeping force in Lebanon. (The Boston Globe)
• NATO expands its security mission to the whole of Afghanistan, taking
command of more than 13,000 U.S. troops in the east of the country.
(CNN)

• Thai authorities take steps to hold peace talks with two Muslim
insurgencies, the Patani United Liberation Organisation (PULO) and
Bersatu, who are fighting the Government in the Muslim-majority
southern provinces of Thailand. (News Limited)
• The Court of Appeal of England and Wales determines that a merchant
ship, SS Storaa, is eligible for consideration for protection as a war
grave under the Protection of Military Remains Act 1986. (BBC)

Sloane Potter is born


Events
[edit] Ongoing

• Avian influenza (H5N1)


outbreak
• Belgian False Flag Terror
arrests
• Benedict XVI Islam
controversy
• Black sites scandal
• Cole Inquiry
• East Timor military and
political crisis
• Immigration law debates
in the US
• Iran's nuclear program
• NSA warrantless
surveillance controversy
• Operación Puerto doping
case
• Taiwan political crisis

[edit] Natural disasters

• Atlantic hurricane
season
o Hurricane Isaac
• North Indian cyclone
season
• Pacific hurricane season
• Pacific typhoon season
o Typhoon Xangsane
• Southern Hemisphere
cyclone season

edit sidebar
• 1: Peter Osgood
• 2: Helen Chenoweth-Hage
• 3: Peter Norman
• 4: R.W. Apple, Jr.
• 6: Buck O'Neil
• 7: Anna Politkovskaya
• 9: Paul Hunter
• 9: Glenn Myernick
• 11: Cory Lidle
• 12: Gillo Pontecorvo
• 14: Freddy Fender
• 14: Gerry Studds
• 16: Valentín Paniagua
• 16: Lister Sinclair
• 17: Christopher Glenn
• 19: Ralph Harris
• 20: Eric Newby
• 20: Jane Wyatt
• 21: Paul Walters
• 22: Choi Kyu-hah
• 26: Pontus Hultén
• 27: Joe Niekro
• 28: Henry Fok
• 28: Red Auerbach
• 28: Trevor Berbick
• 29: Mohammadu Maccido
• 29: Si Simmons
• 30: Clifford Geertz
• 31: P.W. Botha

edit sidebar

Deaths
Armed conflicts
• Acholiland insurgency
• Arab-Israeli conflict (al-
Aqsa Intifada)
o 2006 Israel-Gaza
conflict
o 2006 Israel-
Lebanon conflict
• Darfur conflict in Sudan
• Ethnic conflict in Sri
Lanka
• Iraq War
• Ituri conflict in the DR
Congo
• Ivorian Civil War
• Nepal Civil War
• Second Chechen War
• South Thailand
insurgency

edit sidebar

Elections
• 1: Austria, Legislative
• 1: Bosnia and
Herzegovina, General
Election
• 1: Brazil, General
Election
• 7: Latvia, Parliament
• 8: Belgium, Municipal
• 15: Greece, Municipal
• 15: Ecuador, General
Elections
• 22: Bulgaria, President
• 22: Panama, Panama
Canal expansion
Referendum
• 28, 29: Serbia,
Referendum on
Constitution
• October 29: Brazil,
General Elections (2nd
round)
• October 29: Democratic
Republic of the Congo,
Presidential Run-off

edit sidebar

Trials
• Peru: Alberto Fujimori
(extradition)
• Chile: Augusto Pinochet
• Ethiopia: 111
defendants, including
leaders of the CUD and
journalists, on charges
related to the 2005
elections.
• Iraq: Iraqi Special
Tribunal
o Saddam Hussein &
military chiefs of
staff
• Netherlands: ICC
o Thomas Lubanga
• Netherlands: ICTY
• Sierra Leone: SCfSL
o Charles Taylor
• UK: Leo O'Connor &
David Keogh
• U.S.: Brian Nichols
• U.S.: Jeffrey Skilling
(sentencing)
• U.S.: Tom DeLay

edit sidebar

Holidays and
observances
• 1: Yom Kippur (Judaism,
begins at sunset)
• 2: Gandhi Jayanti (India)
• 2: Dussera (India)
• 2: Labour Day (New South
Wales, Australian Capital
Territory, South Australia)
• 3: German Unity Day
(Germany)
• 4: World Animal Day
• 5: World Teachers' Day
• 5: Republic Day (Portugal)
• 6: German-American
Day (United States)
• 6: Mid-Autumn Festival
(Chinese lunar calendar)
• 6: Sukkot begins at
sunset (Judaism)
• 9: Hangul Day (South
Korea)
• 9: Health and Sports
Day (Japan)
• 9: Thanksgiving (Canada)
• 9: Leif Erikson Day
(United States)
• 9: Columbus Day (United
States)
• 10: Double Tenth Day
(Taiwan)
• 11: General Pulaski
Memorial Day (United
States)
• 11: National Coming Out
Day (United States)
• 12: Hispanic Day (Spain)
• 12: Day of Indigenous
Resistance (Venezuela)
• 12: Children's Day
(Brazil)
• 12: Our Lady
Aparecida's Day (Brazil)
• 13: Shemini Atzeret
begins at sunset
(Judaism)
• 14: Simchat Torah
begins at sunset
(Judaism)
• 14: Teachers' Day
(Poland)
• 15: White Cane Safety
Day (United States)
• 16: World Food Day
• 17: International Day for
the Eradication of
Poverty
• 18: Alaska Day (Alaska)
• 19: Mother Teresa Day
(Albania)
• 20: Birth of the Báb
(Bahá'í calendar)
• 20: Al-Quds Day (Iran)
• 21: Diwali (Hinduism)
• 21: Trafalgar Day (United
Kingdom, Australia)
• 21: Sweetest Day (United
States)
• 22: International
Stuttering Awareness
Day
• 23: Chulalongkorn
Memorial Day (Thailand)
• 23: Eid ul-Fitr begins at
sunset (Islam, est.)
• 23: Labour Day (New
Zealand)
• 24: United Nations Day
• 25: Armed Forces Day
(Romania)
• 25: Retrocession Day
(Taiwan)
• 25: Republic Day
(Kazakhstan)
• 26: Angam Day (Nauru)
• 26: National Day (Austria)
• 28: Okhi Day (Greece)
• 29: Republic Day (Turkey)
• 30: Double Ninth
Festival (Chinese lunar
calendar)
• 31: Reformation Day
(Protestantism)
• 31: Halloween
2006
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2006 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
Jul - Aug - Sep - Oct - Nov - Dec
Arts
Architecture - Art - Literature (Poetry) -
Music (Country, Metal, UK) - Film -
Television - Home video
Politics
Elections - Int'l leaders - Politics - State
leaders - Sovereign states
Science and technology
Archaeology - Aviation - Birding/Ornithology
- Meteorology - Rail transport - Science -
Spaceflight
Sports
Sport - Athletics (Track and Field) -
Australian Football League - Baseball -
Football (soccer) - Ice Hockey - Motorsport -
Tennis National Rugby League
By place
Argentina - Australia - Canada - China
-France - India - Iran - Iraq - Ireland - Japan -
Luxembourg - Malaysia - Mexico - New
Zealand - Norway- Pakistan - Singapore -
South Africa - United Kingdom - United
States - Zimbabwe
Other topics
Deaths - Awards - Games - Law - Religious
leaders - Video gaming
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
Works and introductions categories
Works - Introductions
v•d•e
Year 2006 (MMVI) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian
calendar.
The year 2006 was designated:

• The Year of the Dog In the Chinese calendar, beginning on January 29, 2006.
• International Year of Deserts and Desertification by the United Nations General
Assembly,[1]
• International Asperger's Year,
• Year of Mozart, marking the 250th anniversary of the birth of Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart.

