2015 Year in Review Slideshow: World News
Updated August 5, 2020 |
Infoplease Staff
Top events for the nation and the world in 2015
Jennie Wood
- The Immigration Crisis
- The Crisis Intensifies Throughout Europe in 2015
- During the summer of 2015, the Balkans route replaced the Mediterranean as the most traveled path by migrants. The United Nations High Commission for Refugees projected that 3,000 people a day will attempt to cross the Balkans to reach Western Europe in the coming months. The German government estimated that 800,000 migrants would seek asylum there by the end of 2015, coming from countries such as Syria and Afghanistan to escape war and conflict. Europeans reacted to the immigration crisis in different ways. To shut off migrants, a fence was being built in Hungary along the border it shares with Serbia. More than 200 attacks on migrants had happened in Germany this year, including two fires set to asylum seeker shelters in August. The bodies of 71 migrants were found near Vienna. In Rome, migrants were evacuated by police after a protest against them turned violent. Macedonia declared a temporary state of emergency while dealing with the increasing number of migrants passing through on their way to Western Europe.
- Photo source: AP Photo/Antonio Calanni, File
- Iran Agrees to Historic Nuclear Deal
- World Leaders Negotiate the Nuclear Deal with Iran
- In July, Iran and the group of six nations, the United States, UK, France, China, Russia, and Germany, reached a historic agreement to limit Iran's ability to produce a nuclear weapon in exchange for the lifting of crippling economic sanctions. "Today's announcement marks one more chapter in our pursuit of a safer, more helpful and more hopeful world," said U.S. President Barack Obama. He also said the agreement is "not built on trust, it is built on verification." "Today is the end to acts of tyranny against our nation and the start of cooperation with the world," said President Hassan Rouhani. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the agreement a "historic mistake," and said, "Iran will get a jackpot, a cash bonanza of hundreds of billions of dollars, which will enable it to continue to pursue its aggression and terror in the region and in the world." Iran agreed to reduce its stockpile of enriched uranium by 98%, place two-thirds of their installed centrifuges under international supervision, gave the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) permanent access "where necessary when necessary," and accepted a resumption of sanctions if Iran violates any of the terms.
- Photo source: Carlos Barria, Pool Photo via AP
- U.N. Climate Talks
- World Leaders Gather for Historic Climate Convention
- The United Nations Climate Change began in late Nov., at a convention center just north of Paris, France. It was one of the largest gatherings of world leaders in history. For two weeks, 30,000 diplomats and delegates worked to find a new global pact that all countries could agree on, a pact that would ask every nation to take action in reducing their planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions. U.S. President Barack Obama, President Xi Jinping of China, Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, and France's President Francois Hollande were among the leaders present to kick off the talks.
- Photo: Pollution in China, 2015 Photo source: AP Photo/Andy Wong
- Paris Terrorist Attacks
- Three Coordinated Attacks by ISIS Kill Dozens in Paris
- ISIS launched three coordinated attacks in Paris, killing 129 people and wounding hundreds on Nov. 13. Eighty-nine people died in an assault at a concert hall, the Bataclan, where an American rock band, the ironically-titled Eagles of Death Metal, was performing at the time. Dozens of others were killed in attacks on restaurants and a soccer stadium where France was playing a match against Germany. Seven of the eight terrorists died during the attacks. French authorities were still looking for the last remaining attacker. The attacks were the worst violence in France since World War II. French president François Hollande called the attack "an act of war," and retaliated with airstrikes on Raqqa, Syria, ISIS's self-declared capital. The United States joined France in the airstrikes, sending warplanes to Syria. The following week, hours after Russia acknowledged that a terrorist bomb brought down the Russian passenger plane on Oct. 31, President Vladimir Putin agreed to join with France in the fight against ISIS. Putin ordered a Russian missile cruiser to go to Syria and cooperate with French troops "as with allies." The following week, police conducted a raid in a northern suburb of Paris. During the raid, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the Belgian terrorist suspected of planning the Paris attacks, was killed. Investigators found evidence that Abaaoud, an ISIS fighter, had also been involved in at least four foiled terrorist plots in France this year, including the train attack in August.
