Paris (AFP)
- The year 2019 saw an explosion of demonstrations across the world as people
demanded an overhaul of entrenched political systems and action on climate
change.
Here is a
look back at these and other events that marked the year.
Protests
sweep Latin America
On January
23, Venezuela's opposition chief Juan Guaido declares himself interim
president, escalating a long-running political and economic crisis.
He is
recognised by more than 50 countries, including the United States. But the army
backs President Nicolas Maduro and he remains in his post.
In
mid-September major demonstrations erupt in Haiti after fuel shortages,
demanding the resignation of President Jovenel Moise. Violence claims more than
40 lives.
A metro
ticket hike in Chile's capital mid-October is the trigger for protests that
claim more than 20 lives before a referendum on reforms is agreed.
Bolivia is
gripped by three weeks of demonstrations after President Evo Morales claims to
win a fourth term on October 20. Dozens are killed. Morales resigns on November
10 and flees into exile as the government works on new elections.
Ecuador is
paralysed by nearly two weeks of protests in October and in Colombia strikes
and demonstrations against the right-wing government begin mid-November.
North
Africa/Mideast fury
On February
22, unprecedented protests break out in Algeria against a fifth term for frail
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, in power for 20 years.
He loses
the army's backing and resigns on April 2. But demonstrations continue, demanding
an overhaul of the entire political establishment and rejecting new president
Abdelmadjid Tebboune, elected on December 12 in polls marked by record
abstention.
In Sudan,
the military on April 11 ends Omar al-Bashir's three decades in power, a key
demand in four months of nationwide protests.
Demonstrations
continue until a hard-won agreement in August sets up a joint governing council
to oversee a transition to civilian rule. More than 250 people are killed,
according to protesters.
In Iraq,
mass demonstrations erupt on October 1 against unemployment, corruption and
poor public services, degenerating into violence that claims more than 460
lives.
On December
1, parliament accepts the government's resignation.
In Lebanon,
rolling mass protests start on October 17, triggered by plans for a messaging
app tax and turning against the political elite. They continue even after Prime
Minister Saad Hariri resigns on October 29, with protesters rejecting new
premier-designate Hassan Diab, an engineering professor backed by Hezbollah
chosen on December 19 to form a government.
Iran sees
an explosion of riots on November 15 after a fuel price hike. Authorities crush
the unrest but Amnesty International says more than 304 people were killed,
most shot by security forces, a toll denied by the authorities.
IS leader
killed
After a
five-year offensive to seize vast Islamic State (IS) territory in Iraq and
Syria, the jihadists were driven out of their last bastion in March by
Kurdish-led forces.
On October
27, President Donald Trump announces that IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was
killed in a US special forces raid in Syria, blowing himself up as he was
pursued.
Boeing
MAX grounded
A March 10
Ethiopian Airlines crash leads to the global grounding of Boeing 737 MAX
planes. It follows a Lion Air crash involving the same model six months
earlier, with 346 lives lost in the two incidents.
Boeing
faces investigations and lawsuits, and is forced to upgrade its systems, in a
crisis that costs it billions of dollars.
In
mid-December production of the plane is suspended. On December 23, Boeing chief
Dennis Muilenburg resigns.
Brexit
saga
Britain's
March 29, 2019, deadline for leaving the European Union following a 2016
referendum is postponed three times, with the British parliament unable to
agree to the divorce terms negotiated by Prime Minister Theresa May with
Brussels, nor a second accord negotiated by her successor Boris Johnson.
After
widely winning early elections on December 12, Johnson gets support at the
first reading by the lower house for his accord. He seeks final adoption on
January 9, and to leave the EU on January 31, 2020.
First
black hole photo
On April
10, astronomers unveil the first photograph of a black hole, a phenomenon they
were convinced existed even if it had never been seen before.
Drawn from
mountains of data captured two years earlier by telescopes across the world, it
shows a supermassive black hole 50 million lightyears away.
Notre
Dame burns
On April
15, flames destroy the spire and roof of Paris's beloved Notre-Dame cathedral,
but firefighters manage to save the gothic building, while many of its arts,
relics and other treasures are rescued.
Amid a
global outpouring of emotion, nearly one billion euros ($1.1 billion) is
pledged for its reconstruction, which will take years. For the first time since
1803, Notre-Dame does not celebrate Christmas mass.
Iran
escalation
On May 8,
Tehran announces its first step back from the 2015 nuclear accord -- exactly a
year after the United States quit the deal and reimposed sanctions.
Over the
next months Iran re-engages components of its nuclear programme that it had
halted, including uranium enrichment.
Tensions
mount when Washington blames Tehran for a series of attacks on oil tankers in
the Gulf from mid-May.
On
September 14, Iran is again blamed when major Saudi oil facilities are attacked
by Yemen's Huthi rebels, which it supports. It denies involvement.
In six
months Tehran has surpassed the stock of enriched uranium, the level of
enrichment and heavy water reserves fixed by the accord and modernised its
centrifuges.
Hong Kong
erupts
June 9 sees
the start of the biggest crisis in the former British colony of Hong Kong since
it returned to Chinese rule in 1997, with almost-daily pro-democracy protests.
Demonstrations
are initially sparked by a now-abandoned attempt to allow extraditions to the
Chinese mainland but develop into a popular revolt against Beijing's rule.
On November
24, pro-democracy campaigners win a landslide victory in local elections.
Hottest
month ever
July
temperatures were the hottest ever recorded, US and European Union authorities
announce in August.
Temperature
records rise in Europe and the North Pole, and in August, Iceland loses its
first glacier to climate change.
Fires
ravage Brazil's Amazon and Australia, while Venice is swamped by flooding not
seen in decades.
The extreme
weather raises climate concerns, and rallies for action, initiated by Swedish
teen activist Greta Thunberg, spread worldwide.
US
disengagement
On August
2, the US officially quits the Cold War-era Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
treaty (INF) with Russia.
Trump's
"America First" regime also strikes out alone by pursuing trade wars
with China and the EU. It also withdraw from the Paris accord on climate change
and its troops from northeastern Syria.
Trump
impeachment bid
On
September 24, the Democrats in Congress launch an impeachment enquiry into
Trump after claims he pressured Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden, a rival in
his 2020 reelection bid.
Trump is
impeached in a historic rebuke by the Democratic-controlled House of
Representatives on two counts of abuse of office and obstruction of Congress,
but conviction is unlikely to pass the Republican-controlled Senate in a trial
expected to begin in January.
Turkey
moves into Syria
On October
9, Turkey launches an offensive into northern Syria to push back from the
border Kurdish fighters it considers "terrorists".
Two days
earlier Trump had announced the withdrawal of US troops in the area, leading to
charges that Washington had abandoned Kurdish allies who were vital in the
battle against Islamic State jihadists.
Turkey
halts its operation on October 23 after the US and Russia agree in separate
deals to ensure the fighters leave the border region.
Big Tech
tackled
On July 24,
US regulators fine Facebook a record $5 billion for data protection violations
amid mounting concerns about the dominance of it and other internet giants
Apple, Amazon and Google.
Criticised
for failing to protect consumers as well as over tax and advertising issues,
the tech titans come under pressure to reform, with threats of investigation,
fines and even dismantlement.
Social
crisis in France
France is
confronted from December 5 by a three-week standoff between French transport
workers and the government over pension reforms, which causes havoc to
Christmas travel.
Workers at
the national SNCF and Parisian RATP rail and public transport companies walk
off the job to protest at the government's plan to meld France's 42 pension
schemes into a single points-based one, which would see some public employees
lose certain privileges, including early retirement.

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