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Re: This Day in History

May 10 1869.

The Union Pacific and the Central Pacific Railways met on this day
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Re: This Day in History

May 10, 1994 : NELSON MANDELA INAUGURATED:

In South Africa, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela is sworn in as the first
black president of South Africa. In his inaugural address, Mandela,
who spent 27 years of his life as a political prisoner of the South
African government, declared that "the time for the healing of the
wounds has come." Two weeks earlier, more than 22 million South
Africans had turned out to cast ballots in the country's first-ever
multiracial parliamentary elections. An overwhelming majority chose
Mandela and his African National Congress (ANC) party to lead the
country.

Mandela, born in 1918, was the son of the chief of the Xhosa-speaking
Tembu people. Instead of succeeding his father as chief, Mandela went
to university and became a lawyer. In 1944, he joined the African
National Congress (ANC), a black political organization dedicated to
winning rights for the black majority in white-ruled South Africa. In
1948, the racist National Party came to power, and apartheid--South
Africa's institutionalized system of white supremacy and racial
segregation--became official government policy. With the loss of black
rights under apartheid, black enrollment in the ANC rapidly grew.
Mandela became one of the ANC's leaders and in 1952 was made deputy
national president of the ANC. He organized nonviolent strikes,
boycotts, marches, and other acts of civil disobedience.

After the massacre of peaceful black demonstrators at Sharpeville in
1960, Nelson helped organize a paramilitary branch of the ANC to
engage in acts of sabotage against the white minority government. He
was tried for and acquitted of treason in 1961 but in 1962 was
arrested again for illegally leaving the country. Convicted and
sentenced to five years at Robben Island Prison, he was put on trial
again in 1963 with seven others on charges of sabotage, treason, and
conspiracy. In the celebrated Rivonia Trial, named after the suburb of
Johannesburg where ANC weapons were found, Mandela eloquently defended
his actions. On June 12, 1964, he was sentenced to life imprisonment.

Mandela spent the first 18 of his 27 years in jail at the brutal
Robben Island Prison. He was confined to a small cell without a bed or
plumbing and was forced to do hard labor in a quarry. He could write
and receive a letter once every six months, and once a year he was
allowed to meet with a visitor for 30 minutes. However, Mandela's
resolve remained unbroken, and while remaining the symbolic leader of
the anti-apartheid movement, he led a movement of civil disobedience
at the prison that coerced South African officials into drastically
improving conditions on Robben Island. In 1982 he was moved to
Pollsmoor Prison on the mainland, and in 1988 to a cottage, where he
lived under house arrest.

In 1989, F.W. de Klerk became South African president and set about
dismantling apartheid. De Klerk lifted the ban on the ANC, suspended
executions, and on February 11, 1990, ordered the release of Nelson
Mandela. Mandela subsequently led the ANC in its negotiations with the
minority government for an end to apartheid and the establishment of a
multiracial government. In 1993, Mandela and de Klerk were jointly
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. On April 26, 1994, the country's first
free elections were won by Mandela and the ANC, and a "national unity"
coalition was formed with de Klerk's National Party and the Zulus'
Inkatha Freedom Party. On May 10, Mandela was inaugurated in a
ceremony attended by numerous international dignitaries.

As president, Mandela established the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission to investigate human rights violations under apartheid and
introduced numerous initiatives designed to improve the living
standards of South Africa's black population. In 1996, he presided
over the enactment of a new South African constitution. Mandela
retired from politics in June 1999 at the age of 80. He was succeeded
as president by Thabo Mbeki of the ANC.
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Re: This Day in History

1857 - The Sepoy Rebellion broke out in colonial India, threatening the rule of the British East India Company.
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Re: This Day in History

May 11, 1997:
IBM's Deep Blue chess-playing supercomputer defeats Garry Kasparov in the last game of the rematch, becoming the first computer to beat a world-champion chess player.
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Re: This Day in History

May 11: BUTCHER OF LYON ON TRIAL:

Klaus Barbie, the former Nazi Gestapo chief of German-occupied Lyon,
France, goes on trial in Lyon more than four decades after the end of
World War II. He was charged with 177 crimes against humanity.