Contents
[hide]

• 1 Events of 2006
o 1.1 January
o 1.2 February
o 1.3 March
o 1.4 April
o 1.5 May
o 1.6 June
o 1.7 July
o 1.8 August
o 1.9 September
o 1.10 October
o 1.11 November
o 1.12 December
• 2 Major religious holidays
• 3 Ongoing
• 4 Births
• 5 Deaths
o 5.1 January
o 5.2 February
o 5.3 March
o 5.4 April
o 5.5 May
o 5.6 June
o 5.7 July
o 5.8 August
o 5.9 September
o 5.10 October
o 5.11 November
o 5.12 December
• 6 Nobel Prizes
• 7 See also
• 8 Notes

• 9 External links

[edit] Events of 2006


[edit] January

January
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31

• January 1 - Sydney, Australia, has its hottest day on record, when the city swelters in
45°C heat.
• January 1 - Russia cuts natural gas to Ukraine over a price dispute.
• January 2 - The Bad Reichenhall ice rink roof in Germany collapses after heavy snowfall
in the Bavarian Alps, killing 15.
• January 3 - Twelve dead coal miners and one survivor are discovered in the Sago Mine
Disaster near Buckhannon, West Virginia, U.S.
• January 4 - Powers are transferred from Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to his deputy,
Vice Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, after Sharon suffers a massive hemorrhagic stroke.
• January 5 - A hotel in Mecca, Saudi Arabia collapses, killing 76 pilgrims visiting to
perform hajj.
• January 6 - The record-breaking 2005 Atlantic hurricane season officially draws to a
close as Tropical Storm Zeta dissipates.
• January 7 - Embroiled in multiple scandals, former U.S. House Majority Leader Tom
DeLay announces he will not seek to reassume his former post.
• January 7 - UK Liberal Democratic leader Charles Kennedy resigns after revelations that
he has a drinking problem.
• January 8 - A powerful, magnitude 6.9 earthquake centered off the coast of the Greek
island of Kythera shakes much of Greece and is felt throughout the eastern Mediterranean
basin.
• January 9 - The Dow Jones Industrial Average closes above 11,000 for the first time since
June 7, 2001, closing at 11,011.90.
• January 11 - The Augustine Volcano in Alaska erupts twice, marking its first major
eruption since 1986.
• January 12 - A stampede during the Stoning of the devil ritual on the last day at the Hajj
in Mina, Saudi Arabia, kills 362 pilgrims.
• January 14 - A natural gas explosion in a coal mine kills eight in Romania.
• January 15 - NASA's Stardust mission successfully ends, the first to return dust from a
comet.
• January 19 - Terrorist blows himself up in Tel Aviv, killing only himself but injuring 20
people, one of them seriously.
• January 22 - Kobe Bryant scored 81 points in regulation and is second only to the
legendary 1960s center Wilt Chamberlain, who had 100 points.
• January 23 - Stephen Harper wins the federal election in Canada, forming a minority
government.
• January 24 - Mario Lemieux announces his retirement from the National Hockey League
• January 25 - Hamas wins the majority of seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council
elections.
• January 25 - Deus Caritas Est, the first encyclical of Pope Benedict XVI, is promulgated.
• January 27 - Celebrations are held in Salzburg and around the world for the 250th
anniversary of the birth of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
• January 28 - A trade hall roof collapses in Katowice, Poland, killing 65 people.
• January 31 - Samuel Alito is sworn in as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States.

[edit] February

February
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28

• February 1 - UAL Corporation, United Airlines' parent company, emerges from


bankruptcy after being in that position since December 9, 2002, the longest such filing in
history.
• February 4 - The Wowowee stampede occurred at the PhilSports Arena. 61 killed.
• February 5 - The Pittsburgh Steelers win Super Bowl XL, defeating the Seattle Seahawks
21-10.
• February 7 - An aging Egyptian passenger ferry carrying more than 1,400 people sinks in
the Red Sea off the Saudi coast.
• February 8 - 2006 East Timor crisis: 404 soldiers desert their barracks in East Timor.
• February 10 - The 2006 Winter Olympics open in Turin, Italy. The closing ceremony
occurred on February 26.
• February 11 - U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney accidentally shoots his friend and lawyer,
Harry Whittington, in the face with a shotgun on a south Texas ranch.
• February 16 - Kobe Airport, a controversial offshore airport in Kobe, Japan, opens for
airline service.
• February 17 - As many as 1,800 people die when a mudslide occurs on Leyte Island in
the Philippines.
• February 19 - Pasta de Conchos mine disaster: Sixty-five miners become trapped
underground after an explosion in Nueva Rosita, Mexico; all 65 die.
• February 22 - A bomb heavily damages the Al Askari Mosque, a Shiite holy site in
Samarra, Iraq.
• February 22 - Over £53.1 million is stolen during the Securitas depot robbery, the largest
ever cash robbery in the United Kingdom.
• February 22 - The 1 billionth song is purchased from the Apple iTunes Store.
• February 23 - A roof collapses on a Moscow market, killing 56 people.
• February 24 - A state of emergency is declared in the Philippines, after an alleged coup
d'état against President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is foiled.
• February 25 - Police officers, and protesters injured when a protest prior to the Love
Ulster parade turns into a major riot.
• February 25 - Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni wins his second re-election, sparking
riots in Kampala by opposition supporters.

[edit] March

March
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31

• March 4 - The final contact attempt with Pioneer 10 receives no response.


• March 4 - Prince Sverre Magnus of Norway was christened by Bishop Ole Christian
Kvarme at the chapel inside The Royal Palace in Oslo.
• March 5 - The 78th Academy Awards, hosted by Jon Stewart are held at the Kodak
Theatre in Hollywood, California, with Crash winning Best Picture.
• March 7 - Fifteen people die and many others are injured in three blasts throughout
Varanasi, India.
• March 9 - NASA's Cassini-Huygens spacecraft discovers geysers of a liquid substance
shooting from Saturn's moon Enceladus, signaling a possible presence of water.
• March 10 - NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter enters Mars orbit.
• March 11 - Michelle Bachelet is sworn in as the first female President of Chile.
• March 11 - Slobodan Milošević is found dead in his cell in the UN war crimes tribunal's
detention centre, located in the Scheveningen section of The Hague.
• March 12 - Historic cricket match between Australia in South Africa, 5th ODI of the
series.
• March 15-March 26 - The 2006 Commonwealth Games take place in Melbourne,
Australia.
• March 17 - The United States strikes its two remaining Iowa-class battleships from the
Naval Vessel Register, ending the age of the battleship.
• March 20 - Tropical Cyclone Larry makes landfall in Queensland, Australia.
• March 21 - Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs Laila Freivalds resigns after over a year
of criticism.
• March 22 - ETA declares a permanent ceasefire in their campaign for Basque
independence from Spain.
• March 24 - Disney Channel's original hit series Hannah Montana premieres, getting the
most viewers for a Disney Channel premiere so far.
• March 25 - An estimated 500,000 people take to the streets in downtown Los Angeles to
protest a proposed federal crackdown on illegal immigration.
• March 25 - A revolutionary scramjet jet engine, Hyshot III, designed to fly at seven times
the speed of sound, is successfully tested at Woomera, South Australia.
• March 25 - Seven people die in the Capitol Hill Massacre in Seattle, Washington.
• March 26 - The ban on smoking in public places such as bars and restaurants comes into
effect in Scotland.
• March 30 - The first Brazilian astronaut, Marcos Pontes, goes to space in a Russian
Soyuz spacecraft, Soyuz TMA-8, at 2:29:00 CET.
• March 30 - The al-Dana capsizes off the coast of Bahrain, killing at least 48 people.
• March 30 - The first World Baseball Classic ends in San Diego, California with Japan
beating Cuba in the Championship.

[edit] April

April
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30

• April 1 - Apple Inc. celebrates its 30th birthday.


• April 2 - Chicago, Illinois hosts WrestleMania 22.
• April 5 - A swan with Avian Flu is discovered in Cellardyke in Fife, Scotland (the first
case in the United Kingdom).
• April 6 - Allegedly the day the Devil would rise from hell.[citation needed]
• April 8 - Shedden massacre: The bodies of 8 murdered men are found in Shedden, Elgin
County, Ontario.
• April 8 - Bristol, United Kingdom celebrates the 200th birthday of Isambard Kingdom
Brunel (actually April 9) by relighting the Clifton Suspension Bridge.
• April 8 - Numbersixvalverde, ridden by Niall Madden, wins the Grand National at
Aintree.
• April 8 - Bloc 8406 publishes their Manifesto on Freedom and Democracy for Viet Nam
in Viet Nam; their name comes from this date.
• April 9 - Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is removed from office after four months in
a coma.
• April 9 - Hungarian parliamentary election, 2006
• April 10 - Romano Prodi narrowly defeats Silvio Berlusconi in the Italian parliamentary
elections.
• April 11 - The European Space Agency's Venus Express spaceprobe enters Venus' orbit.
• April 11 - President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad confirms that Iran has successfully
produced a few grams of low-grade enriched uranium.
• April 16 - Albert II, Prince of Monaco, reaches the North Pole, becoming the first
reigning monarch ever to do so.
• April 16 - Ireland commemorates the 90th anniversary of the 1916 Rising for the first
time since 1971.
• April 17 - A suicide bombing by Islamic Jihad in Tel Aviv kills nine people and injures
dozens.
• April 18 - Festivities and memorials across the Bay Area mark the 100th anniversary of
the Great San Francisco Earthquake and Fire.
• April 19 - Han Myeong Sook becomes the first female Prime Minister of South Korea.
• April 20 - Iran announces a uranium enrichment deal with Russia, involving a joint
uranium enrichment firm on Russian soil; nine days later Iran announces that it will not
move all activity to Russia, thus leading to a de-facto termination of the deal.
• April 22 - War on Terror: Four Canadian soldiers are killed 75 kilometers north of
Kandahar, Afghanistan by a roadside bomb – the worst one-day combat loss for the
Canadian army since the Korean War.
• April 22 - Jalal Talabani re-elected for a second term as President of Iraq.
• April 24 - Three explosions in a tourist section of Dahab, Egypt kill 30 and injure over
115.
• April 25 - The Beaconsfield mine collapse occurs in Tasmania, Australia
• April 28 - Ground is broken for the $2.1 billion Encore at Wynn Las Vegas
• April 29 - Massive anti-war demonstrations and a march down Broadway in New York
City mark the third year of war in Iraq.
• April 29 - The Global Night Commute takes place in over 130 cities around the world to
promote the visibility of the Invisible Children in Uganda.
• April 30 - In the Australian Football League, a match between St Kilda and Fremantle
ends in controversial circumstances after St Kilda's Steven Baker was alleged to have
kicked a behind after the final siren had gone. Following an investigation, the Saints were
stripped of two competition points and the full win was handed to Fremantle.

