Al-Qaeda leader
Osama bin Laden says that his organization is working on "serious projects", and that his priority is to use
biological weapons against the United States. Al Qaeda may already have such weapons, and be seeking means to transport and launch them.
Indonesia: An Indonesian court sentences Muslim cleric
Abu Bakar Bashir to four years in prison for treason against the Indonesian government. However, the court found insufficient proof that Bashir was the leader of the militant Islamic organization
Jemaah Islamiyah.[1]
The
Iraqi police handling the investigation say they have arrested 19 men in connection with the blast, many of them foreigners and all with admitted links to
al-Qaeda.[5]
Astronomy: Astronomers announce the discovery of an asteroid (
2003 QQ47) whose orbit has a remote chance of striking earth.
SCO v. IBM: SCO Germany is ordered to pay a fine of 10,000
Euro because they continued their allegations that Linux contains stolen intellectual property of SCO.[8]
Occupation of Iraq: Poland assumes a position in postwar
Iraq. The coalition in Iraq hands over the south-central part of the country to a force led by Poland. The force of Polish troops leads a multinational peacekeeping brigade that will relieve Coalition forces (in particular the United States
Marine expeditionary force). This is Poland's biggest military operation since
World War II. This is also the first sign of the global community's commitment to a postwar Iraq.[12][13]Secretary of StateColin Powell seeks support from Britain, France, Germany, and Russia on a proposed
United Nations resolution that would give the United Nations a role in
Iraq's
economic and
political future.[14][15] Coalition
soldiers strongly desire to see more troops from other nations share the work of occupation.[16]
Iraq:
Iraqi Governing Council swears in the first ministerial cabinet since Saddam Hussein's removal. They urge the cabinet to help restore stability to the country.[18]
Irish minister
Frank Fahey accuses US Immigration authorities at
Shannon Airport of acting 'disgracefully' in turning back a group of 13 Irish musicians travelling to attend New York benefit concert to raise money for an Irish
cancer victim in the United States for treatment. Ireland's
2003 Eurovision Song Contest singer
Mickey Joe Harte, one of the singers refused entry, said they were told they needed no visas in their case. However, at Shannon, the musicians were suddenly told they needed
work visas, though the event was for charity and they were providing their services 'free of charge'. Irish people travelling to the United States do not normally need visas except to get paid employment. The concert is scheduled for Friday.[23]
Miss Justice
Mary Laffoy dramatically resigns as chairperson of the
Laffoy Commission on Child Abuse, which is investigating evidence of child sex abuse in schools, orphanages and Catholic Church-run institutions over decades in Ireland. Her resignation followed one day after the Minister for Education,
Noel Dempsey told
RTÉ Radio that the Irish Government, worried by suggestions that the investigation would last more than a decade and cost hundreds of millions of euro, wanted to restructure the investigation to examine only a sample of the 1800 cases being investigated. The government has delayed publishing Justice Laffoy's resignation letter. Abuse victim and crusader against abuse
Christine Buckey calls for Dempsey's resignation.
Colm O'Gorman, of the child abuse charity One in Four, and himself a prominent survivor of abuse, calls on
TaoiseachBertie Ahern to publish all correspondence relating to the resignation.[24]
California legislature passes expanded
domestic partnership bill. The state assembly approved a measure to extend nearly all the legal rights of married couples to people in same-sex partnerships. If signed by the governor, the bill will become law in 2005.[27]
The
right wingBritish National Party (BNP) candidate Nicholas Geri, who is of Italian descent, wins a surprise victory in a local government
by-election to
Thurrock Borough Council in
Essex. The
