![]() |
| International Current Affairs February 2021 Monthly |
Feb 01. China has launched a carbon exchange program aimed at reducing pollution, as the world's worst polluter finds a way to transform its economy by 2060.
Feb 01. Israel and Kosovo establish political alliances, with the
predominantly Muslim territory seeing al-Quds as the capital of the Jewish
state.
Feb 01. Myanmar's military has taken power in a bloodless coup and declared a
one-year emergency.
Feb 02. Following the postponement of the Test series between South Africa
and Australia, New Zealand became the first team to win the first-ever ICC
World Championship final.
Feb 02. The election of U.S. President Joe Biden to the Secretary of
Transport was confirmed by making Pete Buttigieg the first gay member to appear
in the White House cabinet.
Feb 02. Sri Lanka has signed an agreement with Japan and India to
establish a deep-sea container terminal that is considered an effort to combat
China's growing influence in the region.
Feb 02. Captain Tom Moore, a World War II veteran who entered the heart of
the nation when it was locked when he and his bodyguard demanded money from
health workers, died after discovering he had Covid-19. He was 100 years old.
Feb 02. Wikipedia has introduced a general code of conduct aimed at
preventing harassment, misinformation, and fraud in the online encyclopedia.
Feb 03. Alexei Navalny, Putin's most prominent critic, was imprisoned for
nearly three years.
Feb 03. Founder of Amazon.com, Inc., Jeff Bezos has announced his
resignation as CEO and chairman. He will hand over the keys to the world's
largest internet retailer to Andy Jassy, head of its cloud computing
component.
Feb 04. In his first major foreign policy speech, US President Joe Biden
said the men's war "must end", promising to end US support for
Saudi-led offensive operations and stop arms sales.
Feb 05. Libyan envoys to the UN held talks outside Geneva, making a
surprising decision from Abdul Hamid Dbeibah as interim prime minister to take
the war-torn country to the December elections.
Feb 05. Production company Barack and Michelle Obama have announced that to will make British-Pakistani novelist Mohsin Hamid's novel Exit West into a film.
Feb 05. The Harvard Law Audit named Hassansaan Shahawy, brought into the
world in Los Angeles, Egypt-American, as he accepts, is the first Muslim
president in quite a while 134-year of history.
Feb 06. Britain captain Joe Root turned into the first batsman to hit 200
in quite a while 100th Test, in the wake of accumulating 218 runs against
India.
Feb 06. The Taliban have warned U.S. President Joe Biden's officials to
abandon an agreement reached on February 29 between the two opponents, saying
leaving the agreement would "lead to dangerous growth" in the Afghan
war.
Feb 06. Christopher Plummer, an award-winning entertainer who, at 82
years old, became the most established entertainer in the Institute Grant
ever, has passed on. He was 91 years of age.
Feb 06. The United Nations began electing its next Secretary-General,
calling on 193 UN nations to include candidates for baptism as the world's
chief organizer and to work.
Feb 06. The International Criminal Court ruled that it had the power to
control the situation in the Palestinian territories, and opened the way for
the court to open a military investigation.
Feb 06. New York turned into the first state in the US to proclaim
February 5 as Kashmir Day.
Feb 06. Previous US Secretary of State George Shultz, a former US
official, businessman, and correspondence essayist who burned through a large
portion of the 1980s attempting to improve Cold War relations with the
Soviet Union and construct peace centers in the Middle East, has passed
on. He was 100 years of age.
Feb 07. Previous West Indies striker Ezra Moseley has passed on in an accident.
Feb 07. A special envoy to the United Nations in Yemen, Martin Griffiths,
arrived in Iran on a two-day visit.
Feb 08. The United States has announced that it will “work again” with the
UN Human Rights Council, almost three years after the administration of former
President Donald Trump withdrew the country from the body.
Feb 08. Tesla announced $ 1.5 billion investment in digital currency
Bitcoin.
Feb 08. Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok dissolves Cabinet.
Feb 08. Military law was announced in parts of Myanmar's second-largest city.
Feb 08. Leaders of Palestinian rival factions begin negotiations with the
Egyptians in Cairo.
Feb 09. The UAE Hope Initiative successfully embarked on the Mars orbit,
making history the first planetary work in the Arab world.
