July 6, 2004
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] July 6, 2004
- Major Harry Schmidt of the United States Air Force is found guilty of dereliction of duty in a "friendly fire" bombing that killed four and seriously wounded eight Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan in 2002, given an official reprimand and fined US$5,672, which will be made in two monthly payments of US$2,836. (CNN) (Washington Post)
- President of Austria Thomas Klestil dies of a heart attack, just two days before he was due to leave office. (BBC)
- Islamic Response claims that United States Marine Corps Corporal Wassef Ali Hassoun has been taken to a place of safety after he promised to desert from the Marine Corps. (BBC)
- A car bomb in the Khalis section of Baghdad kills 13 people attending the wake of individuals killed two days ago in a previous attack. (Boston Globe)
- United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan calls upon African Union leaders to take action to resolve the crisis in Darfur where an estimated 30,000 black Sudanese have been killed by Sudanese Arabs in cultural and racial strife. (BBC)
- U.S. Democratic Party presumptive presidential candidate John Kerry picks former rival John Edwards to be his running mate. (MSNBC) (BBC) (Democracy Now!)
- In a huge front-page headline, the New York Post mistakenly reports that Kerry had picked Richard A. "Dick" Gephardt.
- The U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence uncovers that, before the War on Iraq, the C.I.A. was told by relatives of Iraqi scientists that Iraq's programs to develop unconventional weapons had been abandoned. (Guardian)