[edit] May

May
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31

• May 1 - Bolivian President Evo Morales nationalizes his nation's gas fields.
• May 1 - The Great American Boycott takes place across the United States as marchers
protest for immigration rights.
• May 4 - A new coalition government takes office in Israel; its four political parties hold
67 of the 120 seats in the Knesset.
• May 5 - NASA astronomers announce the discovery of a storm system in the Jovian
atmosphere, dubbed the Red Spot Junior.
• May 5 - Fiat chairman Sergio Marchionne announces that the Alfa Romeo automobile
brand will return to the United States in 2008, after a 13-year hiatus.
• May 9 - Beaconsfield mine collapse: After 14 days trapped underground, miners Todd
Russell and Brant Webb are rescued in Beaconsfield, Tasmania, Australia.
• May 13 - Liverpool F.C. defeat West Ham United F.C. on penalties in the 2006 FA Cup
Final following a 3-3 draw after extra time.
• May 17 - FC Barcelona beat Arsenal in the final of the UEFA Champions League played
in Paris.
• May 20 - Munster defeat Biarritz 23-19 to win their first Heineken European Cup in
Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.
• May 20 - Finland's Lordi wins the 2006 Eurovision Song Contest held in Athens.
• May 21 - The Dallas Mavericks beat the San Antonio Spurs in overtime to win the
Western Conference semi-finals in the NBA Playoffs.
• May 24 - East Timor's Foreign Minister Ramos-Horta officially requests military
assistance from the governments of Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Portugal.
• May 27 - A 6.3 magnitude earthquake strikes central Java in Indonesia, killing more than
6,000, injuring at least 36,000 and leaving some 1.5 million people homeless.
• May 27 - The first demonstration for gay rights in Moscow is broken up by the police.
• May 28 - President Alvaro Uribe Velez is re-elected in Colombia for a second term. He
becomes the first president in over a century to serve consecutive terms.

[edit] June

June
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30

• June 3 - Montenegro declares independence after a May 21 referendum. The state union
of Serbia and Montenegro is dissolved on June 5 leaving Serbia as the successor state.
• June 3 - Seventeen men are arrested in the Greater Toronto Area for alleged ties to a
terrorist plot to blow up targets in the region.
• June 6 - The Union of Islamic Courts gains control of Somalia's capital Mogadishu,
ending warlord rule of the city.
• June 6 - The 6bone (testbed network for the IPv6 network protocol) is phased out.
• June 7 - Al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and seven of his aides are killed
in a U.S. air raid just north of the town of Baqouba, Iraq.
• June 9 - An explosion kills eight Palestinian civilians on a Gaza beach. Israel denies
responsibility for the blast.
• June 9 - Thailand begins celebrations of the 60th anniversary of the accession of
Bhumibol Adulyadej to the throne.
• June 9 - The 2006 FIFA World Cup begins in Germany.
• June 10 - President Mahmoud Abbas sets July 26 as the date for a national referendum in
the Palestinian National Authority.
• June 18 - The first Kazakh space satellite "KazSat" is launched.
• June 19 - The Carolina Hurricanes defeat the Edmonton Oilers 4 games-3 games to win
the Stanley Cup.
• June 20 - The Miami Heat win the NBA Finals over the Dallas Mavericks, 4-2.
• June 22 - The Magen David Adom and Palestine Red Crescent Society are officially
recognized by the International Committee of the Red Cross.
• June 23 - In Miami, the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrests seven men, accusing them
of planning to bomb the Sears Tower and other attacks in Miami.
• June 25 - Warren Buffett donates over US$30 billion to the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation.
• June 28 - Israel launches Operation Summer Rains, an offensive against militants in
Gaza.
• June 29 - The Dutch cabinet Balkenende II resigns after the political party of D'66 drops
its support.
• June 29 - Women vote for the first time in elections for the National Assembly of Kuwait.

[edit] July

July
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31

• July 1 - The Qinghai-Tibet Railway launches a trial operation, connecting China proper
and Tibet for the first time.
• July 2 - A presidential election is held in Mexico. Felipe Calderón is confirmed as the
winner on September 5.
• July 4 - STS-121: Space Shuttle Discovery is launched to the International Space Station.
It returns safely on July 17.
• July 5 - North Korea test fires missiles, timed with the liftoff of Discovery, preceding the
fireworks celebrations that night in America. The long range Taepodong-2 reportedly
fails shortly after takeoff.
• July 6 - The Nathula Pass between India and China, sealed during the Sino-Indian War,
re-opens for trade after 44 years.
• July 9 - S7 Airlines Flight 778 crashes into a concrete barrier shortly after landing, killing
at least 122 people and leaving many injured.
• July 9 - Italy wins the 2006 FIFA World Cup by beating France 5-3 on penalties. The
score after extra time is 1-1.
• July 10 - Pakistan International Airlines Flight 688 crashes in Multan, Pakistan shortly
after takeoff.
• July 11 - A series of coordinated bomb attacks strikes several commuter trains in
Mumbai, India during the evening rush hour.
• July 12 - 2006 Lebanon War: Israeli troops invade Lebanon in response to Hezbollah
kidnapping two Israeli soldiers and killing 3. Hezbollah declares open war against Israel
2 days later.
• July 17 - Space Shuttle Discovery returns to Earth from the International Space Station,
thirteen days after its launch.
• July 18 - The SS Nomadic, the last floating link to Titanic, returns home to a great
reception in Belfast.
• July 21 - St Louis is hit by two major derechos (violent windstorms) in a span of three
days.
• July 22 - Canada defeats USA 15-11 in the 2006 World Lacrosse Championship. This
marked only the second time the USA had not won the gold medal, and only the second
time Canada had won the gold. Geoff Snider was announced as MVP.
• July 23 - Phonak team rider, American cyclist Floyd Landis wins the Tour de France;
however, tour officials soon announce that he has failed a doping test.
• July 28 - Alejandro Toledo concludes his term as President of Peru, and Alan Garcia
becomes president.
• July 28 - Actor Mel Gibson is arrested for drunk driving in California and launches an
anti-semitic tirade.
• July 30 - The world's longest running music show, Top of the Pops, broadcasts for the last
time on BBC Two.
• July 31 - Fidel Castro, President of Cuba, temporarily relinquishes power to his brother
Raúl before surgery.

[edit] August

August
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
• August 10 - London Metropolitan Police make 21 arrests in connection to an apparent
terrorist plot that involved aircraft traveling from the United Kingdom to the United
States. Liquids and gels are banned from checked and carryon baggage.
• August 11 - A resolution to end the 2006 Lebanon War is unanimously accepted by the
United Nations Security Council.
• August 14 - A UN cease fire takes effect in the 2006 Lebanon War.
• August 22 - Pulkovo Airlines Flight 612 crashes near the Russian border in Ukraine,
killing 171 people, including 45 children.
• August 22 - The ICM awards Grigori Perelman the Fields Medal for proving the Poincare
conjecture, one of seven Millennium Prize Problems. Perelman refuses the medal.
• August 23 - In Austria Natascha Kampusch manages to escape after being kidnapped
eight years ago by Wolfgang Priklopil who locked her up in his cellar. Priklopil commits
suicide by throwing himself in front of a train.
• August 24 - The International Astronomical Union defines 'planet' at its 26th General
Assembly, demoting Pluto to the status of 'dwarf planet' more than 70 years after its
discovery.
• August 27 - Comair Flight 5191, carrying 50 people, crashes shortly after take off from
Blue Grass Airport in Lexington, Kentucky.
• August 28 - A Greyhound Lines bus from New York City to Montreal, carrying 52
people, crashes at mile 115 on Interstate 87 near Elizabethtown killing 5 people including
the driver and several are seriously injured.
• August 31 - Edvard Munch paintings The Scream and Madonna are recovered in a police
raid in Oslo, Norway.

