Today Wednesday, August 26 is a very crucial day in the history of Nigeria and the world, there are great events that took place around the world on this day, that is worthy of Note.
Today’s Major Highlight
UN BOMB BLAST
2011: At least 18 people were killed after a car loaded with explosives crashed into the main United Nations’ building in Nigeria’s capital of Abuja and explodes, in one of the deadliest assaults on the international body in a decade. A radical Muslim sect claimed responsibility for the blast.
On Monday, August 24, the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-Moon, laid wreath at the bomb site of the United Nation’s building in Abuja, which was attacked by the Boko Haram terrorists in 2011.

Ki-Moon told UN workers not to despair as a result of the bombing, he urged them to remain committed to their job for the advancement of humanity.
Other Events Around The World
1071: Turkish Seljuks beat the Byzantine forces at the Battle of Manzikert (now Malazgirt, Turkey), gaining entry into Anatolia and opening the road to Europe.

1346: English archers defeat French knights at Battle of Crecy in northern France.
1541: Suleiman I, Sultan of Turkey, annexes Hungary.
1883: The volcano Krakatoa erupts on the island Krakatau, near Indonesia, creating tsunami waves that killed more than 36,000 people.

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1896: Insurrection begins in the Philippines against the Spanish.
1915: German army captures Brest-Litovsk in Russia during World War I.
1920: The 19th Amendment to the US Constitution, guaranteeing American women the right to vote, is declared in effect.
1934: Adolf Hitler demands that France turn over the Saar region to Germany.

1936: Treaty ends British occupation of Egypt, except Suez Canal zone, and Britain and Egypt form alliance for 20 years.
1937: Japan blockades Chinese shipping.
1942: German army reaches Stalingrad in Soviet Union during World War II.
1945: Japanese envoys board US battleship Missouri to receive surrender instructions at the end of World War II.
1947: The UN Security Council passes a resolution for both the Dutch and Indonesians to adhere to a cease-fire order.
1952: Floods caused by monsoon rains inundate 90 percent of Manila, causing at least eight deaths. It is Manila’s third flood in a month.


1957: The Soviet Union announces it has successfully tested an intercontinental ballistic missile.
1964: Student and Buddhist riots force resignation of government of Premier Nguyen Khanh in South Vietnam.
1970: North Vietnam sends its chief negotiator back to Vietnam peace talks in Paris after 8 1/2 month boycott of negotiations.
1978: Cardinal Albino Luciani of Venice is elected the 264th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church following the death of Paul VI. The new pontiff takes the name John Paul I.

John Paul I
1990: Number of US soldiers, airmen and sailors in the Gulf reaches 60,000.

1993: Egyptian-born Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman and 14 others are charged in an attack on New York’s World Trade Center earlier in the year.
1997: Former South African President F W de Klerk resigns as the head of the National Party, which created the practice of apartheid, and leaves politics.
2003: Rwandan President Paul Kagame is the overwhelming winner of presidential elections. The election was the first since the 1994 genocide.
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2004: Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, makes a dramatic return to Najaf and swiftly wins agreement from a rebel cleric and the government to end three weeks of fighting between his militia and US-Iraqi forces.
2005: A fire races through a crowded, rundown Paris apartment building housing African immigrants killing 17 people, mainly children trapped while they slept, and triggers angry calls for decent housing for the needy in the French capital.

2008: Russia recognises the independence claims of two Georgian breakaway regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
2009: Edward “Ted” Kennedy dies at 77. The brother of President John F Kennedy and Senator Robert F Kennedy, he was the US Senate’s dominant liberal and most skilful dealmaker.

Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, delivers his speech about the effect of the war in Iraq on America’s security at George Washington University in Washington. Sen. Ted Kennedy has died after battling a brain tumor his family announced early Wednesday Aug. 26, 2009. Photo: AP
2014: Israel and Gaza’s ruling Hamas agree to an open-ended ceasefire after seven weeks of fighting — an uneasy deal that halts the deadliest war the sides have fought in years.
These historic events had great impacts in the history of Nigeria as a country and indeed the world at Large. As Nigeria remembers those who died from the blast at the UN building in Abuja, the nation is reminded that the fight against terrorism is real and ongoing, but like President Buhari has promised, there is hope that it surely will come to an end very soon.
The Nigerian military has already begun execution of plots to bring the insurgent attacks to a finish. Additional combat platforms have been deployed to north east of the country to further the course.
The post On This Day: Bomb Blast In Abuja Kills 18, Leaves Dozens Injured (Pictured) appeared first on Nigeria News today & Breaking news | Read on NAIJ.COM.
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