Bin Laden top story of 2011
New York - The killing of Osama bin Laden during a raid by Navy Seals on his hideout in Pakistan was the top news story of 2011, followed by Japan's earthquake and tsunami disaster, according to The Associated Press' annual poll of US editors and news directors.
The death of bin Laden, the al-Qaeda leader who masterminded the September 11 2001, terror attacks, received 128 first-place votes out of 247 ballots cast for the top 10 stories.
The Japan disaster was next, with 60 first-place votes. Placing third were the Arab Spring uprisings that rocked North Africa and the Middle East, while the European Union's financial turmoil was No 4.
The international flavour of these top stories contrasted with last year's voting - when the Gulf of Mexico oil spill was the top story, US President Barack Obama's health care overhaul was No 2, and the US midterm elections were No 3.
Here are 2011's top 10 stories, in order:
- Osama Bin Laden's death:
He'd been the world's most-wanted terrorist for nearly a decade, ever since a team of his al-Qaeda followers carried out the attacks of September 11 2001.
In May, the long and often-frustrating manhunt ended with a night-time assault by a helicopter-borne special operations squad on his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Bin Laden was shot dead by one of the raiders, and within hours his body was buried at sea.
- Japan's triple disaster:
A 9.0-magnitude earthquake off Japan's northeast coast in March unleashed a tsunami that devastated scores of communities, leaving nearly 20 000 people dead or missing and wreaking an estimated $218bn in damage.
The tsunami triggered the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl after waves knocked out the cooling system at a nuclear power plant, causing it to spew radiation that turned up in local produce. About 100 000 people evacuated from the area have not returned to their homes.
- Arab spring:
It began with demonstrations in Tunisia that rapidly toppled the long-time strongman. Spreading like a wildfire, the Arab Spring protests sparked a revolution in Egypt that ousted Hosni Mubarak, fuelled a civil war in Libya that climaxed with Muammar Gaddafi's death, and fomented a bloody uprising in Syria against the Assad regime.
Bahrain and Yemen also experienced major protests and unrest.
- EU fiscal crisis:
The EU was hit with relentless fiscal turmoil. In Greece, austerity measures triggered strikes, protests and riots, while Italy's economic woes toppled Premier Silvio Berlusconi. France and Germany led urgent efforts to ease the debt crisis; Britain balked at proposed changes.
- US economy:
By some measures, the US economy gained strength as the year progressed. Hiring picked up a bit, consumers were spending more, and the unemployment rate finally dipped below 9%.
But millions of Americans remained buffeted by foreclosures, joblessness and benefit cutbacks, and investors were on edge monitoring the chain of fiscal crises in Europe.
- Penn State sex abuse scandal:
One of America's most storied college football programs was tarnished in a scandal that prompted the firing of Hall of Fame football coach Joe Paterno.
One of his former assistants, Jerry Sandusky, was accused of sexually molesting 10 boys; two senior Penn State officials were charged with perjury; and the long-time president was ousted. Paterno wasn't charged, but expressed regret he didn't do more after being told there was a problem.
- Gaddafi toppled in Libya:
After nearly 42 years of mercurial and often brutal rule, Muammar Gaddafi was toppled by his own people. Anti-government protests escalated into an eight-month rebellion, backed by Nato bombing, that shattered his regime, and Gaddafi finally was tracked down and killed in the fishing village where he was born.
- Fiscal showdowns in congress:
Partisan divisions in Congress led to several showdowns on fiscal issues. A fight over the debt ceiling prompted Standard & Poor's to strip the US of its AAA credit rating.
Later, the so-called "supercommittee" failed to agree on a deficit-reduction package of at least $1.2 trillion - potentially triggering automatic spending cuts of that amount starting in 2013.
- Occupy Wall Street protests:
It began on September 17 with a protest at a New York City park near Wall Street, and within weeks spread to scores of communities across the US and abroad.