[edit] September

September
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30

• September 1 - A fire kills 29 of 148 people aboard an Iran Air Tours Tu-154M aircraft
after the plane lands in Mashhad, Iran.
• September 2 - A Nimrod MR2 based at RAF Kinloss, Scotland, crashes in the Southern
Province of Kandahar, Afghanistan, due to a technical fault. All 14 crew on board were
killed.
• September 3 - Spain wins the 2006 FIBA World Championship.
• September 3 - Andre Agassi retires after his final tennis match against Benjamin Becker
in the U.S. Open.
• September 4 - Vladimir Putin issues a statement revealing that the Soviet Union will be
re-established in the near future
• September 4 - Steve Irwin, Australian wildlife wrangler, dies at 44.
• September 7 - Chiang Kai-shek International Airport in Taipei is renamed to Taiwan
Taoyuan International Airport.
• September 8 - Peter Brock, Australian Racecar Driver, dies in targa west rally
• September 9 - STS-115: Space Shuttle Atlantis is launched on a mission to build up the
International Space Station. It returns safe and successful on September 21.
• September 10 - Seven-time World Champion Michael Schumacher announces he will
retire from Formula 1 at the end of the year.
• September 12 - A stampede at a rally in Yemen leaves 41 dead.
• September 12 - Pope Benedict XVI gives a lecture in Germany; he quotes a criticism of
the Islamic faith, sparking mass protest.
• September 13 - 10th anniversary of the death of American rapper Tupac Shakur, aka
2Pac, is commemorated by the release of his sixth posthumous album, Pac's Life(released
November 21).
• September 13 - The Dawson College Shooting occurs in Montreal, Quebec, Canada,
leaving one student dead and 19 others injured.
• September 13 - The solar system's largest dwarf planet, designated until now as 2003
UB313, is officially named "Eris"; its satellite is now known as "Dysnomia".
• September 15 - Spinach contaminated with E. coli kills one person and poisons over 100
others in 20 states of the United States.
• September 16 - Five churches are attacked in Palestinian areas following the Pope's
comments on Islam.
• September 17 - The Alliance for Sweden wins the Swedish general election, 2006 after
ousting the Social Democratic government which have ruled Sweden since 1994 .
• September 17 - The 2006 protests in Hungary started near the Hungarian Parliament.
• September 19 - Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra of Thailand declares a state of
emergency in Bangkok as members of the Royal Thai Army stage a coup d'état. The army
announces the removal of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra from power.
• September 19 - A memorial service for recently deceased Australian personality Steve
Irwin takes place at Australia Zoo, Queensland, Australia. The service is broadcast across
Australia and other parts of the world.
• September 20 - The CW Television Network (a merger of The WB and UPN) officially
begins operations.
• September 22 - A Transrapid Maglev train crashes into a maintenance vehicle on a test
track in Germany, killing 23 and injuring 10; it is the first recorded fatal accident
involving a Maglev.
• September 23 - Toomas Hendrik Ilves is elected President of Estonia.
• September 24 - Europe win the Ryder Cup in Ireland.
• September 24 - Communist Party of China Central Political Bureau committee member,
Shanghai Municipal Party Committee Secretary Chen Liangyu is dismissed for alleged
corruption charges.
• September 25 - The Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans re-opens 13 months after
Hurricane Katrina with extensive repairs, including the largest re-roofing project in the
United States.
• September 26 - Diet of Japan elects Shinzo Abe as new Prime Minister of Japan
succeeding Junichiro Koizumi.
• September 27 - An armed suspect holds six female students as hostages in Platte Canyon
High School located in Bailey, Colorado. One hostage is fatally wounded as the gunman
kills himself.
• September 28 - After 40 years of development, Suvarnabhumi Airport, opens in Bangkok,
Thailand replacing Don Mueang International Airport as Bangkok's primary airport for
commercial flights.
• September 29 - Gol Flight 1907, a Boeing 737-800, collides with a business jet over the
Amazon Rainforest killing all 154 onboard.
• September 29 - U.S. Representative Mark Foley (R-FL) resigns after it is revealed that he
sent explicit e-mails for several years to underage male pages.
• September 30 - West Coast Eagles win the Australian Football League Grand Final at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground.

[edit] October

October
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31

• October 1 - Vodafone Japan, owned by SoftBank, officially changes its name to Softbank
Mobile Corporation.
• October 2 - Charles Carl Roberts IV, a 32-yr-old milk-truck driver, kills five female
students at an Amish schoolhouse in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania before shooting
himself.
• October 2 - Per Westerberg takes office as Speaker of the Riksdag in Sweden.
• October 4 - The Dow Industrial Average closes above 11,800 for the first time rising
123.27 points, or 1.05%, finishing at 11,850.61.
• October 6 - Hazardous waste plant near Apex, North Carolina explodes releasing chlorine
gas, resulting in the evacuation of thousands and the hospitalization of over 100 residents.
North Korean nuclear test

• October 8 - Mark Porter, New Zealand racecar driver, dies in Bathurst 1000 support race
• October 9 - North Korea claims to have conducted its first ever nuclear test.
• October 10 - Google buys YouTube for USD$1.65 billion.
• October 11 - New York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle is killed, along with his flight
instructor, when his plane crashes into a building in New York City's Upper East Side.
• October 13 - Ban Ki-moon (from South Korea) is elected as the new Secretary-General of
the United Nations.
• October 15 - The UN agrees to sanction North Korea over nuclear testing issue.
• October 15 - Chief Justice of Japan Akira Machida retires upon reaching the age of 70.
• October 15 - Declaration of the establishment of the Islamic State of Iraq.
• October 16 - The last MASH was decommissioned.
• October 17 - The United States population reaches 300 million based on a United States
Census Bureau projection.
• October 18 - Microsoft publicly releases Windows Internet Explorer 7.
• October 19 - On the 19th anniversary of the 1987 stock market crash, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average closed above 12,000 for the first time gaining 19.05 points, or 0.16%,
to 12,011.73.
• October 23 - Jeffrey Skilling is sentenced to 24 years and 4 months in federal prison on
charges relating to the financial collapse of Enron.
• October 25 - The New Jersey Supreme Court unanimously rules in favor of marriage
equality. [1]
• October 27 - Last Ford Taurus rolls off Atlanta Assembly line.
• October 27 - The St. Louis Cardinals win the 2006 World Series.
• October 29 - Aviation Development Company Flight 53 crashes shortly after take off in
Nigeria.
• October 29 - Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is re-elected President of Brazil.
• October 30 - Former President of Chile Augusto Pinochet is placed under house arrest for
crimes committed at the Villa Grimaldi detention centre.
• October 30 - An airstrike on a madrasah in Bajaur kills dozens of suspected al-Qaeda and
Taliban militants.
• October 30 - The Esperanza Fire burns over 61 square miles of Cabazon, California
mountain territory.

[edit] November

November
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30

• November 1 - The Stardust Resort & Casino closes after 48 years of business in Las
Vegas.
• November 3 - Iran successfully test-fires 3 new models of sea missiles in a show of force
to assert its military capacities in the Gulf.
• November 3 - Science predicts 90% of maritime life forms will be extinct by 2048.
• November 3 - Ted Haggard resigns as president of the National Association of
Evangelicals, after allegations of methamphetamine use and sexual relations with a male
prostitute.
• November 5 - Former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and two of his senior allies are
sentenced to death by hanging after an Iraqi court finds them guilty of crimes against
humanity.
• November 7 - U.S. Midterm elections: Democrats win control of both houses of Congress
for the first time since 1994.
• November 7 - In the U.S. congressional elections, Minnesota Democrat Keith Ellison
becomes the first Muslim elected to the House of Representatives.
• November 7 - The Japanese town of Saroma, Hokkaido is struck by a tornado, killing
nine. It is the deadliest tornado in Japan since 1941.
• November 8 - U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld resigns; President Bush
nominates Robert Gates, a former Central Intelligence Agency director, as his
replacement. Gates is then confirmed by the U.S. Senate and sworn in on December 18.
• November 8 - Margaret Chan is elected as the Director-General of the World Health
Organization.
• November 8 - A transit of Mercury occurs.
• November 11 - Edinburgh Place Ferry Pier, Hong Kong, completed the last journey of its
49-year operation.
• November 12 - Gerald Ford surpasses Ronald Reagan as the longest lived President of
the United States.
• November 12 - The former Soviet republic of South Ossetia holds a referendum on
independence from Georgia.
• November 15 - Al Jazeera launches its new English language news channel, Al Jazeera
English.
• November 15 - Start of the Sales and Use Tax in Puerto Rico; a response to the Puerto
Rico budget crisis of May 2006.
• November 15 - The State of Hawaii bans smoking in all enclosed public places.
• November 16 - Rioting in Nuku'alofa, the capital of Tonga, destroys approx. 80% of the
CBD; 8 bodies found and foreign forces requested.
• November 17 - U.S. comedian and actor Michael Richards launches a racially charged
tirade at hecklers during a performance at the Laugh Factory in Los Angeles.
• November 19 - Nintendo releases its 7th generation console, the Wii.
• November 20 - Iran and Syria recognize the government of Iraq, restore diplomatic
relations, and call for a peace conference.
• November 20 - Lee High School bus crash kills 4 students in Huntsville, Alabama.
• November 21 - Pierre Amine Gemayel, Lebanon's Minister of Industry, is assassinated in
Beirut.
• November 21 - Israel's Supreme Court finds that Israel must recognize and register same-
gender marriages celebrated in other countries.
• November 21 - A gas explosion in the coal mine Halemba in Ruda Slaska, Poland, kills
23 miners approximately 1,000 meters below ground.
• November 22 - Dutch general election, 2006: The Christian Democratic Appeal wins a
plurality of seats in The Netherlands.
• November 22 - A General Election is held for the House of Keys in the Isle of Man.
• November 22 - Ten people are trapped and killed in the Kolkata leather factory fire in
India.
• November 23 - Alexander Litvinenko, a former Russian KGB agent, is killed by
Polonium-210 in a London sushi bar.
• November 23 - A series of car bombs and mortar attacks in Sadr City, Baghdad, kill at
least 215 people and injure 257 others.
• November 24 - Michael Stone is arrested for breaking into the parliament buildings at
Stormont while armed. Bertie Ahern and Tony Blair's deadline on Northern Ireland
power-sharing.
• November 26 - US Judge James Robertson orders the US Treasury to change the dollar
bill.
• November 26 - WWE Diva Amy Dumas AKA Lita retires from WWE
• November 30 - South Africa becomes the fifth nation to legalize gay marriage.
• November 30 - Typhoon Durian triggers a massive mudslide and kills hundreds of people
in the Philippines.
• November 30 - Windows Vista, the newest version of operating system from Microsoft,
released for volume license customers.

