Today in History: Slavery Convention signed by 20 states at League of Nations
The following are some of the major events to have occurred on September 25:
1926 – Slavery Convention signed by 20 states at League of Nations.
1932 – The Spanish region of Catalonia was granted autonomy.
1943 – The Russians liberated Smolensk, one of the most important bastions still left to the Germans in Russia, during World War Two.
1957 – U.S. National Guardsmen escorted nine black students into Little Rock Central High School in Arkansas in an attempt at desegregation.
1983 – Leopold III, king of Belgium 1934-51, died. He became a national embarrassment and was forced to abdicate in 1951 because of his alleged collaboration with Nazi Germany.
1997 – The British Thrust SuperSonic car set a new land speed record in Nevada of 714.1 mph (1,149.2 kph).
2001 – Saudi Arabia severed diplomatic relations with Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers, leaving Pakistan as the last state still recognising the Taliban government.
2002 – Indian commandos stormed the Akshardham Temple in western Gujarat, ending a siege and killing two gunmen who had massacred 28 people and wounded more than 70 the night before.
2003 Edward Said, Palestinian intellectual, died. A comparative literature professor at Columbia, he was also a literary critic and theoretician and a prominent Palestinian activist.
2003 – Franco Modigliani, who fled his native Italy under fascism and won a Nobel prize in economics in 1985, died. He was 85.
2003 – French actress Clotilde Courau marries Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy, grandson of Italy’s last king.
(Reuters)
No comments
Thanks for viewing, your comments are appreciated.
Disclaimer: Comments on this blog are NOT posted by Olomo TIMES, Readers are SOLELY responsible for their comments.
Need to contact us for gossips, news reports, adverts or anything?
Email us on; olomoinfo@gmail.com