As chief of Nazi Germany's secret police in Lyon, Barbie sent 7,500
French Jews and French Resistance partisans to concentration camps,
and executed some 4,000 others. Among other atrocities, Barbie
personally tortured and executed many of his prisoners. In 1943, he
captured Jean Moulin, the leader of the French Resistance, and had him
slowly beaten to death. In 1944, Barbie rounded up 44 young Jewish
children and their seven teachers hiding in a boarding house in Izieu
and deported them to the Auschwitz extermination camp. Of the 51, only
one teacher survived. In August 1944, as the Germans prepared to
retreat from Lyon, he organized one last deportation train that took
hundreds of people to the death camps.

Barbie returned to Germany, and at the end of the war burned off his
SS identification tattoo and assumed a new identity. With former SS
officers, he engaged in underground anti-communist activity and in
June 1947 surrendered himself to the U.S. Counter-Intelligence Corps
(CIC) after the Americans offered him money and protection in exchange
for his intelligence services. Barbie worked as a U.S. agent in
Germany for two years, and the Americans shielded him from French
prosecutors trying to track him down. In 1949, Barbie and his family
were smuggled by the Americans to South America.

Assuming the name of Klaus Altmann, Barbie settled in Bolivia and
continued his work as a U.S. agent. He became a successful businessman
and advised the military regimes of Bolivia. In 1971, the oppressive
dictator Hugo Banzer Suarez came to power, and Barbie helped him set
up brutal internment camps for his many political opponents. During
his 32 years in Bolivia, Barbie also served as an officer in the
Bolivian secret police, participated in drug-running schemes, and
founded a rightist death squad. He regularly traveled to Europe, and
even visited France, where he had been tried in absentia in 1952 and
1954 for his war crimes and sentenced to death.

In 1972, the Nazi hunters Serge Klarsfeld and Beatte Kunzel discovered
Barbie's whereabouts in Bolivia, but Banzer Suarez refused to
extradite him to France. In the early 1980s, a liberal Bolivian regime
came to power and agreed to extradite Barbie in exchange for French
aid. On January 19, 1983, Barbie was arrested, and on February 7 he
arrived in France. The statute of limitations had expired on his
in-absentia convictions from the 1950s; he would have to be tried
again. The U.S. government formally apologized to France for its
conduct in the Barbie case later that year.

Legal wrangling, especially between the groups representing his
victims, delayed his trial for four years. Finally, on May 11, 1987,
the "Butcher of Lyon," as he was known in France, went on trial for
his crimes against humanity. In a courtroom twist unimaginable four
decades earlier, Barbie was defended by three minority lawyers--an
Asian, an African, and an Arab--who made the dramatic case that the
French and the Jews were as guilty of crimes against humanity as
Barbie or any other Nazi. Barbie's lawyers seemed more intent on
putting France and Israel on trial than in proving their client's
innocence, and on July 4, 1987, he was found guilty. For his crimes,
the 73-year-old Barbie was sentenced to spend the rest of his life in
prison, France's highest punishment. He died of cancer in a prison
hospital in 1991.
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Re: This Day in History

May 11 1981:

Reggae legend Bob Marley dies of cancer on this day in 1981 in Miami Beach, Florida.
Marley, born in Jamaica in 1945, began recording in his late teens.
He formed his band, the Wailers, in 1963.
In the early 1970s, the band's records began to catch on outside Jamaica, assisted by Eric Clapton's cover of "I Shot the Sheriff."
Marley's music influenced countless later musicians.
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Re: This Day in History

On May 11:

1949 - Siam changed its named to Thailand.
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Re: This Day in History

May 11, 1981:
Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical "Cats" opened in London. It ran for 21 years and closed 11th May 2002 after 8949 performances.
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Re: This Day in History

May 11, 1953

Winston Churchill criticizes John Foster Dulles domino theory
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Re: This Day in History

May 12, 2006:
Justin Gatlin ties the fastest 100m sprint ever in a time of 9.77 seconds in Doha, Qatar.
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