[edit] December

December
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

• December 1 - Felipe Calderón is sworn in as the President of Mexico by the Congress in


Mexico.
• December 1 - The 15th Asian Games start in Doha, Qatar; the closing ceremony takes
place on December 15.
• December 1 - Typhoon Durian kills at least 388 people in Albay province on the island of
Luzon in the Philippines.
• December 2 - In Rome, about two million people, led by opposition leader Silvio
Berlusconi, demonstrate against Romano Prodi's government.
• December 2 - Stephane Dion is elected the new Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, on
the fourth ballot.
• December 3 - Ed Stelmach is elected the new Leader of the Progressive Conservatives,
Alberta, after the second ballot results, and second choice votes for Ted Morton have
been added up. Ed becomes the Premier-designate of Alberta.
• December 3 - Hugo Chávez is re-elected President of Venezuela.
• December 3 - Explosive demolition of Germany's tallest chimney at former Westerholt
Power Station.
• December 5 - The military seizes power in Fiji by means of a coup d'état led by
Commodore Josaia Voreqe "Frank" Bainimarama.
• December 7 - Smoking is banned in all Ohio bars, restaurants, workplaces, and other
public places.
• December 8 - The Wii is launched in the United Kingdom.
• December 9 - A fire at a hospital in Moscow kills 45 people.
• December 10 - STS-116: Space Shuttle Discovery lifts off from the Kennedy Space
Center on the first night launch since the 2003 loss of Columbia.
• December 10 - Christer Fuglesang becomes the first Swede in space.
• December 10 - Chivas defeats Toluca in the final of the Mexican Soccer League.
• December 11 - The Holocaust conference is opened in Tehran, Iran by Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad.
• December 12 - Peugeot produce their last car at the Ryton Plant signalling the end of
mass car production in a city that was once a major centre of the British motor industry;
Coventry.
• December 13 - The Chinese River Dolphin or Baiji becomes extinct.
• December 13 - U.S. Senator Tim Johnson (D-SD) suffers a stroke during a radio
interview.
• December 14 - U.S. Spy Satellite USA 193, also known as NRO Launch 21 (NROL-21 or
simply L-21) is launched and malfunctions soon after.
• December 15 - Lockheed Martin's F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter successfully
flies for the first time.
• December 15 - An alleged assassination attempt on the Palestinian prime minister Ismail
Haniyeh sparks inter-Palestinian clashes.
• December 15 - Jigme Singye Wangchuck, the King of Bhutan, abdicates in favour of his
son Jigme Khesar Namgyal Wangchuck a year earlier than expected.
• December 15 - The Japanese government passes a bill to upgrade the Japan Defense
Agency to a Ministry.
• December 19 - Murder investigation when the bodies of five murdered prostitutes were
discovered at different locations near Ipswich in Suffolk, England.
• December 19 - A Libyan court sentences five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor to
death for knowingly infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV.
• December 20 - Somalia: Islamic Courts Union fighters begin attacking the government-
held town of Baidoa.
• December 21 - Saparmurat Niyazov, the dictator of Turkmenistan dies unexpectedly,
sparking world concern over a possible power vacuum and instability in this energy-rich
country.
• December 21 - Australian cricketer Shane Warne announces his retirement from the sport.
• December 22 - The Space Shuttle Discovery lands at the Kennedy Space Center,
concluding a two week mission to the International Space Station.
• December 24 - Ethiopia admits its troops have intervened in Somalia.
• December 26 - An oil pipeline explodes in Nigeria's commercial capital, Lagos killing at
least 200 people.
• December 26 - The Hengchun earthquake in Taiwan kills two people, damaged about 15
historical buildings and several undersea cables, disrupting Internet and IDD
telecommunication services in Asia.
• December 29 - War in Somalia: Ethiopian and Transitional government troops capture
Mogadishu without resistance.
• December 30 - Saddam Hussein, former Iraq president, is executed in Baghdad.
• December 30 - The M/V Senopati Nusantara sinks in Indonesia with several hundred
casualties.
• December 30 - The Free State Project completes its "First 1,000" pledge.
• December 31 - At least eleven bombs go off in Bangkok hours before the new year.
• December 31 - The U.S. death toll in Iraq reaches 3,000.
• December 31 - According to the Met Office, England experienced its warmest year since
records began in 1659 with an average temperature of 10.82°C.

[edit] Major religious holidays


2006 in other calendars
2006
Gregorian calendar
MMVI
Ab urbe condita 2759
1455
Armenian calendar
ԹՎ ՌՆԾԵ
Bahá'í calendar 162 – 163
Berber calendar 2956
Buddhist calendar 2550
Burmese calendar 1368
Chinese calendar 4642/4702-12-2
(乙酉年十二月初二日)
— to —
4643/4703-11-12
(丙戌年十一月十二日)
Coptic calendar 1722 – 1723
Ethiopian calendar 1998 – 1999
Hebrew calendar 5766 – 5767
Hindu calendars
- Vikram Samvat 2061 – 2062
- Shaka Samvat 1928 – 1929
- Kali Yuga 5107 – 5108
Holocene calendar 12006
Iranian calendar 1384 – 1385
Islamic calendar 1426 – 1427
Japanese calendar Heisei 18
(平成 18 年)

- Imperial Year Kōki 2666


(皇紀 2666 年)
Korean calendar 4339
Thai solar calendar 2549
Unix time 1136073600 – 1167609599
v•d•e

• January 6 - Feast of Epiphany or Día de los Reyes Magos (Day of the Magi Kings) or La
Fête des Rois (Feast of the Kings).
• January 7 - Christmas in the Russian Orthodox, Serbian Orthodox, Coptic Orthodox,
Ukrainian Catholic and other Eastern Christian church calendars.
• January 10 - Islamic festival of Eid ul-Adha begins (ends on January 12).
• January 11 - Vaikunta Ekadashi is observed by Hindus. This is the day when the Gates of
Heaven open and remain open for the next ten days.
• January 14 - Mahayana Buddhist New Year.
• January 14 - Pongal Harvest Festival in Tamil Nadu.
• January 15 - Maatu Pongal, Festival of Cows in Tamil Nadu.
• January 16 - Uzhavar Tirunaal, Farmer's Day in Tamil Nadu.
• January 29 - Year of the Dog, 4703, begins. Chinese/Asian New Year.
• January 31 - Muslim New Year.
• February 1 - Imbolc Cross-quarter day (Celebrated on February 2 in some places).
• February 9 - Day of Ashurah.
• February 13 - Tu Bishvat.
• February 28 - Mardi Gras.
• March 13 - Jewish holiday of Purim begins at sunset.
• March 14 - Sikh New Year.
• March 21 - Iranian New Year's Day (Norouz).
• March 30 - Hindu New Year.
• April 5 - Qingming Festival.
• April 11 - Birth anniversary of Muhammad.
• April 12 - Pesach or Passover begins at sunset, continues for a week.
• April 13 - Theravada Buddhist New Year.
• April 13 - Punjabi New Year.
• April 14 - Good Friday in the Western Church Calendar, Sikh Holiday of Vaisakhi.
• April 14 - Puththaandu Tamil New Year in the Tamil Calendar, observed by people in
Tamil Nadu.
• April 16 - Easter in the Western Church Calendar.
• April 21 - Good Friday in the Eastern Church Calendar.
• April 23 - Easter in the Eastern Church Calendar.
• May 1 - Beltane Cross-quarter day.
• June 1 - Jewish holiday of Shavuot begins at sunset.
• August 1 - Lammas Cross-quarter day.
• August 2 - Jewish fast of Tisha B'Av begins at sundown; it extends until the night of
August 3.
• September 22 - Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown. Continues until
nightfall of the 24th.
• September 23 - First day of Ramadan.
• October 1 - Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur begins at sundown. Ends at nightfall of the
2nd.
• October 21 - Hindu festival of Diwali.
• October 23 - Islamic festival of Eid ul-Fitr.
• October 31 - Samhain Cross-quarter day.
• December 15 - Hannukah.
• December 21 - Wiccans celebrate the festival of Yule.
• December 25 - Christmas in the Western Church Calendar.
• December 31 - Islamic festival of Eid ul-Adha begins (ends on January 2, 2007).