Labour Party, which has a 21-seat majority on the Council, sees its candidate pushed into third place, behind the BNP and the
Conservative Party. Turnout in the by-election was 22%.[28]
Singapore drops its 21-year ban on Cosmopolitan magazine and slightly relaxes its film
censorship policy. Despite this move, the censorship board's surveyors found the Singaporean public largely does not want the country's tough censorship rules liberalized.[29]
Natural disaster: The Booth and Bear Butte
forest fires in the
Cascade Mountains, which had been 45% contained, explodes to burn an additional 20,000 acres (80 km2). Estimates of the size of this fire vary between 62,000 and 80,000 acres (250 and 320 km2). The resort community of
Camp Sherman, where authorities allowed residents to return, is once again evacuated.[30]
Hong Kong's leader
Tung Chee-hwa announces that he will indefinitely postpone plans for an extremely unpopular
security bill which sparked massive public protests and would have granted the government broad powers to prosecute vaguely defined threats to national security.[32]
Palestinian Authority: Prime Minister
Mahmoud Abbas tells the Palestinian parliament to either support him or fire him, a move seen as making public for the first time his quarrel with
Yasser Arafat.[33]VOA characterizes Mr. Abbas' ultimatum as the latest twist in a power struggle between him and Arafat, who is the President of the Palestinian Authority.[17]
David Blaine begins a new stunt. He will stay in a small transparent capsule suspended 30 feet above the ground near
Tower Bridge on London's
River Thames without food for 44 days.[34]
Johns Hopkins researchers retract all results of a frequently cited study which claimed that extensive and permanent brain damage occurred after just a single dose of
Ecstasy. Due to a labelling mistake on the experimental drug vials, all but one of the animals involved in the study were not actually given Ecstasy at all, but were instead given the drug
d-methamphetamine.[36]
War on Terrorism:
European Union foreign ministers denounce the political wing of
Hamas as a
terrorist organization following the group's claim of responsibility for a truce-shattering bomb attack in Jerusalem.[37]
War on Terrorism: An
Israeli warplane drops a relatively small bomb on a house in
Gaza City (in an effort to avoid killing innocents, according to military sources who spoke to
AP), lightly wounding
Hamas founder Sheik
Ahmed Yassin and 15 other people in an airstrike that Israeli officials confirm was an attempt to wipe out the Islamic group's top leaders as they assemble for a meeting.[38]
Palestinian Authority: Prime Minister
Mahmoud Abbas submits his resignation to the President of the Palestinian Authority,
Yasser Arafat. According to Palestinian sources, he will play a "caretaker" role of the position until a new prime minister is sworn in.[40]
Tennis: Justine Henin-Hardenne defeated fellow Belgian Kim Clijsters 7–5, 6–1 to win her first
U.S. Open title. She had defeated Clijsters earlier that year to take the
French Open as well.
Israeli-Palestinian conflict:
Israel's Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon declares that
Hamas leaders are "marked for death" and will not have a moment's rest, after Israel failed in an attempt to kill the top-ranking members of Hamas with a 550-pound bomb dropped on a
Gaza City apartment.
Violence surges sharply in Indian-controlled
Kashmir with a series of separatist attacks across the Himalayan region. This follows a bomb explosion on Saturday in the main wholesale market for fruit in the region, which killed six people and wounded 25.
Tennis:
Andy Roddick defeated Spain's
Juan Carlos Ferrero in straight sets (6–3, 7–6, 6–3) in the Men's Singles Final at the
U.S. Open. This marks the first Grand Slam victory for the 21-year-old American.
The Ellen DeGeneres Show premiered on NBC. Hosted by comedian and entertainer
Ellen DeGeneres and originally filmed in Studio 11 at NBC Studios in
Burbank, California, The successful television program has won 31 day-time Emmy Awards and is scheduled to remain on air to at least the 2013-2014 season.
