Rafy
Retired
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2004
- Messages
- 10,719
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2005
- Uni Grad
- 2008
"In 2005, we were never so rich, so secure ... and so afraid."
http://smh.com.au/news/world/year-of-living-dangerously/2005/12/19/1134840772127.html?page=fullpage
A nice look at the year that was. The above quote was frightenly true.
Your thoughts on the year of 2005? From Tsunamis to a new pope, hurricanes, aid concerts and politics: Any one news story that stood out more than others for you?
I found the dramatic shift in the political landscape in both Federal and state politics to be quite significant. We saw the downfall of Latham, the rebirth of Beazely, the coalition control of the senate and the subsequent passing of controversial legeslation. On the state scene, we had the unexpected departure of Carr, and the suprise emergence of Iemma that meant that finally our trains were somewhat "fixed". And of course Brogden's demise...
Time Magazine has seleted Bono and Bill and Melinda Gates as the People of the year. I must say, that while their aid efforts are quite worthy, i would not have chosen them for such a title.
MAJOR STORIES
* Former Australian Guantanomo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib arrives back in Australia.
* Mark Latham resigns as Labor leader and the member for Werriwa. Kim Beazley is then elected Labor leader. Later in the year Latham releases his diaries which are critical of the Labor leadership.
* Indonesian Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir is jailed after being found guilty of charges relating to the 2002 Bali bombings.
* Prince Charles marries his long-time lover Camilla Parker-Bowles.
* Ray Williams and Rodney Adler are jailed for their role in the demise of HIH.
* German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger becomes Pope Benedict XVI.
* Singer Kylie Minogue is diagnosed with breast cancer.
* Australian Schapelle Corby is sentenced to 20 years' jail in Bali. After an appeal her sentence is reduced to 15 years.
* Former FBI director Mark Felt is revealed as the Washington Post's "Deep Throat".
* Sol Trujillo is appointed Telstra CEO.
* Popstar Michael Jackson is acquitted of child sex charges.
* Australian Douglas Wood is rescued in a military operation in Iraq after being held hostage for six weeks.
* A Sydney-based Chinese diplomat seeks and is granted asylum in Australia.
* The National party's John Anderson announces his resignation from politics.
* The Federal Government takes control of the Senate.
* Four bombs explode on London's Underground and bus network killing 52 people.
* Bob Carr announces his retirement as New South Wales premier and is replaced by Morris Iemma.
* Thousands are believed to have been killed in the wake of a series of hurricanes which hit the US Gulf states. The worst to hit is hurricane Katrina.
* John Brogden announces his retirement from politics after a suicide attempt.
* Perth researcher Barry Marshall and Robin Warren win the 2005 Nobel Prize for Medicine.
* Twenty-two people, including four Australians, are killed in a series of bomb explosions in Bali.
* A major international trial confirms the effectiveness of a cervical cancer vaccine developed in Australia.
* The UN nuclear watchdog and its chief, Mohamed El Baradei, win the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize.
* A son is born to Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary of Denmark.
* A major earthquake shakes cities and villages across the south Asian subcontinent wiping out several villages and killing thousands of people.
* An inquiry into public hospitals in Queensland recommends doctor Jayant Patel be charged with manslaughter.
* The Federal Government's sweeping changes to the industrial relations system pass the Senate.
* Rioting in Sydney takes police and politicians by surprise.
Year in Reviews
http://www.abc.net.au/news/specials/yearinreview/2005/default.htm
Reuters pictures of the year
http://abcnews.go.com/US/YearInReview/
http://news.yahoo.com/page/year_review
http://smh.com.au/news/world/year-of-living-dangerously/2005/12/19/1134840772127.html?page=fullpage
A nice look at the year that was. The above quote was frightenly true.
Your thoughts on the year of 2005? From Tsunamis to a new pope, hurricanes, aid concerts and politics: Any one news story that stood out more than others for you?
I found the dramatic shift in the political landscape in both Federal and state politics to be quite significant. We saw the downfall of Latham, the rebirth of Beazely, the coalition control of the senate and the subsequent passing of controversial legeslation. On the state scene, we had the unexpected departure of Carr, and the suprise emergence of Iemma that meant that finally our trains were somewhat "fixed". And of course Brogden's demise...
Time Magazine has seleted Bono and Bill and Melinda Gates as the People of the year. I must say, that while their aid efforts are quite worthy, i would not have chosen them for such a title.
MAJOR STORIES
* Former Australian Guantanomo Bay detainee Mamdouh Habib arrives back in Australia.
* Mark Latham resigns as Labor leader and the member for Werriwa. Kim Beazley is then elected Labor leader. Later in the year Latham releases his diaries which are critical of the Labor leadership.
* Indonesian Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir is jailed after being found guilty of charges relating to the 2002 Bali bombings.
* Prince Charles marries his long-time lover Camilla Parker-Bowles.
* Ray Williams and Rodney Adler are jailed for their role in the demise of HIH.
* German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger becomes Pope Benedict XVI.
* Singer Kylie Minogue is diagnosed with breast cancer.
* Australian Schapelle Corby is sentenced to 20 years' jail in Bali. After an appeal her sentence is reduced to 15 years.
* Former FBI director Mark Felt is revealed as the Washington Post's "Deep Throat".
* Sol Trujillo is appointed Telstra CEO.
* Popstar Michael Jackson is acquitted of child sex charges.
* Australian Douglas Wood is rescued in a military operation in Iraq after being held hostage for six weeks.
* A Sydney-based Chinese diplomat seeks and is granted asylum in Australia.
* The National party's John Anderson announces his resignation from politics.
* The Federal Government takes control of the Senate.
* Four bombs explode on London's Underground and bus network killing 52 people.
* Bob Carr announces his retirement as New South Wales premier and is replaced by Morris Iemma.
* Thousands are believed to have been killed in the wake of a series of hurricanes which hit the US Gulf states. The worst to hit is hurricane Katrina.
* John Brogden announces his retirement from politics after a suicide attempt.
* Perth researcher Barry Marshall and Robin Warren win the 2005 Nobel Prize for Medicine.
* Twenty-two people, including four Australians, are killed in a series of bomb explosions in Bali.
* A major international trial confirms the effectiveness of a cervical cancer vaccine developed in Australia.
* The UN nuclear watchdog and its chief, Mohamed El Baradei, win the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize.
* A son is born to Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary of Denmark.
* A major earthquake shakes cities and villages across the south Asian subcontinent wiping out several villages and killing thousands of people.
* An inquiry into public hospitals in Queensland recommends doctor Jayant Patel be charged with manslaughter.
* The Federal Government's sweeping changes to the industrial relations system pass the Senate.
* Rioting in Sydney takes police and politicians by surprise.
Year in Reviews
http://www.abc.net.au/news/specials/yearinreview/2005/default.htm
Reuters pictures of the year
http://abcnews.go.com/US/YearInReview/
http://news.yahoo.com/page/year_review
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