[edit] Ongoing
• War in Iraq.

[edit] Births
• June 3 - Countess Leonore of Orange-Nassau, Jonkvrouwe van Amsberg, daughter of
Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands and Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands.
• June 18 - Countess Zaria of Orange-Nassau, Jonkvrouwe van Amsberg, daughter of
Princess Mabel of Orange-Nassau and Prince Friso of Orange-Nassau.
• September 6 - Prince Hisahito of Akishino, son of Princess Akishino and Prince
Akishino, the prince is third in line to the throne of Japan.
• October 24 - World's youngest premature baby (22 weeks in the womb)[2]
• October 25 - Krista and Tatiana Hogan, notable conjoined twins.

[edit] Deaths
Main article: Deaths in 2006

[edit] January
Coretta Scott King, wife of Martin Luther King, Jr.

• January 1 - Charles Steen, American geologist, The "Uranium King" (b. 1919)
• January 2 - John Woodnutt, British actor (b. 1924)
• January 3 - Steve Rogers, Australian rugby player (b. 1954)
• January 3 - Bill Skate, Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea (b. 1954)
• January 4 - Sheikh Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Prime Minister of the United Arab
Emirates (b. 1946)
• January 4 - Robert Howard White, Mayor of Papatoetoe, New Zealand (b. 1914)
• January 6 - Lou Rawls, American singer (b. 1933)
• January 8 - Tony Banks, Baron Stratford, British politician (b. 1943)
• January 9 - Andy Caldecott, off road motorcycle racer (b. 1964)
• January 14 - Jim Gary, American sculptor (b. 1939)
• January 14 - Shelley Winters, American actress (b. 1920)
• January 15 - Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, Emir of Kuwait (b. 1926)
• January 19 - Wilson Pickett, American singer (b. 1941)
• January 19 - Geoff Rabone, New Zealand cricket player (b. 1921)
• January 21 - Ibrahim Rugova, first President of Kosovo (b. 1944)
• January 24 - Chris Penn, American actor (b. 1965)
• January 27 - Johannes Rau, President of Germany (b. 1931)
• January 28 - Yitzchak Kadouri, Iraqi-born rabbi (b. 1900)
• January 30 - Coretta Scott King, American civil rights activist and wife of Martin Luther
King, Jr. (b. 1927)

[edit] February

• February 1 - Dick Brooks, American auto racer (b. 1942)


• February 1 - Bryce Harland, New Zealand diplomat (b. 1931)
• February 3 - Al Lewis, American actor (b. 1923)
• February 4 - Betty Friedan, American feminist, activist, and writer (b.1921)
• February 8 - Ron Greenwood, English football manager (b. 1921)
• February 8 - Akira Ifukube, Japanese classical music/film composer (b. 1914)
• February 9 - Sir Freddie Laker, British airline entrepreneur (b. 1922)
• February 10 - J Dilla, American music producer (b. 1974)
• February 12 - Ken Hart, American composer, journalist, and playwright (b. 1917)
• February 13 - Andreas Katsulas, Greek-American actor (b. 1946)
• February 13 - P. F. Strawson, English philosopher (b. 1919)
• February 14 - Shoshana Damari, Israeli singer and actress (b. 1923)
• February 15 - Sun Yun-suan, Premier of the Republic of China (b. 1913)
• February 16 - Ernie Stautner, German-born American football player (b. 1925)
• February 20 - Lucjan Wolanowski, Polish journalist, writer and traveler (b. 1920)
• February 22 - Anthony Burger, American musician and singer (b. 1961)
• February 22 - Sinnathamby Rajaratnam, Singapore politician (b. 1925)
• February 23 - Mauri Favén, Finnish painter (b. 1920)
• February 23 - Zarra, Spanish footballer (b. 1921)
• February 24 - Don Knotts, American actor (b. 1924)
• February 24 - Dennis Weaver, American actor (b. 1924)
• February 25 - Darren McGavin, American actor (b. 1922)
• February 25 - Florian ZaBach, American musician and TV personality (b. 1931)
• February 27 - Linda Smith, English comedian (b. 1958)
• February 28 - Ron Cyrus, American politician, father of Billy Ray Cyrus (b. 1935)

[edit] March

• March 1 - Harry Browne, American Libertarian Presidential candidate (b. 1933)


• March 1 - Peter Osgood, English footballer (b. 1947)
• March 1 - Peter Snow, New Zealand doctor
• March 2 - Jack Wild, English actor (b. 1952)
• March 3 - William Herskovic, Hungarian Holocaust hero and philanthropist (b. 1914)
• March 4 - Dave Rose, American artist (b. 1910)
• March 4 - Edgar Valter, Estonian illustrator and cartoonist (b. 1929)
• March 4 - John Reynolds Gardiner, American author and engineer (b. 1944)
• March 6 - Dana Reeve, American actress, wife of Christopher Reeve (b. 1961)
• March 6 - Kirby Puckett, U.S. baseball player (b. 1960)

Slobodan Milošević, died at The Hague while on trial for war crimes

• March 6 - King Floyd, American singer (b. 1945)


• March 8 - Brian Barratt-Boyes, New Zealand heart surgeon (b. 1924)
• March 9 - Hanka Bielicka, Polish actress (b. 1915)
• March 9 - John Profumo, British politician (b. 1915)
• March 11 - Bernie Geoffrion, Canadian hockey player (b. 1931)
• March 11 - Slobodan Milošević, President of Serbia (b. 1941)
• March 13 - Maureen Stapleton, American actress (b. 1925)
• March 13 - Peter Tomarken, American game show host (b. 1942)
• March 14 - Lennart Meri, President of Estonia (b. 1929)
• March 15 - George Mackey, American mathematician (b. 1916)
• March 23 - Cindy Walker, American songwriter (b. 1918)
• March 24 - Lynne Perrie, English actress (b. 1931)
• March 25 - Rocio Durcal, Spanish singer and actress (b. 1944)
• March 25 - Buck Owens, American musician (b. 1929)
• March 26 - Paul Dana, American race car driver (b. 1975)
• March 27 - Stanislaw Lem, Polish writer (b. 1921)
• March 28 - Caspar Weinberger, United States Secretary of Defense (b. 1917)

[edit] April

• April 2 - Nina Schenk von Stauffenberg, German wife of soldier Claus Schenk von
Stauffenberg (b. 1913)
• April 4 - Denis Donaldson, Irish Republican informer (b. 1950)
• April 5 - Gene Pitney, American singer (b. 1941)
• April 8 - Gerard Reve, Dutch author (b. 1923)
• April 11 - Proof, American rapper (D12) (b. 1973)
• April 11 - Les Foote, Australian footballer (b. 1924)
• April 11 - June Pointer, American singer (b. 1953)
• April 12 - Rajkumar, Indian actor (b. 1929)
• April 12 - William Sloane Coffin, American university chaplain and activist (b. 1924)
• April 13 - Muriel Spark, Scottish novelist (b. 1918)
• April 15 - Louise Smith, American race car driver (b. 1916)
• April 17 - Calum Kennedy, Scottish singer (b. 1928)
• April 18 - John Lyall, British football player and manager (b. 1940)
• April 19 - Scott Crossfield, American pilot (b. 1921)
• April 20 - Anna Svidersky, American murder victim (b. 1988)
• April 21 - Telê Santana, Brazilian footballer and coach (b. 1931)
• April 23 - Alida Valli, Italian actress (b. 1921)
• April 23 - Johnny Checketts, New Zealand flying ace (b. 1912)
• April 24 - Nasreen Huq, Bangladeshi social worker and human rights activist (b. 1958)
• April 24 - Brian Labone, English footballer (b. 1940)
• April 24 - Steve Stavro, Canadian businessman and sports team owner (b. 1927)
• April 24 - Moshe Teitelbaum, Hungarian-born Hassidic rabbi (b. 1914)
• April 25 - Jane Jacobs, American-born writer and activist (b. 1916)
• April 25 - Peter Law, British politician (b. 1948)
• April 29 - John Kenneth Galbraith, Canadian economist (b. 1908)
[edit] May

• May 2 - Louis Rukeyser, American television host (b. 1933)


