May 2011

May 2011 was the fifth month of that common year. The month, which began on a Sunday, ended on a Tuesday after 31 days.

International holidays

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Portal:Current events

This is an archived version of Wikipedia's Current events Portal from May 2011.

May 1, 2011 (Sunday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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May 2, 2011 (Monday)
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Law and crime
  • As part of one of the four cases currently against him, Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi appears in court on charges of corruption and attacks his prosecutors again. (BBC)
Politics and elections
Sport
May 3, 2011 (Tuesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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May 4, 2011 (Wednesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • 2011 Syrian uprising
    • Syrian security forces arrest two people outside of the University of Damascus as student demonstrators rally for the release of political detainees and army convoys and tanks rolled into the capital city, setting up what eyewitnesses described as a base in the central square. (CNN) (Sky News)
    • More than 1,000 people are arrested in Syria amid ongoing protests (UPI)
    • Eye-witness reports say dozens are killed in clashes as thousands of people across Syria rallied to show support for residents of the southern border city of Daraa who have been living under siege since government forces attacked earlier this week. (CNN)
    • UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calls Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and urges him to immediately end the violent crackdown against anti-government protesters in Syria, as Syrian tanks and armored vehicles deployed around the town of Rastan, witnesses said, raising fears of another deadly attack on protesters challenging Assad's rule. (The Jerusalem Post) (Channel 6 News)
    • Syrian officials confirm the detention of an Al Jazeera reporter, Dorothy Parvaz, who has been missing since Friday. (CNN)
  • 2011 Libyan civil war
  • Reactions to the death of Osama bin Laden:
  • Russian security forces kill Doger Sevdet, an al-Qaeda emissary who fought alongside Chechen insurgents, in the northern Caucasus region of Russia. (CNN)
  • One policeman is killed and another injured when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's convoy is attacked after a campaign rally in northern Turkey; Erdoğan was not in the convoy at the time of the attack. (CNN) (The Telegraph)
Arts and culture
Business and economy
Disasters
International Relations
  • Public executions, death by starvation and torture are common in North Korean political prisoner camps, according to testimony given to human rights group Amnesty International, which they say could contain as many as 200,000 prisoners. (CNN) (The New York Times) (AFP)
  • Sarah Shourd, an American hiker released last year from an Iranian prison on $500,000 bail because of a medical condition said she will not return to Tehran to face espionage charges in a court hearing scheduled for next week; her fiancé, Shane Bauer, and their friend, Josh Fattal, are still being held in Evin Prison in Iran. (CNN)
Law and crime
  • The trial of two Rwandan rebel leaders charged in connection with their part in crimes against humanity and war crimes carried out by their militias in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2008 and 2009, begins in the Stuttgart high court, Germany. (CNN)
  • China announces the creation of a State Internet Information Office to 'direct, coordinate, and supervise' online content management, prompting fears that online censorship will grow even more stringent. (RFA)
Politics
Sport
May 5, 2011 (Thursday)
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May 6, 2011 (Friday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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  • CNET reports that a group of computer hackers is planning another cyberattack against Sony over its handling of the PlayStation Network outage. (CNET)
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May 7, 2011 (Saturday)
Armed conflict and attacks
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May 8, 2011 (Sunday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
Business
  • There is a near riot in the Beijing Apple Store as the Apple iPad 2 goes on sale in the People's Republic of China. (AFP via Straits Times)
  • Peter Beale, Nick Stephenson, John Edwards and John Towers - the so-called "Phoenix Four" who ran MG Rover following its collapse - have agreed to be disqualified from serving as company directors for between 3 and 6 years. The deal was made with the UK's Department of Business, Innovation and Skills, following a "lengthy and complex investigation" into the affair. (BBC)
Disasters
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May 9, 2011 (Monday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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May 10, 2011 (Tuesday)
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International relations
