< Portal:Current events 
    
        
    
 
        
      September 10, 2009 (Thursday)
        
        
    - British Prime Minister Gordon Brown apologises for the post-war treatment of celebrated WWII code-breaker Alan Turing, who was chemically castrated for having homosexual relations. (Downing St) (CBC) (Reuters India) (The New York Times) (The Daily Telegraph)
 - Libyan leader Muammar al-Gaddafi says he will demand a permanent place in the United Nations Security Council for Africa and compensation worth 777 trillion dollars for years of colonialism in New York later this month. (IOL)
 - A Hong Kong court convicts Du Jun, a former senior banker at Morgan Stanley, in the country's largest insider trading case. (BBC)
 - Gabon bars opposition leaders from leaving the country following recent riots over claims of fraud in the 2009 presidential election. (BBC)
 - Dubai's Metro System, the first mass transit system of the Arabian Peninsula, officially opens to the public as its first metro line is partially operational. (Al Bawaba)
 - Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri steps aside in Lebanon. (BBC) (Xinhua)
 - At least five girls are killed and 30 other students injured in a stampede at a state-run school in the Indian capital, New Delhi. (ABC) (RTÉ)
 - Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez recognizes Abkhazia and South Ossetia during a visit to Russia. (El Universal) (Reuters)
 - Afghan journalists express anger over the killing of local reporter Sultan Munadi during a rescue operation that saved his colleague Stephen Farrell. (RTÉ)
 - British consul John Terry is murdered in Jamaica. (Jamaica Gleaner) (Times Online)
 - Greek militant group Revolutionary Struggle threatens to attack the "golden boys" it blames for the economic crisis as it claims responsibility for the Athens stock market bombing. (RTÉ)
 - In football, Germany beat England 6–2 in the UEFA Women's Euro 2009 final, claiming their seventh European title. (BBC)
 - A boat with over 250 people on board capsizes in a storm off the coast of Sierra Leone, killing at least 8. (New York Times) (Awareness Times) (Al Jazeera)
 - Supporters of the traditional Kabaka of Buganda, Muwenda Mutebi II, riot in the Ugandan capital Kampala after a move by the government to prevent him from visiting a local area, resulting in several deaths. (BBC) (IOL) (Press TV)
 
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