• May 3 - Karel Appel, Dutch painter (b. 1921)
• May 3 - Pramod Mahajan, Indian Bharatiya Janata Party politician and strategist (b.
1949)
• May 3 - Earl Woods, American athlete and father of Tiger Woods (b. 1932)
• May 6 - Lillian Asplund, last American survivor of the Titanic disaster (b. 1906)
• May 6 - Shigeru Kayano, Japanese activist (b. 1926)
• May 7 - Richard Carleton, Australian journalist (b. 1943)
• May 7 - Steve Bender, German musician (Dschinghis Khan) (b. 1946)
• May 8 - Iain MacMillan, British photographer (b. 1938)
• May 10 - Val Guest, British film director (b. 1911)
• May 10 - Soraya, Colombian-born singer and musician (b. 1969)
• May 11 - Yossi Banai, Israeli singer and actor (b. 1932)
• May 11 - Floyd Patterson, American boxer (b. 1935)
• May 13 - Jaroslav Pelikan, American historian (b. 1923)
• May 13 - Johnnie Wilder, Jr., American R&B singer (b. 1949)
• May 16 - Jorge Porcel, Argentine actor (b. 1936)
• May 19 - Freddie Garrity, English singer (Freddie and the Dreamers) (b. 1940)
• May 21 - Katherine Dunham, American dancer, choreographer, and songwriter (b. 1909)
• May 22 - Lee Jong-wook, Korean Director-General of the World Health Organisation (b.
1945)
• May 23 - Lloyd Bentsen, American politician (b. 1921)
• May 24 - Anderson Mazoka, Zambian politician (b. 1943)
• May 24 - Michał Życzkowski, Polish technician (b. 1930)
• May 25 - Desmond Dekker, Jamaican singer and songwriter (b. 1941)
• May 25 - Tobías Lasser, Venezuelan botanist (b. 1911)
• May 25 - Kari S. Tikka, Finnish professor (b. 1944)
• May 26 - Édouard Michelin, French businessman (b. 1963)
• May 27 - Alex Toth, American comic book artist and cartoonist (b. 1928)
• May 29 - Masumi Okada, Japanese actor (b. 1935)
• May 30 - Shohei Imamura, Japanese film director (b. 1926)
• May 30 - David Lloyd, New Zealand biologist (b. 1938)

[edit] June

• June 1 - Rocio Jurado, Spanish singer and actress (b. 1944)


• June 6 - Arnold Newman, American photographer (b. 1918)
• June 6 - Billy Preston, American artist and musician (b. 1946)
• June 6 - Hilton Ruiz, Puerto Rican jazz pianist (b. 1952)
• June 7 - Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Jordanian militant (b. 1966)
• June 7 - John Tenta, Canadian professional wrestler (b. 1963)
• June 11 - Neroli Fairhall, New Zealand archer (b. 1944)
• June 12 - Chakufwa Chihana, Malawi politician (b. 1939)
• June 12 - György Ligeti, Hungarian composer (b. 1923)
• June 12 - Kenneth Thomson, Canadian businessman and art collector (b. 1923)
• June 13 - Charles Haughey, Prime Minister of Ireland (b. 1925)
• June 13 - Hiroyuki Iwaki, Japanese conductor and percussionist (b. 1932)
• June 14 - Jean Roba, Belgian comics author (b. 1930)
• June 15 - Raymond Devos, French humorist (b. 1922)
• June 17 - Bussunda, Brazilian comedian (b. 1962)
• June 18 - Gica Petrescu, Romanian musician (b. 1915)
• June 18 - Chris and Cru Kahui, infant twin brothers murdered in New Zealand (b. 2006)
• June 23 - Aaron Spelling, American television producer (b. 1923)
• June 24 - Patsy Ramsey, Mother of slain 6-year-old JonBenet (b. 1956)
• June 25 - Arif Mardin, Turkish-born music producer (b. 1932)
• June 25 - Jaap Penraat, Dutch architect and resistance fighter (b. 1918)
• June 30 - Mohamed Haneef, Maldivian Politician and former Vice-President of Islamic
Democratic Party of Maldives (b. 1946)
• June 30 - Robert Gernhardt, German satirist (b. 1937)

[edit] July

• July 1 - Ryutaro Hashimoto, 53rd Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1937)


• July 1 - Fred Trueman, English cricketer (b. 1931)
• July 3 - Joseph Goguen, American computer scientist (b. 1941)
• July 5 - Gert Fredriksson, Swedish kayaker (b. 1919)
• July 5 - Kenneth Lay, American businessman (b. 1942)
• July 6 - Kasey Rogers, American actress, author, and biker (b. 1925)
• July 7 - Tom Weir, Scottish climber, author, and broadcaster (b. 1914)
• July 7 - Rudi Carrell, Dutch entertainer (b. 1934)
• July 7 - Syd Barrett, English singer, songwriter, and guitarist (b. 1946)
• July 7 - John Money, Sexologist (b. 1921)
• July 8 - June Allyson, American actress (b. 1917)
• July 8 - Catherine Leroy, French photographer (b. 1945)
• July 10 - Shamil Basayev, Chechen rebel (b. 1965)
• July 11 - Ross M. Lence, American political scientist (b. 1943)
• July 11 - John Spencer, British snooker player (b. 1935)
• July 13 - Red Buttons, American actor and comedian (b. 1919)
• July 16 - Bob Orton, American wrestler (b. 1929)
• July 17 - Mickey Spillane, American writer (b. 1918)
• July 18 - Raul Cortez, Brazilian actor (b. 1931)
• July 19 - Jack Warden, American actor (b. 1920)
• July 20 - Lim Kim San, Singapore politician (b. 1916)
• July 20 - Ted Grant, British politician (b. 1913)
• July 21 - Ta Mok, Cambodian military leader (b. 1926)
• July 21 - Mako Iwamatsu, Japanese-born actor (b. 1933)
• July 22 - José Antonio Delgado, Venezuelan mountain climber (b. 1965)
• July 22 - Gianfrancesco Guarnieri, Italian-born Brazilian actor and playwright (b.1934)
• July 25 - Hani Mohsin, Malaysian actor (b. 1965)
• July 28 - David Gemmell, British author (b. 1948)
• July 30 - Murray Bookchin, American libertarian socialist (b. 1921)

[edit] August

• August 2 - Luisel Ramos, Uruguayan model (b. 1984)


• August 3 - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, German-born soprano (b. 1915)
• August 3 - Arthur Lee, American musician (b. 1945)
• August 6 - Hirotaka Suzuoki, Japanese Seiyu (b. 1950)
• August 9 - James van Allen, American physicist (b. 1914)
• August 11 - Mike Douglas, American entertainer (b. 1925)
• August 13 - Tony Jay, English-born actor (b. 1933)
• August 13 - Payao Poontarat, Thai boxer (b. 1957)
• August 15 - Te Atairangi Kaahu, Maori queen (b. 1931)
• August 15 - Faas Wilkes, former Dutch football player(b. 1923)
• August 16 - Alfredo Stroessner, President of Paraguay (b. 1912)
• August 20 - Joe Rosenthal, American photographer (b. 1911)
• August 20 - Cpl Bryan Budd VC, British soldier (Afghanistan). (b. 1977)
• August 21 - Bismillah Khan, Indian musician (b. 1916)
• August 21 - S. Yizhar, Israeli writer (b. 1916)
• August 23 - Maynard Ferguson, Canadian trumpet player and bandleader (b. 1928)
• August 23 - Wolfgang Priklopil, Austrian kidnapper of Natascha Kampusch (b. 1962)
• August 26 - Rainer Barzel, German politician (b. 1924)
• August 26 - Clyde Walcott, Barbadian cricketer (b. 1926)
• August 27 - Hrishikesh Mukherjee, Indian filmmaker (b. 1922)
• August 30 - Glenn Ford, Canadian actor (b. 1916)
• August 30 - Naguib Mahfouz, Egyptian writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1911)
• August 30 - Robin Cooke, Baron Cooke of Thorndon, New Zealand jurist and member of
the British House of Lords (b. 1926)

[edit] September

Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin

• September 1 - György Faludy, Hungarian poet (b. 1910)


