June 11, 2010
(Friday)
- Shanghai International Film Festival:
- From Oscar-winning blockbusters to low-budget art-house and documentary films, the 13th Shanghai International Film Festival screens films for everyone. It will feature a retrospective of films by Woody Allen and John Woo, classic movies from Japan, Canada, Germany, Italy and Ireland, as well as new Chinese cinema. (Shanghai Daily) (SIFF)
- 2010 Kyrgyzstan crisis:
- Riots erupt in the southern city of Osh killing at least 45, and injuring over a hundred others. The violence comes just over two months after violent riots in Bishkek toppled Kurmanbek Bakiyev's government, and only days ahead of a critical constitutional referendum. (News Daily) (CNN) (BBC) (The Wall Street Journal)
- A curfew is imposed and a state of emergency declared in Osh by the interim government. (RIA Novosti) (Aljazeera)
- Mexico – United States relations:
- Univision airs video footage of the U.S. agent who fatally shot a Mexican boy on Monday. (Sky News) (Press TV)
- Mexico asks that the American agent who shot the boy be extradited. (Daily Mail)
- Politics of Japan:
- Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan warns that the nation's economy is on "brink of collapse". (BBC) (The Guardian)
- Shizuka Kamei, minister in charge of postal reform and financial services, quits after three days in protest over Kan's decision to delay a bill related to the proposed postal service privatisation. (The Australian)
- François Bazaramba is sentenced to life imprisonment for his part in the 1994 Rwandan Genocide in Porvoo, Finland's first genocide trial. (Aljazeera) (BBC) (news24.com) (Reuters)
- Israeli police fatally shoot a Palestinian driver who was attempting to run them down; the two policeman and three civilians are injured in the incident. (Jerusalem Post) (The New York Times)
- 40 people are killed and at least four others are wounded in an attack by at least 30 gunmen in Chihuahua, Mexico. (Xinhua) (The AP) (BBC) (Aljazeera) (Toronto Sun)
- At least 20 people die during flash floods of the Little Missouri River through a campground in the Ouachita Mountains near Caddo Gap, Arkansas, west of Little Rock, Arkansas in the United States. (China Daily) (Reuters)
- At least 11 civilians and two US soldiers are killed in southern Afghanistan: 9 of the civilian deaths are in a roadside bomb on a minibus in Kandahar. (Aljazeera)
- Pope Benedict XVI begs for forgiveness from God and from those who have been abused as children by priests. (The Daily Telegraph) (The New York Times) (RTÉ) (Aljazeera)
- A small plane crashes into Round Valley High School in Eagar, Arizona with at least two casualties. (Fox TV Phoenix)
- Researchers use X-ray techniques to discover that Rose of Viterbo died from thrombus in her heart, not tuberculosis as originally thought. (BBC) (The Star) (Fox News)
- New Zealand has a parliamentary expenses scandal, with one MP claiming for pornography. (BBC) (The Scotsman)
- Two motorcyclists, from Austria and New Zealand, are killed in the same Isle of Man TT race. (BBC)
- King George Tupou V proposes the use of nuclear energy in Tonga. (Canadian Business)
- An Israeli parliamentary lobby group submits a bill, supported by 25 politicians, proposing that boycotts of Israel be outlawed. (The Independent)
- Taipei pulls its films from the Shanghai International Film Festival over fears that China would claim them. (AP) (Asiaone)
- Jane Fonda is awarded the Great Medal of Paris by mayor Bertrand Delanoë for her contribution to the city's art and culture during the Paris Cinema Festival. (BBC) (AFP) (NPR)[permanent dead link ] (The Canadian Press)
- 2010 FIFA World Cup:
- The first African edition of the association football tournament begins in South Africa. (Aljazeera)
- Nelson Mandela cancels his much anticipated public appearance at the opening ceremony due to the death of his great-granddaughter on her way home from the opening concert last night. (BBC) (The Guardian) (RTÉ) (The New York Times)
- Technical issues disrupt Al Jazeera Sports's broadcast in the United Arab Emirates and much of the Arab World. (Gulf News) (The National)
- NCAA (U.S. college) conference realignment:
- Boise State University will leave the Western Athletic Conference to join the Mountain West Conference. (ESPN)
- The University of Nebraska will leave the Big 12 Conference and join the Big Ten Conference. (ESPN)
- Astronomers at the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile track the motion of gas giant Beta Pictoris b, the first time an extra-solar planet is tracked in orbit around a young star. (BBC)