  • East Timor rejected Chinese plans to build a radar on its territory in 2007, due to fears it would be used for intelligence purposes, according to Wikileaks. (Straits Times)
Law and crime
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Sport
May 11, 2011 (Wednesday)
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May 12, 2011 (Thursday)
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Science and technology
  • Anti-retroviral drugs reduce the risk of people spreading HIV to uninfected partners by 96%, according to a new study. (BBC) (Mail & Guardian)
May 13, 2011 (Friday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • 2011 Bahraini uprising:
    • The Bahraini government tortures doctors into confessions of "trying to overthrow the monarchy" by aiding wounded civilians who protested during the uprising. (Al Jazeera)
  • 2011 Yemeni uprising:
    • 3 people are killed and 18 others are wounded as troops shoot at medics, witnesses and people protesting against the Saleh regime in Ibb, Ta'izz and Sana'a, though Saleh remains defiant. Qatar withdraws from mediation efforts, saying Saleh has been full of "indecision and delays". (BBC)
  • 2011 Syrian uprising:
    • Soldiers are reportedly ordered not to fire on protesters. (Buenos Aires Herald)
    • Authorities close off entire areas in cities across Syria, setting up roadblocks and checkpoints in an attempt to prevent protests after Friday prayers. (AP via Google News)
    • At least 3 people are killed in the centre of the city of Homs, with one being seen to be shot in the head after forces loyal to the regime fire into crowds of people. Gunfire erupts in the city of Daraa. (BBC)
  • 2011 Libyan civil war:
    • A video shows 11 dead imams and 45 wounded Muslim holy men, 5 of whom are in a coma, alleged to have been caused by a NATO airstrike. Those attacked were said to have been at rest and sleeping while participating in a long peace march; Muslims and Christians unite in condemnation of the attack. (The Guardian)
    • Upon speculation that Gaddafi was injured in a NATO air-strike, Libyan State TV released an audio tape of what it claims to be Gaddafi giving a message saying that he was not hurt and is alive. (Al Jazeera)
  • 2011 Egyptian revolution:
    • Authorities extend for 15 more days the detention of Hosni Mubarak, whose regime was overthrown by a recent popular revolution. (BBC)
    • Suzanne Mubarak, the wife, is detained for 15 days on allegations of corruption and has a heart attack. (BBC)
    • Tens of thousands of people gather in Tahrir Square to display unity against sectarian tension and solidarity with the plight of the Palestinian people and the other popular uprisings against regimes in the region. Cheers erupt as Suzanne Mubarak is incarcerated. (The Guardian)
  • Dozens of people are injured in a petrol bomb attack on a bank in Gansu, northwest China. (BBC) (Xinhua) (Times of India)
  • Catholic priest Father Mussie Zerai alleges that as many as 400 people, mainly Eritreans, are being held for ransom by human traffickers in the Sinai Desert, and that at least one has been killed after experiencing electric shock torture. (BBC) (UPI)
  • 2011 Charsadda bombing. 80 people were killed when two suicide bombs exploded in the Frontier Constabulary training center in Charsadda District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan.
Disasters
International relations
Law and crime
Politics and elections
Religion
May 14, 2011 (Saturday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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International Relations
  • Pakistan's parliament adopts a resolution that demands an immediate stop to drone strikes and an end to raids by U.S. troops within Pakistan's borders and threatens to cut off access to a facility used by NATO forces to ferry troops into Afghanistan, as the rift between the US and Pakistan grows, following the killing of Osama bin Laden. (CNN)
Law and crime
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Sports
May 15, 2011 (Sunday)
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May 16, 2011 (Monday)
Armed conflict and attacks
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May 17, 2011 (Tuesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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Natural history
  • Ming Ming, the oldest panda in the world, dies at the age of 34 in Guangdong, China. (BBC)
Politics and elections
Sport
May 18, 2011 (Wednesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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May 19, 2011 (Thursday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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May 20, 2011 (Friday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
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Politics
  • The 2011 Spanish protests continue in the Puerta del Sol in central Madrid, despite a ruling by Spain's electoral board that it should end by the weekend. (BBC)
  • Tens of thousands of people protest in Santiago, Chile about plans to build two dams on wild rivers in southern Patagonia with an minority of people turning violent. (AP via MSNBC)
Science
  • The Government of the People's Republic of China acknowledges that there are "urgent problems" associated with the country's Three Gorges Dam project, as it is linked to soil erosion, earthquakes, drought and social upheaval. (The Guardian)