• September 2 - Charlie Williams, British comedian (b. 1927)
• September 2 - Bob Mathias, American athlete (b. 1930)
• September 2 - Willi Ninja, American dancer and choreographer (b. 1961)
• September 4 - Steve Irwin, Australian environmentalist and television personality (b.
1962)
• September 4 - Giacinto Facchetti, Italian footballer (b. 1942)
• September 4 - Colin Thiele, Australian author and educator (b. 1920)
• September 7 - Robert Earl Jones, American stage and film actor (b. (1910)
• September 8 - Hilda Bernstein, English-born author, artist, and activist (b. 1915)
• September 8 - Peter Brock, Australian race car driver (b. 1945)
• September 9 - Richard Burmer, American composer and electronic musician (b. 1955)
• September 9 - William B. Ziff, Jr., American publishing executive (b. 1930)
• September 10 - Taufa'ahau Tupou IV, King of Tonga (b. 1918)
• September 11 - Joachim Fest, German historian and journalist (b. 1926)
• September 11 - Johannes Bob van Benthem, Dutch lawyer (b. 1921)
• September 13 - Ann Richards, Governor of Texas, USA (b. 1933)
• September 14 - Elizabeth Choy, Singapore World War II hero (b. 1910)
• September 14 -Mickey Hargitay, Hungarian-born actor and bodybuilder (b. 1926)
• September 15 - Oriana Fallaci, Italian journalist (b. 1929)
• September 15 - Abe Saffron, Australian nightclub owner and property developer (b.
1920)
• September 16 - Rob Levin, American computer programmer (b. 1955)
• September 17 - Patricia Kennedy Lawford, American socialite, sister of John F. Kennedy
(b. 1924)
• September 17 - Dorothy C. Stratton, Director of the United States Coast Guard Women's
Reserve (b. 1899)
• September 19 - Roy Schuiten, Dutch cyclist (b. 1950)
• September 19 - Hugh Kawharu, paramount chief of the Ngāti Whātua Māori tribe (b.
1927)
• September 20 - Armin Jordan, Swiss conductor (b. 1932)
• September 20 - John W. Peterson, American composer (b. 1921)
• September 23 - Malcolm Arnold, English composer (b. 1921)
• September 23 - Aladár Pege, Hungarian musician (b. 1939)
• September 24 - Tetsuro Tamba, Japanese actor (b. 1922)
• September 26 - Byron Nelson, American golfer (b. 1912)
• September 26 - Iva Toguri D'Aquino, American propagandist for Japan in World War II
(b. 1916)
• September 29 - Walter Hadlee, New Zealand cricketer (b. 1915)
• September 29 - Jan Werner Danielsen, Norwegian musician (b. 1976)

[edit] October
Jane Wyatt, Famous actress in Gentlemen's Agreement

• October 6 - Buck O'Neil, American Negro League baseball player (b. 1911)
• October 6 - Wilson Tucker, American writer (b. 1914)
• October 7 - Anna Politkovskaya, American-born Russian journalist (b. 1958)
• October 8 - Mark Porter, New Zealand race car driver (racing accident) (b. 1975)
• October 9 - Paul Hunter, British snooker player (b. 1978)
• October 10 - Michael John Rogers, English ornithologist (b. 1932)
• October 11 - Cory Lidle, U.S. baseball player (b. 1972)
• October 14 - Freddy Fender, American singer (b. 1937)
• October 16 - Lister Sinclair, Canadian broadcaster and playwright (b. 1921)
• October 16 - Valentín Paniagua, President of Peru (b. 1936)
• October 18 - Anna Russell, British-born comedian and music satirist (b. 1911)
• October 20 - Jane Wyatt, American actress (b. 1910)
• October 21 - Sandy West, Drummer for the runaways (b. 1959)
• October 24 - Enolia McMillan, First female president of the NAACP (b. 1904)
• October 28 - Red Auerbach, American basketball coach and official (b. 1917)
• October 28 - Trevor Berbick, Jamaican boxer (b. 1955)
• October 30 - Clifford Geertz, American anthropologist (b. 1926)
• October 31 - Pieter Willem Botha, former State President of South Africa (b. 1916)

[edit] November
Ferenc Puskás, famous Hungarian footballer

• November 1 - Adrienne Shelly, American actress & director (b. 1966)


• November 1 - William Styron, American writer (b. 1925)
• November 2 - Adrien Douady, French mathematician (b. 1935)
• November 2 - Wally Foreman, Australian sports commentator (b. 1948)
• November 3 - Paul Mauriat, French musician (b. 1925)
• November 4 - Frank Arthur Calder, Canadian politician (b. 1915)
• November 4 - Sergi López Segú, Spanish footballer (b. 1967)
• November 5 - Mustafa Bülent Ecevit, Turkish politician, poet, writer and journalist (b.
1925)
• November 5 - Samuel Bowers, American Ku Klux Klansman and convicted killer (b.
1924)
• November 7 - Bryan Pata, American college football player (b. 1984)
• November 8 - Basil Poledouris, American composer (b. 1945)
• November 9 - Ed Bradley, American journalist (b. 1941)
• November 10 - Gerald Levert, American singer (b. 1966)
• November 10 - Jack Palance, American actor (b. 1919)
• November 11 - Belinda Emmett, Australian actress and singer (b. 1974)
• November 15 - Ana Carolina Reston, Brazilian fashion model (b. 1985)
• November 16 - Milton Friedman, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1912)
• November 17 - Ferenc Puskás, Hungarian footballer (b. 1927)
• November 17 - Bo Schembechler, American football coach (b. 1929)
• November 17 - Ruth Brown, American singer (b. 1928)
• November 20 - Robert Altman, American film director (b. 1925)
• November 20 - Andre Waters, American football player (b. 1962)
• November 21 - Pierre Amine Gemayel, Lebanese politician (b. 1972)
• November 22 - John Allan Cameron, Canadian musician (b. 1938)
• November 23 - Alexander Litvinenko, Russian-born spy (b. 1962)
• November 23 - Philippe Noiret, French actor (b. 1930)
• November 23 - Anita O'Day, American singer (b. 1919)
• November 23 - Willie Pep, American boxer (b. 1922)
• November 24 - Walter Booker, American jazz bassist (b. 1933)
• November 24 - Juice Leskinen, Finnish singer and songwriter (b. 1950)
• November 25 - Leo Chiosso, Italian poet (b. 1920)
• November 25 - Valentin Elizalde, Mexican singer (b. 1979)
• November 25 - Phyllis Fraser Cerf Wagner, American actress, journalist and publisher (b.
1916)
• November 26 - Dave Cockrum, American comic book artist (b. 1943)
• November 27 - Alan Freeman, Australian-born broadcaster and disc jockey (b. 1927)

[edit] December
Augusto Pinochet, the 30th president of Chile

Gerald Ford, the 38th President of the United States

Saddam Hussein, executed by hanging

• December 3 - James Kim, American television personality (b. 1971)


• December 3 - Logan Whitehurst, American comedy singer (b. 1977)
• December 3 - Craig Hinton, British novelist (b. 1964)
• December 5 - David Bronstein, Soviet Union chess grandmaster (b. 1924)
• December 6 - John Feeney, Documentary film-director (b. 1922)
• December 7 - Jeane Kirkpatrick, American political theorist and U.N. ambassador (b.
1926)
• December 7 - J. B. Hunt, American trucking magnate (b. 1927)
• December 8 - Jose Uribe, Dominican Major League Baseball player (b. 1959)
• December 10 - Augusto Pinochet, Chilean dictator (b. 1915)
• December 12 - Paul Arizin, American basketball player (b. 1928)
• December 12 - Peter Boyle, American actor (b. 1935)
• December 12 - Raymond P. Shafer, 38th Governor of Pennsylvania (b. 1917)
• December 13 - Lamar Hunt, American sports executive (b. 1932)
• December 13 - "Homesick" James Williamson, American blues musician (b. 1910)
• December 13 - Federico Crescentini, Sanmarinese football player (b. 1982)
• December 14 - Ahmet Ertegün, Turkish record executive (b. 1923)
• December 14 - Mike Evans, American actor (b. 1949)
• December 15 - Clay Regazzoni, Swiss race car driver (b. 1939)
• December 16 - Don Jardine, Canadian professional wrestler (b. 1940)
• December 18 - Joseph Barbera, American animator (b. 1911)
• December 20 - Ma Ji, Chinese actor (b. 1934)
• December 21 - Saparmurat Niyazov, President of Turkmenistan (b. 1940)
• December 22 - Elena Mukhina, Russian gymnast (b. 1960)
• December 23 - Robert Stafford, American politician (b. 1913)
• December 23 - Dutch Mason, Canadian blues musician (b. 1938)
• December 23 - Marilyn Waltz, American actress, model & Playboy playmate (b. 1931)
• December 24 - Braguinha, Brazilian songwriter (b. 1907)
• December 24 - Charlie Drake, English comedian (b. 1925)
• December 24 - Frank Stanton, American television executive (b. 1908)
• December 24 - Kenneth Sivertsen, Norwegian musician, composer, poet and comedian
(b. 1961)
• December 25 - James Brown, American singer (b. 1933)
• December 26 - Gerald R. Ford, 38th President of the United States (b. 1913)
• December 26 - Chris Brown, U.S. baseball player (b. 1961)
• December 30 - Saddam Hussein, 5th President of Iraq (b. 1937)
• December 30 - Antony Lambton, Viscount Lambton, British politician (b. 1922)

[edit] Nobel Prizes


• Chemistry - Roger D. Kornberg.
• Economics - Edmund Phelps.
• Literature - Orhan Pamuk.
• Peace - Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank.
• Physics - John C. Mather, George F. Smoot.
• Physiology or Medicine - Andrew Z. Fire, Craig C. Mello.

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