The movement depicted itself as leaderless and shied away from specific demands, but succeeded in airing its complaint that the richest 1% of Americans benefit at the expense of the rest. As winter approached, local police dismantled several of the protest encampments.
- Gabrielle Giffords shot:
The popular third-term congresswoman from Arizona suffered a severe brain injury when she and 18 other people were shot by a gunman as she met with constituents outside a Tucson supermarket in January. Six people died, and Giffords' painstaking recovery is still in progress.
Among the news events falling just short of the Top 10 were the death of Apple Inc co-founder Steve Jobs, Hurricane Irene, the devastating series of tornados across Midwest and south-eastern US, and the repeal of the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that barred gays from serving openly in US military.
The death of bin Laden, the al-Qaeda leader who masterminded the September 11 2001, terror attacks, received 128 first-place votes out of 247 ballots cast for the top 10 stories.
The Japan disaster was next, with 60 first-place votes. Placing third were the Arab Spring uprisings that rocked North Africa and the Middle East, while the European Union's financial turmoil was No 4.
The international flavour of these top stories contrasted with last year's voting - when the Gulf of Mexico oil spill was the top story, US President Barack Obama's health care overhaul was No 2, and the US midterm elections were No 3.
Here are 2011's top 10 stories, in order:
- Osama Bin Laden's death:
He'd been the world's most-wanted terrorist for nearly a decade, ever since a team of his al-Qaeda followers carried out the attacks of September 11 2001.
In May, the long and often-frustrating manhunt ended with a night-time assault by a helicopter-borne special operations squad on his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Bin Laden was shot dead by one of the raiders, and within hours his body was buried at sea.
- Japan's triple disaster:
A 9.0-magnitude earthquake off Japan's northeast coast in March unleashed a tsunami that devastated scores of communities, leaving nearly 20 000 people dead or missing and wreaking an estimated $218bn in damage.
The tsunami triggered the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl after waves knocked out the cooling system at a nuclear power plant, causing it to spew radiation that turned up in local produce. About 100 000 people evacuated from the area have not returned to their homes.
- Arab spring:
It began with demonstrations in Tunisia that rapidly toppled the long-time strongman. Spreading like a wildfire, the Arab Spring protests sparked a revolution in Egypt that ousted Hosni Mubarak, fuelled a civil war in Libya that climaxed with Muammar Gaddafi's death, and fomented a bloody uprising in Syria against the Assad regime.
Bahrain and Yemen also experienced major protests and unrest.
- EU fiscal crisis:
The EU was hit with relentless fiscal turmoil. In Greece, austerity measures triggered strikes, protests and riots, while Italy's economic woes toppled Premier Silvio Berlusconi. France and Germany led urgent efforts to ease the debt crisis; Britain balked at proposed changes.
- US economy:
By some measures, the US economy gained strength as the year progressed. Hiring picked up a bit, consumers were spending more, and the unemployment rate finally dipped below 9%.
But millions of Americans remained buffeted by foreclosures, joblessness and benefit cutbacks, and investors were on edge monitoring the chain of fiscal crises in Europe.
- Penn State sex abuse scandal:
One of America's most storied college football programs was tarnished in a scandal that prompted the firing of Hall of Fame football coach Joe Paterno.
One of his former assistants, Jerry Sandusky, was accused of sexually molesting 10 boys; two senior Penn State officials were charged with perjury; and the long-time president was ousted. Paterno wasn't charged, but expressed regret he didn't do more after being told there was a problem.
- Gaddafi toppled in Libya:
After nearly 42 years of mercurial and often brutal rule, Muammar Gaddafi was toppled by his own people. Anti-government protests escalated into an eight-month rebellion, backed by Nato bombing, that shattered his regime, and Gaddafi finally was tracked down and killed in the fishing village where he was born.
- Fiscal showdowns in congress:
Partisan divisions in Congress led to several showdowns on fiscal issues. A fight over the debt ceiling prompted Standard & Poor's to strip the US of its AAA credit rating.