Feb 09. Winchester College, one of Britain's most independent and
respected schools, has announced the opening of its old doors for girls for the
first time in its 600-year history.
Feb 09. North Korea and Iran have renewed cooperation on the construction
of long-range missiles by 2020, according to a UN report, also confirming
Pyongyang's continued violation of various nuclear decisions.
Feb 09. COVID-19 may first show up in quite a while after bouncing
from a creature, said a group of Chinese and Chinese researchers searching
for the origins of the Coronavirus, citing theoretical proof that the
infection had escaped from the Chinese lab.
Feb 10. Chinese exploration Tiawen-1 enters the orbit of the planet Mars.
Feb 10. The UN Security Council has neglected to issue a joint
statement concerning war-torn Syria.
Feb 10. Saudi specialists discharge noticeable ladies' rights extremist Loujain al-Hathloul.
Feb 11. Joe Biden has challenged Chinese leader Xi Jinping on human
rights, trade, and regional muscle change, on their first call since the new US
president took office.
Feb 11. China's broadcasting director pulled BBC World News off the air,
saying the channel's content "severely violated" the country's
reporting guidelines.
Feb 11. India has reached an agreement with China for the two to return to
part of their Himalayan border.
Feb 11. Nepal revoked certificates for the 2016 Indian Everest conference for
lying in 2016, barring them and their party leader from climbing mountains in
the country.
Feb 13. Former Central Bank Governor Mario Draghi was officially sworn in
as Italy's new Prime Minister.
Feb 13. The remains of the French and Russian soldiers were placed during
Napoleon's catastrophic flight to Moscow in 1812, in an unusual moment of unity
between the two countries.
Feb 13. Former President Donald Trump was released at 57:43 on his second
U.S. Senate trial.
Feb 13. In excess of 120 nations chose English attorney Karim Khan as the
next prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Feb 14. The West Indies defeated Bangladesh in the second and final Test
to end the series.
Feb 14. The UAE investigation has restored its original image of Mars.
This photograph
was taken at a height of 24,700 miles (15,300 miles) over the Martian surface.
Feb 15. Kosovo's left-wing party Vetevendosje (Election) won a landslide
victory in the parliamentary elections.
Feb 15. China outperforms the US by 2020 as the EU's biggest trading accomplice, according to the EU's statistical office Eurostat.
Feb 15. The World Health Organization (WHO) has given emergency endorsement
for AstraZeneca's coronavirus vaccine.
Feb 15. Former Nigerian Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala received
unanimous support to become the first and first female director of Africa for
the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Feb 16. Canadian singer-songwriter Raymond Lévesque, whose old 1956 name
"Quand les hommes vivront d'amour" was global, died at the age of 92.
Feb 16. Armed forces in Iran launch a maritime safety exercise program in the Maritime, which is a drill level with Russia in the northern Indian Ocean.
Feb 16. The lower house in the French parliament voted in favor of
legislation against "Isla mist separatism".
Feb 18. NASA's persistent perseverance touches Mars down after
successfully defeating a dangerous arrival phase known as "seven minutes
of fear".
The Rover is the only one that puts its wheels down on Mars. The
feat was first achieved in 1997 and is still American. Patience now initiates a
multi-year search for bio signatures of microbes that may have been there billions
of years ago, when conditions were warmer and wetter than they are today.
Starting in the summer, it will try to collect 30 rock and soil samples from
closed tubes, to finally be brought back to earth sometime in the 2030s for
laboratory testing.
Feb 18. England and Canada force sanctions on commanders in Myanmar over
denials of basic freedoms following the military coup.
Feb 18. Former Japanese politician Seiko Hashimoto was elected president
of the Tokyo 2020 planning committee.
Feb 19. In a speech to the annual security conference in Munich - held on
video link to the 19th - US President Joe Biden announced that "the
transatlantic alliance is back", Biden said US conventional accomplices
ought to indeed depend on Washington. Authority.
Feb 19. Prince Harry and his American wife, Megan, have been on permanent silent royal duties as Queen Elizabeth II has instructed the Duke and Duchess of
Sussex, as they are officially known, to relinquish their titles and
sponsorship following assurances that they will not return as active monarchs.
Feb 19. A U.S. government judge has sentenced, along with Pakistani
American capitalists, Imaad Zuberi, to 12 years in prison for falsifying
records of his coverage of his work as a foreign agent while appealing to top
US officials. He was likewise fined $ 1.75 million and requested to pay $ 15.7
million in compensation.
