< Portal:Current events

Portal:Current events/2012 March 22

March 22, 2012 (2012-03-22) (Thursday)
Armed conflict and attacks
Art and culture
  • The Los Angeles County Coroner's Office says that Whitney Houston's official cause of death was drowning as a result of cocaine use. (CNN)
Business and economy
  • Ireland officially falls back into recession. (BBC)
  • Portuguese trade unions hold a 24-hour strike in protest of austerity measures. (AFP via Google News)
  • In the United States, about 350,000 people filed for unemployment benefits, hitting a four-year low, according to the United States Labor Department. (CNN)
Disasters
International relations
  • The United Nations Human Rights Council urges Sri Lanka to "credibly investigate" possible war crimes committed during the Sri Lankan Civil War. (Economic Times of India) (Daily Times of Pakistan)
  • South Sudan invites Sudan to discuss outstanding issues next month between the two countries that nearly resulted in a war. (IOL)
  • The United Nations appoints a special rapporteur to investigate the situation in Tibet, after hunger strikes occurred outside the United Nations Headquarters building in New York City. (CBC) (AFP)
Law and crime
  • The parents of an unarmed black teen boy killed by gunshot wound in a suburb of Orlando in the U.S. state of Florida address a mass rally in New York to call for justice. (BBC)
  • A court hears that two British men shot dead in the U.S. state of Florida last April were found with their shirts off and trousers round their thighs. (BBC)
  • Malcolm Naden, Australia's most wanted man, is captured after seven years on the run near the town of Gloucester in the state of New South Wales and will face murder charges today. (News Limited) (Al Jazeera)
Politics
  • After 15 years, the Mahon Tribunal into political corruption in Ireland concludes with findings against high-profile politicians, including two former Taoisigh. (BBC) (Financial Times) (RTÉ)
  • A draft report by government auditors estimates India lost $210 billion by selling coalfields too cheaply. Opposition politicians denounce the government for "looting the country". (BBC) (The Times of India) (Al Jazeera)
  • In Montreal the biggest protest in Quebec's history sets out against the government's tuition hikes and for free access to post-secondary education, with more than 200 000 people marching in the streets ("Huffington Post")
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