Later, the so-called "supercommittee" failed to agree on a deficit-reduction package of at least $1.2 trillion - potentially triggering automatic spending cuts of that amount starting in 2013.
- Occupy Wall Street protests:
It began on September 17 with a protest at a New York City park near Wall Street, and within weeks spread to scores of communities across the US and abroad.
The movement depicted itself as leaderless and shied away from specific demands, but succeeded in airing its complaint that the richest 1% of Americans benefit at the expense of the rest. As winter approached, local police dismantled several of the protest encampments.
- Gabrielle Giffords shot:
The popular third-term congresswoman from Arizona suffered a severe brain injury when she and 18 other people were shot by a gunman as she met with constituents outside a Tucson supermarket in January. Six people died, and Giffords' painstaking recovery is still in progress.
Among the news events falling just short of the Top 10 were the death of Apple Inc co-founder Steve Jobs, Hurricane Irene, the devastating series of tornados across Midwest and south-eastern US, and the repeal of the "don't ask, don't tell" policy that barred gays from serving openly in US military.
- SAPA
Read more on: us
Related posts:
If you enjoyed this article, subscribe to receive more great content just like it.
Popular Posts
-
Being intimidated by beautiful women is pretty common, but there are some people who actually have a fear of beautiful women. This diagn...
Recent Stories
Connect with Facebook
Sponsors
Search
Archives
Categories
Recent Comments
Tag Cloud
Tech News
Featured
How To
Facts
facebook
Blogging
Google
Windows
Internet
OMG
adsense
About
Mobile
Windows 7
Windows 8
firefox
Browser
Social Networking
Interview
Mahindra Satyam
Medical
News
Thesis
Wordpress
airtel
blogger
chrome
Adobe
Coupon Code
Domain
Facial
Flash Media
Free Facebook
Mp3
Offer
Promo Code
Questions with Answer
Reliance
Salary
Skype
Top
USB
Wallpaper
Web
adwords
bookmark
convert
fan page
free
online
stylish
yahoo
404
Accurate
Albums
Allergy
Amazon
BIOS
Beauty
Beer
Benifits
Birds
Bootable
Broadband
Business
Communication
Cut
Dandruff
Diamond
Doctors
Documents
Dolphins
Download
Explorer
Facial Recognation Technology
Free Ware
FriendSheet
Fungus
GSM
Genuine
Grammer
Grandma
Hacked
Improve
Installer
Ipad
Ipad 3
Job Alerts
Junglee
Kindle Fire
Laptop
Marathon
Mark
Market
Mediastinal Seminoma
Monitors
Mouse
Mozilla
Negotiate
Nokia
Olympic Gold Medal
Power Cut
Profile Picture
RIP
Recognition
Repair
Rich
Rio
Security
Signal
SkypeIn
Smartphone
Space
Tallest Man
Tamilnadu
Temple
Theme
Tips
Treatment
Types Of Blogs
USSD
Vehicle
Videocon
WIFI
WMA
What
Women
Xp
Youngest Mother
Youtube
Zuckerberg
add more
android
anna Hazare
apple
application
audio
backup
balance
banned
birthday
blank
buying
chief minister
chromebook
cleanup
computer
customisation
delete
details
develop
disk
edit
error
extension
fax
footer
galaxy
games
giveaway
google plus
index
information
ios
join
kerala
launches
light box
mac
messange
microsoft
notifications
number
office
orbits
own
pc
pdf
photos
pigeon
pinterest
planetary
read more
regedit
registration
restore
ring2skype
rss
ryt
samsung
scan
skin
software
sound
steve jobs
subscribers
tab
teasers
timeline
tool
trick
twitter
widgetized
0 comments for this post
Leave a reply
Share me whatever in your mind. Comment is welcomed to all :) Tips: Choose Name/URL (next to the comment as:) and type your website name and URL. And you can post your comment.