Feb 19. The United States has officially joined the Paris agreement on a
historic global agreement to reduce known global warming.
Feb 20. Barbora Krejcikova and Rajeev Ram have won their second Australian
Open title mixed in three years.
Feb 21. Serbia's Novak Djokovic knocked down Russia's Daniil Medvedev for
a record-breaking Australian 9th open title.
Feb 21. Sudan took the unprecedented but anticipated step of floating its currency, a bold economic step taken by the joint military and military
government in charge of the African country following a popular request.
Feb 21. Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), met with Iran's atomic energy chief in Tehran, hours before the deadline set by
the Islamic Republic to limit the organisation's tests if US sanctions are not
lifted.
Feb 22. The Italian diplomat to the Majority Rule Republic of Congo, Luca
Attanasio, was murdered.
Feb 22. The United States has surpassed the record death toll of 500,000
Covid-19 people in more than a year since the coronavirus infected its first
known victim in Santa Clara County, California.
Feb 23. The anti-Afghan forces return to the negotiating table.
Feb 23. Previous Saudi priest Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, a vital participant
after the 1973 oil boycott, has died at the age of 90 years old.
About Sheikh Yamani
Yamani's 24-year tenure as the world's largest crude oil producer
made him a world-famous figure during the "oil" inflation of the
1970s. In 1973, he was instrumental in OPEC's decision to raise oil prices to
protest Israel's occupation of the 1967 Arab world, which eased the world's
economic woes. He played a key role in Saudi Arabia's industrialization of the
oil industry, led today by energy company Aramco Yamani, notable at the time,
as a common figure in the royal family-born June 30, 1930, son of a scholar and
Muslim judge in Makkah. Yaman was expected to follow his father and grandfather
in teaching. Subsequent to considering law in Cairo, he went to New York
University and Harvard. Returning to Saudi Arabia, he founded a law firm and
did government work, drawing the attention of future King Faisal. He became the oil
minister in 1962.
Feb 23. Nepal's High Court ordered the restoration of parliament after it
was dissolved by the leader.
Feb 23. Catholic Catholic bishops in Germany elect a woman pastor, Beate.
Feb 24. Amnesty International has released Russian opposition leader
Alexey Navalny from prison for his recent "hate speech" speech, but
vowed to release him.
Feb 24. Ghana became the first country to receive treatment under the
international Covax system.
Feb 25. Chinese President Xi Jinping has announced that his country has
achieved a “human miracle” to end extreme poverty.
Feb 25. England has demanded the consent of six people from Myanmar's
military council, in memory of the Chief of Staff General Min Aung Hlaing, to
take part in the new massacre.
Feb 25. The Australian Parliament has passed a final amendment to the Haggling
Code that will force Google and Facebook to pay for news. Feb 26. Security
Council announces war, and in times of emergency.
Feb 26. Britain's highest court has rejected an application by Shamima
Begum, a woman who had been stripped of her UK citizenship for joining a Muslim
group, to return to contest the decision.
Feb 27. UN envoy to Myanmar Kyaw Moe Tun was ousted, a day later, urging
the United Nations to use "any means necessary" to overthrow the
military on February 1.
Feb 27. Armenian President Armen Sarkisian would not sign a request to the
country's top foreign official.
Feb 27. Scottish workers named Anas Sarwar, son of Punjab Governor
Chaudhry Mohammad Sarwar, as their new leader.
Feb 27. The French Open lga Swiatek champion clicks world number 12 Belinda
Bencic with straight sets for the Adelaide International.
Feb 27. The U.S. House has released the largest package, the $ 1.9 trillion
coronavirus.
Feb 28. U.S.Government judge allowed the last approval on Facebook to
pay $ 650 million to clarify the security question between the California team
and the 1.6 million customers in the Illinois region of Illinois.
Feb 28. The Soyuz rocket carrying Russia's first Arctic climate satellite
exploded at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
Feb 28. The Arctic has large oil and gas reserves controlled by Russia and
other countries, including the United States, Canada, and Norway.
International Current Affairs February 2021
latest national and international
current affairs
Current Affairs in
latest international current affairs
current affairs for national and
international

0 Comments