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January 2004

 

January 2004

2004 : January - February - March - April - May - June - July - August - September - October - November - December- &rarr

Ongoing events
2004 Canadian Federal Election
  Conservative leadership race
2004 Taiwan Presidential Election
2004 U.S. Presidential Election
  Democratic Presidential Primary
Bloody Sunday Inquiry
Exploration of Mars
  Mars Exploration Rovers
  Mars Express Orbiter
Bird flu
Hutton Inquiry
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
  Road Map to Peace
Kyoto Protocol
North Korean Crisis
Same-sex Marriage
SCO v. IBM
War on Terrorism
  Afghanistan timeline January 2004
Occupation of Iraq
Iraqi Insurgency
  Iraq Timeline

January 31, 2004

January 10, 2004

  • Occupation of Iraq: Protests in the city of Amarah because of unemployment occur. Police officers and soldiers open fire on demonstrators. Five or six are killed and one or eleven wounded. [1]
  • In publicity for a new book for which former U.S Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill is the primary source, 60 Minutes reveals O'Neill's claims that the Bush administration was making plans for an invasion of Iraq within days of Bush's inauguration. Bush officials note that regime change in Iraq had been official U.S. policy since 1998, three years before Bush took office. O'Neill, fired for his opposition to tax cuts, also characterized Bush as so disengaged in cabinet meetings that he "was like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people". On the positive side, O'Neill also described Bush as such a good listener that he (O'Neill) was able to give a non-stop monologue for nearly an hour in a one-on-one meeting. [1]
  • SCO v. IBM: SCO Group claims that it has has "low-level talks" with Google about a possible license agreement related to Linux.[1]
  • Iraq and weapons of mass destruction: On January 9, 2004, Danish troops discovered decade-old mortar rounds containing suspicious liquid buried in Southern Iraq. Initial tests now indicate that the rounds contain the banned chemical weapon blister gas. Final tests should be available in two days. [1] [1]
  • A speed boat carrying illegal immigrants from Albania, bound for Italy broke down and capsized. 11 people survived, while as many as 21 died due to drowning and exposure. Two have been arrested by Albanian authorities for people smuggling, while other senior officials have been implicated in connection with the tragedy. [1] [1] [1]

    January 9, 2004

  • Education in Greece: George Papandreou, junior talks about the possibility to allow private universities in Greece. [1] (Greek)
  • Turkey fully abolishes the death penalty. [1]
  • USA lowers the terrorism advisory level to yellow (elevated) from orange (high). [1]
  • Bangladesh bans books published by the Ahmadiyya movement, an Islamic sect. [1]
  • Exploration of Mars: Engineers at JPL decide to turn the Mars Spirit Rover around on its lander after it was found the airbags could not be retracted enough to allow it to move off in a forward direction. It is expected the rover will drive off sometime next week. The Rover has also stood up and deployed its front wheels. [1] [1]
  • Two volcanoes erupt: the Piton de la Fournaise on Réunion Island, and the Volcán de Fuego near Antigua Guatemala, Guatemala. The eruption in Guatemala is not thought to be serious enough to require evacuations. [1]
  • In Guatemala City, fifteen people die and twenty are hurt when a public bus collides with a crane. [1] [1]
  • Enron Corporation: Former Assistant Treasurer Lea Fastow and wife of Andrew Fastow, failed to respond to a plea agreement by the deadline. The offer would have allowed her to plead guilty in federal court to lesser charges and serve five months in return for her testimony. Her trial for conspiracy to commit wire fraud, money laundering, and tax evasion is scheduled to start February 10. [1]

    January 8, 2004

  • Levi Strauss & Co. shuts its last U.S. jeans sewing plant in San Antonio, Texas, ending all U.S. manufacturing as it shifts to a contract production model. The closure ends a "Made in the U.S.A." tradition dating back to the 1870s. [1]
  • The Queen Mary 2 is christened by Queen Elizabeth II.[1]
  • An RTÉ Prime Time investigation accuses the Garda Síochána, the Republic of Ireland's police force, of violent abuse of people arrested. Irish Minister of State Dick Roche accuses Gardaí of "torture" of one student beaten up in a Dublin police station, while a former judge accuses police of committing perjury in his courts. The Gardaí deny all allegations. [1]