Sport
May 21, 2011 (Saturday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
  • Dawn, Pakistan's largest English-language newspaper, begins publication of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables it has obtained in a deal with WikiLeaks and Julian Assange. The cables show that the Pakistani military asked the United States to increase its drone attacks against insurgents on Pakistani territory, a request Pakistani authorities have not admitted in public. (Al Jazeera)
  • Arab Spring:
    • 2011–2012 Syrian uprising:
      • Several people are killed and dozens of others are injured in Homs as Syrian security forces attack the funeral of protesters killed in yesterday's protest events during the country's uprising against the regime. (Al Jazeera)
      • The Syrian regime attacks women protesters, shooting them dead during all-women marches and arresting the female relatives of male protesters. (The Guardian)
    • 2011 Libyan civil war:
      • The cities of Yafran and al-Qalaa in the Nafusa Mountains are in critical condition following ongoing attacks by Muammar Gaddafi's forces, with heavy artillery shelling continuing, water supplies shut off, and no food or medical supplies coming into the towns for weeks. (CNN)
      • A bus carrying foreign journalists is attacked by a pro-Muammar Gaddafi crowd; soldiers fire into the air to disperse the crowd. (Reuters)
    • 2011 Yemeni uprising: The opposition sign a deal that will allow President Ali Abdullah Saleh out of power within a month. (Reuters) (Al Jazeera)
    • 2011 Egyptian revolution:
      • Scuffles in court (as families reportedly yell "Butcher! Butcher!") lead to the postponement of the trial of Hosni Mubarak's former interior minister Habib el-Adly and six others after "three or four minutes". Habib el-Adly is accused of massacring people who demonstrated against the Mubarak regime, prior to its downfall as a result of a popular revolution in February 2011. (Al Jazeera)
      • Egyptian border guards shoot and injure an Eritrean woman as she attempts to cross into Israel. (Journal of Turkish Weekly)
  • Other anti-government protests:
  • At least 15 people are killed near the town of Landi Kotal in Pakistan after a bomb destroys an Afghanistan-bound oil tanker. (AFP via WA Today)
  • At least 3 people are killed in a suicide attack at the Charsad Bestar Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan. (BBC) (Al Jazeera)
  • A bomb explodes in a bank in the city centre of Derry, Northern Ireland; no damage is done. (BBC)
  • Sudanese invasion of Abyei:
  • Police clashed with protesters in Valparaíso, Chile over the government's proposed hydro-electric dam project and education and labour policies which, student leaders say, are going "in the opposite way from those the population were demanding". The demonstration coincides with Sebastián Piñera's state of the nation address. (BBC)
Arts and culture
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Law and crime
  • Hundreds of Twitter users post the name of an English Premier League footballer who won a superinjunction to stop details of his affair going public, in protest at the player's attempts to sue the social networking site. (BBC)
Politics and elections
Sport
May 22, 2011 (Sunday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
Arts and culture
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International relations
Law and crime
  • Hamid Baqai, the Chief of Staff of the Iranian President, is banned from public office for four years, after it was exposed that he was involved in a multi-million dollar embezzlement during the construction of a building on Kish Island in 2010. (NCR)
  • Scottish newspaper The Sunday Herald names a footballer accused of being linked to a privacy superinjunction by users of social networking website Twitter, arguing that the injunction is only enforceable under English law and does not apply in Scots law. (BBC)
  • The Attorney General for England and Wales is being asked to consider prosecuting a journalist who allegedly broke a privacy order on Twitter in respect of another footballer who has taken out an injunction. (BBC)
Politics and elections
May 23, 2011 (Monday)
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May 24, 2011 (Tuesday)
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May 25, 2011 (Wednesday)
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May 26, 2011 (Thursday)
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May 27, 2011 (Friday)
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May 28, 2011 (Saturday)
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May 29, 2011 (Sunday)
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May 30, 2011 (Monday)
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May 31, 2011 (Tuesday)
Armed conflict and attacks
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Health
  • The World Health Organization classifies cell phone radiation as a "carcinogenic hazard" and "possibly carcinogenic to humans." It was classified as such after a team of scientists reviewed peer-review studies on cell phone safety. (CNN)
International relations
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