Iraq: The
Iraqi Governing Council gains the seat at the
Arab League left open since
Saddam Hussein's ouster by the US-led coalition earlier that year. The council, which was formed under US auspices, seems to have taken a step toward sovereign legitimacy in the eyes of the international community.[44]
SARS: A
Singaporean man is confirmed to have SARS, which is the first case of the illness since June 2003. Home
quarantine have been imposed on those who had direct contact with the 27-year-old man, who is a post-doctoral student working with the
West Nile virus.[50][51][52][53][54][55][56]
The
United States Department of the Treasury revamps its $20 bill as part of its never-ending quest to foil counterfeiters, including the addition of a peach-hued background to the denomination. (Many non-US citizens regard the US dollar as "
hard currency" and keep much of their wealth in it as a hedge against inflation.)[58]
The name of Montreal Dorval International Airport is officially changed to
Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport. The
Montreal airport becomes the first major Canadian site to be renamed in honour of
Prime MinisterTrudeau. The move sparks controversy among many in
Quebec owing to Trudeau's political history, such as his decision to invoke the War Measures Act and send troops into Montreal during the
October Crisis in 1970, and his construction of
Montréal-Mirabel International Airport, which they regard as a white elephant. The renaming will take effect on January 1, 2004.[59]
Terrorism:
Al-Qaida sued over September 11 attacks. Major
insurance companies are suing al-Qaida and Middle Eastern governments in a bid to recover
billions of dollars in losses related to the September 11 attacks.[61]
Japan is to freeze and confiscate assets linked to the removed
Iraqiregime based on a
United Nations resolution. The assets belong to former Iraqi
PresidentSaddam Hussein, his two sons, and 52 other former top officials of the removed regime.[68]
Terrorism:
ImamSamudra became the second
Bali bomber to be sentenced to death by
firing squad for his role in the October 12 atrocity which killed 202 people. Samudra greeted the sentence with chants of "Allahu Akbar" (God is great).[69][70]
War on Terrorism: An
Israeli warplane targeted the apartment building which is home of the senior
Hamas leader,
Mahmoud al-Zahar, in
Gaza. Al-Zahar is lightly wounded; his adult son and a
bodyguard are killed in the attack. A half-
tonbomb destroys the building, marking the first time a Hamas leader has been attacked in his home, an escalation of Israel's campaign against the group. Twenty-five people were wounded, including Zahar's wife and a daughter.[71][72]
Terrorism: The leader of
Hamas, says that its
jihad will continue, and that the group may now attack
Israeli homes. The
military wing of the group has threatened to change tactics by attacking Israeli houses and buildings after Israel tried to kill Hamas political leader.[73][74]
War on Terrorism:
Israel states that an "unwritten and abstract" axis with India and the United States has been created to combat international
terrorism and make the world a more secure place for all.[75]
War on Terrorism:
Kuala Lumpur:
Malaysia will amend its
Penal Code to punish not just terrorists but also those who provide financial services or facilities to them. Changes will penalize those who help terrorists.[77]
SwedishForeign MinisterAnna Lindh dies in the hospital from stab wounds inflicted while she was shopping in a department store in the centre of
Stockholm. In the wake of the incident, both the Yes and No
Euro campaigns suspended their activities.[81]
Zimbabwe's only opposition newspaper, the Daily News ceases publication following a court order that it breached the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act introduced by President
Robert Mugabe in 2002. The closure follows an armed raid on the paper's offices by police. One reporter told
Reuters that the action was an "unprecedented attack on press freedom".[89]
Libya: The
United Nations today ends 15-year-old sanctions against Libya. The sanctions were imposed following the
Lockerbie disaster. The sanctions are lifted following payment by Libya (following an admission of responsibility) of $2.7 billion to the families of those who died in the bombing.
Some of the severe
wildfires in
British Columbia have been contained, including the one threatening
Kelowna. The one near
Kamloops is still threatening structures. This has been the worst wildfire season in BC in fifty years.[91]
China formally acknowledges that it has transferred guard duties along the China –
North Korea border from the police to the army. The government does not formally report the number of troops deployed, however independent media estimate place it at 150,000.
Same-sex marriage in Canada: A
House of Commons motion brought by the
Canadian Alliance reiterating the heterosexual definition of marriage is narrowly defeated. This motion is preparatory to the government's introduction of a bill to extend the Federal marriage law to include
same-sex couples, expected within the next few months.[94]
NASA says that capsules similar to those used in the
Apollo program are among the options considered as replacements to the
Space Shuttle.
26-year-old gunman Harold Kilpatrick, Jr. of
Dyersburg, Tennessee, takes a classroom of 12–16 students at
Dyersburg State Community College hostage. Kilpatrick, who was mentally ill, was shot dead by police after firing a
pistol, ending a nine-hour standoff. Two hostages were slightly wounded.[95]
Richard Grasso, chairman of the
New York Stock Exchange, resigns amid criticism of his $140 million compensation package and the fact that the compensation was approved without input from the exchange's board of directors.
The
Arab League submits a draft resolution to the annual General Conference of the
International Atomic Energy Agency which calls on
Israel to sign the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and to open up its nuclear program to inspections by the
United Nations.
Israel's nuclear weapons program is believed have developed 100 to 200
nuclear warheads, but officially maintains a policy of "nuclear ambiguity" with support from the United States. The move by Arab nations comes in response to a Friday IAEA resolution submitted by Australia, Canada and Japan and lobbied for by the United States which asked
Iran for "accelerated cooperation" and set an October 31 deadline for the country to disclose any attempts to acquire nuclear weapons.