- Photo source: AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza
- More Economic Woes for Greece
- Greece Misses Debt Payment
- In June, Greece missed a critical debt payment of 1.5 billion euros to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), increasing the country's financial crisis. Greece's international creditors refused to extend the country's bailout program. The IMF placed Greece in arrears, a classification used to avoid saying a country that doesn't pay its debt on time is in default. The missed payment created alarm and chaos. Greece shut down its banking system, ordering its banks to close for six days. Standard & Poor's released a statement about Greece that said, "a commercial default is inevitable within the next six months." Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras called for a referendum where voters would decide whether or not to accept the terms of the country's creditors. In a July referendum, 61% of voters backed Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras call to vote "no" on the proposed budget cuts by creditors in return for loans that Greece needs. After the referendum, negotiations between Greece and European leaders resumed. In Aug., a third bailout for Greece was approved by Germany and other European governments. Greece received $14.5 billion, the first payment of a new three-year bailout that is worth a total of $95.6 billion.
- Photo source: Yorgos Karahalis for Associated Press
- Charlie Hebdo Attack
- Twelve Are Killed in Terrorist Attack at Newspaper in Paris
- On Jan. 7, two masked gunmen stormed the office of Charlie Hebdo, a satirical weekly magazine, in Paris, and killed 12 people, including the paper's top editor, Stephane Charbonnier, several cartoonists, and two police officers. Five others were critically injured. The provocative magazine was known for publishing charged cartoons that satirized the Prophet Muhammad, most religions, the pope, and several world leaders. French President Francois Holland responded to the attack by saying that "France is in shock." U.S. President Barack Obama and other world leaders condemned the attack. A manhunt began for the two gunmen, Said Kouachi, 34, and his younger brother Cherif, 32. Meanwhile, the driver of the getaway car, Hamyd Mourad, 18, turned himself in at a police station about 145 miles northeast of Paris. News reports said the brothers have connections to Al Qaeda in Yemen. Two days later, the Kouachi brothers took a hostage at a printing facility outside Paris. French police launched an assault on the building, freeing the hostage and killing the suspects. Meanwhile, in another incident in Paris, Amedy Coulibaly allegedly took several hostages at a kosher supermarket. Police killed Coulibaly, but four hostages were also killed. Coulibaly was also blamed for the shooting death of a female police officer on Jan. 8. Yemen-based Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula claimed responsibility for the Charlie Hebdo attack. The militant group said in a statement that the leader of Al Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahri, ordered the attack in retaliation for the magazine's caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad.
- Photo source: AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere
- Cuba and the United States
- Cuba and U.S. Agree to Open Embassies
- In July, Cuba and the U.S. reached an agreement to open embassies in Washington D.C. and Havana. The U.S. Embassy in Havana opened by the end of the month. The reestablishment of embassies was another major step in rebuilding relations between the two countries. On July 20, Cuba's flag was raised outside its mission in Washington DC, officially re-opening it as an embassy and restoring full diplomatic relations between the two countries for the first time since 1961. In Havana, the U.S. mission was also restored to embassy status, and the American flag was raised when Secretary of State John Kerry visited in August.
- Photo: U.S. Embassy in Cuba, 2015 Photo source: AP Photo/Desmond Boylan
- Boris Y. Nemtsov
- Russian Opposition Leader Is Assassinated
- A vocal critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Boris Y. Nemtsov was shot and killed in Moscow on Feb. 27, 2015. The shooting took place on a bridge near Moscow's Red Square, not far from the Kremlin. Putin condemned the killing and promised to lead the investigation into Nemtsov's death. Nemtsov had been an outspoken critic of Putin, and most recently, of the war in Ukraine. Nemtsov's murder was the biggest assassination to happen in Russia during Putin's presidency. The incident sparked outrage and protests, with tens of thousands marching in Moscow in the days after the assassination.
- Photo source: AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko
- Historic Myanmar Election
- Opposition Party Wins Landmark Election in Myanmar
- In Nov., Aung San Suu Kyi's opposition party won Myanmar's landmark national elections by a landslide. The first official results had the opposition party winning the majority of seats in Yangon, Myanmar's largest city. The country's ruling military-backed party conceded the election. If the results were honored by the military and ruling party, it would be the first time in over fifty years that Myanmar voters were able to freely pick their leaders through an election.
- Photo source: Khin Maung Win for ASSOCIATED PRESS
- More from 2015 Year in Review
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