This Day in History – February 24
Today is the 55th day of 2025. There are 310 days left in the year.
TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT
2008: Raul Castro replaces brother Fidel as Cuba’s president.
OTHER EVENTS
1208: St Francis of Assisi, 26, receives his vocation in Portiuncula, Italy.
1525: Spanish army, using muskets for first time in war, routs French and Swiss forces at Pavia, Italy, as 14,000 men are slain in battle.
1530: Charles V is crowned holy Roman emperor and King of Italy by Pope Clement VII at Bologna — the last imperial coronation by a pope.
1656: Spain declares war on England.
1830: King Louis-Philippe of France abdicates in the face of an insurrection in Paris, giving way to the Second Republic.
1891: China pays indemnity to Russia for return of Ili Valley in north-west China.
1920: Nazi Party is organised in Germany.
1945: Egypt’s Premier Ahmed Pasha is assassinated after announcing Egypt’s declaration of war against Germany.
1946: Juan Peron is elected for first of three presidential terms in Argentina.
1990: Candidates favouring independence run well in elections to the Supreme Soviet of Lithuania.
1993: With the lowest popularity rating in Canadian polling history, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney calls it quits after nine years in office.
1995: Breaking its silence with a fury rare in transatlantic diplomacy, the US Embassy accuses France’s interior minister of lying about a spy scandal.
1996: Cuban Government fighter planes shoot down two small aircraft belonging to an exile group flying off the coast of Havana.
1997: Nine army officers in Zaire declare that they will join the rebels under Laurent Kabila who seek to topple Mobuto Sese Seko.
2000: Betty Lou Beets, 62, is executed after Texas Governor George W Bush rejects her claim that she killed her fifth husband in self-defence and deserved a reprieve. She is the second woman executed in Texas since the Civil War.
2002: The Winter Olympic Games concludes in Salt Lake City, Utah, with Germany winning the most medals in the games: 12 golds, 16 silvers and seven bronzes for a total of 35.
2003: Vojislav Seselj, leader of the ultranationalist Serbian Radical Party, surrenders to the UN International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. He is charged with eight counts of crimes against humanity and six counts of war crimes.
2007: The Virginia General Assembly votes unanimously to express “profound regret” for the state’s role in slavery, becoming the first in the US to pass such a measure.
2009: US President Barack Obama makes his first address to Congress, warning the US has to start reckoning with its economic problems.
2010: Toyota chief executive Akio Toyoda apologises personally and repeatedly to the United States and millions of American Toyota owners for safety lapses that have led to deaths and widespread recalls.
2011: Discovery, the world’s most travelled spaceship, thunders into orbit for the final time, heading toward the International Space Station on a journey that marks the beginning of the end of the shuttle era.
2012: Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton blasts Russia and China as “despicable” for opposing UN action aimed at stopping the bloodshed in Syria.
2013: Pope Benedict XVI bestows his final Sunday blessing of his pontificate on a cheering crowd in St Peter’s Square.
2020: Former Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein is found guilty of rape and a criminal sexual act in landmark case that ignited #MeToo movement.
2021: United Nations-backed COVAX initiative begins delivering vaccines to middle- and low-income countries with first AstraZeneca shipment to Ghana.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
Charles V, holy Roman emperor, king of Spain and archduke of Austria (1500-1558); Wilhelm Grimm, German author (1786-1859); George Augustus Moore, English novelist (1852-1933); Bettino Craxi, first socialist prime minister of Italy (1934-2000); James Farentino, US actor (1938-2012); Paula Zahn, US news correspondent (1956- ); Sir Alexander Bustamante, Jamaica’s first prime minister and national hero (1884-1977)
— AP/Jamaica Observer