International Atomic Energy Agency:
Iranian officials give signals that they do not intend to comply with a resolution passed by the
United Nations's nuclear watchdog giving
Tehran until the end of next month to come clean on its atomic programme. Parliamentary speaker
Mehdi Karrubi, a close ally of
PresidentMohammad Khatami, said the IAEA resolution was "political" and that "the Iranian people will not accept giving in to the logic of force."[96]
A passenger aboard a
South African Airways jet tries to break into the cockpit during a flight from
Cape Town to
Atlanta. The passenger, James Drake, is arrested upon arrival. He had also been arrested in 1987 after trying to break into another airplane's cockpit.
Hurricane Isabel: Isabel, now a tropical storm, moves through western
Pennsylvania before heading to
Ontario, Canada. The storm leaves more than 4.3 million residents along the East Coast of the United States without power.
Email virus: Email users are swamped by a new fast-spreading
computer virus circulating through
email that purports to be security software from
Microsoft, but actually tries to disable security programs that are already running. The worm, dubbed "Swen" or "Gibe", takes advantage of a two-year-old hole in
Internet Explorer and affects systems that have not installed a patch for that
security hole.
Nuclear Weapons: Secretary of the
Guardian CouncilAyatollahAhmad Jannati, a leading hardline Iranian
cleric, calls for
Iran to withdrawal from
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty because of the compliance
protocols referred to by the
International Atomic Energy Agency and not consent to unfettered inspections of its nuclear facilities. "The treaty has been denounced by a number of countries. Although Iran has inked the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, it is free to withdraw from it anytime". "
North Korea withdrew from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. Many countries have not even signed it. It would have been better if Iran had not signed it."[101][102]
Israeli-Palestinian conflict:
Israel says that the
United Nations resolution on
Yasser Arafat (passed 133–4 with 15 abstentions) "is meaningless. It is only a declaration and not legally binding." Yasser Arafat states it is of the "utmost importance" as a sign of international support for the Palestinians. Israel states
Palestinians should focus their energy on fighting terrorism. Israel also insists that a new government being formed by incoming Palestinian
Prime MinisterAhmed Qureia cut links to Arafat. Israel says Arafat is tainted by
terrorism. Qureia's criticism of United States policy is the strongest sign yet he does not plan to challenge Arafat.[103][104][105][106]
Occupation of Iraq: Two American soldiers are killed and 13 wounded in a mortar attack in
Abu Ghraib, and another soldier dies in a roadside attack in Ramadi, bringing the number of U.S. deaths since the war began to 304, of which 165 occurred after President Bush's "mission accomplished" statement of May 1.[109] A member of the
Governing Council, Dr.
Aquila al-Hashimi, is shot in an assassination attempt (she dies five days later).
United NationsSecretary-GeneralKofi Annan strongly condemns the attack and warns that it only undermines the country's political progress.[110]
Canadian Liberal Leadership Race: Early numbers from delegate-selection elections within the Liberal Party confirm
Paul Martin will win an automatic first-round victory at the forthcoming leadership convention. Barring unforeseen circumstances, Martin can now be expected to become
Canada's 21st Prime Minister in February 2004.[112]
Galileo probe: After 14 years of flight time and 8 years of service in the Jovian system, Galileo's mission was terminated by sending the probe into Jupiter's crushing atmosphere at a speed of nearly 50 kilometres per second to avoid any chance of it contaminating local moons.
Espionage: The Washington Times reveals the arrest of U.S. Army Captain
James Yee, an Islamic
chaplain at the
Guantanamo Bay naval base, for officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, state that
FBI agents discovered classified documents carried by Yee and were questioning him before handing him over to the military.[113][114]
Terrorism –
9/11:
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,
mastermind of the September 11 attacks, tells interrogators he first discussed the plot with
Osama bin Laden in 1996. The original plan, and its evolution, are told to an interrogator, along with the answers to several questions over the attacks.[115][116]
United Nations: Leaders of the United Nations are concerned if change can give it the freedom it needs to survive.
Kofi Annan will outline plans for reform at the
United Nations General Assembly next week. Annan states that only "radical" revisions will likely preserve it.[117]
Embargo: China voices opposition to United States sanctions over the alleged sale of advanced
missiletechnology to an unnamed country.[119]
Germany: State elections in the state of
Bavaria show a great success for the governing
CSU of
Edmund Stoiber, scoring over 60%. The nationally governing
SPD is down to 19%, a historic low point.
A
suicide attacker detonates a
car bomb near
United Nations headquarters in
Baghdad, killing himself and an Iraqi guard and injuring at least 11 others. The attack came a month after a massive truck bomb devastated the complex and as the UN considers expanding its role in Iraq.
UN Secretary-GeneralKofi Annan states that personnel are assessing the situation following the attack.[120][121]
United Nations: World
heads of state and
government convene at
United Nations Headquarters in New York City for the start of the annual
General Assembly high-level summit.
President of the United StatesGeorge W. Bush urges the international community to help
Iraq rebuild itself into a democracy with the "great power to inspire the Middle East." President Bush states a transformed Middle East would also benefit the entire world "by undermining the ideologies that export violence to other lands." President Bush also calls on the
Security Council to adopt new anti-proliferation resolution "calling on all members of the UN to criminalize the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction", enacting strict export controls, and securing all sensitive material.[124]
Iraq: A new
Gallup poll shows majority of Iraqis expect a better life in five years. After
foreign occupation and the removal of
Saddam Hussein, around two-thirds of
Baghdad residents state the Iraqi dictator removal was worth the hardships they've been forced to endure.[125]
Iraq: A U.S.-led coalition-backed
Iraqi Governing Council member,
Ayad Allawi, announces restrictions of the operations of TV networks
al Jazeera and
al-Arabiya. The networks are barred from reporting on official activities and news conferences and from entering ministries and office buildings for the next two weeks. The council claims they incited anti-occupation violence (by airing statements from resistance leaders; specifically broadcasting a video of "terrorists terrorizing Iraqis"), increased ethnic and sectarian tensions and were supportive of the lawless resistance. Allawi hopes the ban sends a "very clear message" to other stations. Al Jazeera responds that it is trying to give a balanced view of the current situation in Iraq and that it considers its ethical standards to be similar to western ones. The
Coalition Provisional Authority has not responded to inquiries about the announcement.[126][127][128][129]
Blackout: A power shortcut lays the southern part of Sweden and the eastern part of Denmark dead from midday, creating traffic problems and other disruptions throughout the area. About 2–3 million people are affected. From 4 p.m.Copenhagen has power again. A Swedish
nuclear power plant abruptly stopped producing power.
Israeli-Palestinian conflict: A protest letter by a group of 27 Israeli pilots to the
Israeli air force is publicized. In the letter, the pilots announce their refusal to fly further missions to bomb leaders of Palestinian terrorist groups in civilian areas. The pilots' letter calls the attacks "illegal and immoral". It draws quick condemnation from commentators, from politicians and from military leaders, with calls for severe punishment including jail, although a dismissal is considered the most likely result. The pilots' protest is a reaction to attacks like the one on
Hamas leader
Salah Shehade in July 2002, which killed Shehade, his bodyguard and 15 civilians, among them nine children.,[132][133][134]
Computer and Communications Industry Association report, written by a handful of security experts,
Microsoft's dominance in key
technologies poses security risk and threatens the
national infrastructure. Computer and Communications Industry Association states reliance on a single technology, such as the
Windowsoperating system, threatens economic security and critical infrastructure. The paper warns that many security improvements planned by Microsoft are likely designed to deter customers from switching to another operating system.[135]
Terrorism:
FBI probes Hamas-linked '
criminal enterprises' associated with the radical Islamic group Hamas that has taken responsibility for a string of
bombings in Israel.
Hamas also declares the organization would not participate with other Palestinian groups in a proposed cease-fire nor join the next Palestinian government.
SheikAhmed Yassin states "the enemy is continuing his aggression, killing, and settlement activities."[139][140]
Shariah: An
Islamic appeals court in northern
Nigeria has acquitted single mother
Amina Lawal. A Shariah court had sentenced her to death by
stoning for
adultery, but a five-judge panel rejected her March 2002 conviction under
Shariah saying she was not given "ample opportunity to defend herself".[141][142]
Business:
Kodak has said that it will no longer make major investments in conventional photographic film.[143]
WMD: An early draft of an interim report by the inspectors for banned weapons in
Iraq says his team has not found any of the
unconventional weapons cited by
PresidentGeorge W. Bush as a principal reason for going to war.
CIA stresses report is not final and inspectors are still getting data.[144]
Natural disaster: An
earthquake of
magnitude 8.0 struck near the island of
Hokkaido in Japan at 19:50:07 (UTC). A 7-foot-tall (2.1 m)
tsunami was generated off the coast of Hokkaido as a result of the quake and tsunami warnings have been issued for most of the
Pacific Rim, including Japan, Russia's eastern coast,
Alaska, and
Hawaii.[145]
Occupation of Iraq: Nine
rebels in north
Iraq are killed. Coalition troops kill nine guerrillas, the biggest toll for more than a month, in scattered action over northern Iraq in the past 24 hours.
MajorJosslyn Aberle states "The enemy are becoming more desperate as we pursue them."[148]
Iraq –
Constitution:
Secretary of StateColin Powell, responding to a rapid timetable self-rule demands from France (and others), states the United States would set a deadline of six months for Iraqi leaders working under the coalition occupation to produce a new constitution. The constitution would clear the way for
elections and the installation of a new leadership next year.[154][155]
Iraq –
Terrorism:
Mortar rounds hit killing at least seven civilian Iraqis in the town square of
Baquba. At least 20 civilian were wounded. Also,
Akila al-Hashemi, a member of Iraq's Governing Council, was buried in
Najaf a day after she died from wounds inflicted by an unidentified gunmen.[156]
Nuclear Weapons:
Iran remains defiant about nuclear program.
Iran states it will not give up its nuclear program (including uranium enrichment). The
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have given Iran until October 31 to prove it has no secret nuclear arms program and told it to halt enrichment activities. Iran states international pressure will not deter its nuclear plans.[157][158]
Blackout: In Italy and a small part of Switzerland 57 million people were without power from late Saturday night until Sunday noon. The power outage was more extensive than the
North American blackout in
August.[159][160]
Space: Europe has launched its first mission to the moon, using
SMART-1, an unmanned probe.[161]
Pope John Paul II names 30 new
cardinals, including
Marc Ouellet,
Archbishop of Quebec and
Primate of Canada. The Pope also created a 31st Cardinal in pectore, which means his identity is kept secret and he will not be made a Cardinal if the Pope dies before revealing his name.[162]
Abdalla Yones, who was convicted of murder for killing his daughter,
Heshu Yones, for dating a Christian, is sentenced to life in prison after becoming the first person in Britain to admit an "
honour killing".[163]
Space –
Technology:
NASA outlines plans for the
Space Shuttle's Replacement, a "Space Taxi". The next-generation space vehicle is on the drawing boards now and NASA has just issued newly defined requirements.[167]
Nuclear weapons:
Iranian official confirm traces of highly enriched
uranium found in the country at the
Kalaye Electric Company near
Tehran (this was the second time such a discovery was made by
United Nations inspectors). Iran's ambassador to the
International Atomic Energy Agency,
Ali Akbar Salehi, attributes the find to the contamination of imported equipment on state television. Iranians have allegedly used Kalaye Electric Company to test centrifuges used to make highly enriched uranium that can be used to make atomic bombs.[169]
International relations: Former
US Secretary of State,
Madeleine Albright (commenting on
European Union relations to the United States), says that current transatlantic relations are in a dangerous "vicious circle". She states that the European Union is not a counterweight to American power in the world. She also states that there is an American "catch-22", and that America is criticized no matter which foreign policy it adopts.[171]
United Kingdom: The British
Labour Party is holding its annual conference in
Bournemouth on the English south coast. For the party and especially
Tony Blair it is a tough conference as his policies (especially over Iraq) are under heavy attack.
European Union: Member states clash over the issue of how many MEPs should represent the European Parliament on the approaching
Intergovernmental Conference on October 4. The developing consensus seems to be that at least one representative from the two major parties in the
European Parliament will attend the conference, but this procedure is highly controversial—normally parliamentarians do not attend high level meetings among EU leaders.[172]
Russia stalls on signing the
Kyoto Protocol, the international treaty to reduce
global warming. Kyoto Protocol supporters in the EU react with consternation to Russia's decision.[176]
EU
foreign ministers have approved a controversial
pension reform for EU
civil servants, which is set to increase their pension age and make the new entrants work more years to receive the maximum level of pension.[177]
European Union: Poland and Spain are about to launch their battle to keep the current system of voting in the
European Council, introduced by the Nice Treaty.[178]
The
European Commission will not shy away from imposing fines on France if it continues to break
Euro-rules, according to Economics Commissioner
Pedro Solbes.[180]