< Portal:Current events
Portal:Current events/2017 November 1
November 1, 2017 (Wednesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
- Saudi Arabian-led intervention in Yemen
- A Saudi-led coalition airstrike on a market in Sahar District in Yemen's northern Saada Governorate, which is under Houthi control, kills at least 26 people, according to medics and local officials. (Reuters)
- War in Afghanistan
Arts and culture
- Rock climbing in Australia
- The Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park's board votes unanimously to ban climbing on Uluru, sacred to the Anangu people, in Australia's Northern Territory, from October 2019, due to Indigenous concerns over respect for the sacred site and for the safety of tourists. (Deutsch Welle via USA Today)
- NPR controversies
- Citing "inappropriate behavior", Michael Oreskes resigns from his position as senior vice president of news at NPR after three journalists accuse him of sexual harassment. (CNN)
Law and crime
- 2017 Spanish constitutional crisis
- A Belgian lawyer representing Carles Puigdemont announces his client will not return to Spain to answer charges against him. Spanish prosecutors could order a European Arrest Warrant if Puigdemont fails to appear in court. (BBC)
- Thornton shooting
- A gunman opens fire in a Walmart in Thornton, Colorado, killing three people. (The Telegraph)
Politics and elections
- Japanese general election, 2017
- Shinzō Abe is officially reinstated as Prime Minister of Japan following the election on 22 October 2017. (Reuters)
- 2017 Australian parliamentary eligibility crisis
- President of the Australian Senate, Stephen Parry, announces he will resign, effective 2 November 2017, after confirming he holds dual British-Australian citizenship. (BBC)
- States of emergency in France
- France declares the end of the country's state of emergency which was enforced as a reaction to the November 2015 Paris attacks. The state of emergency gets replaced with a new counterterrorism law signed by President Emmanuel Macron. (The Independent)
- 2017 Westminster sexual scandals
- Michael Fallon resigns as the United Kingdom's Secretary of State for Defence amid controversy over reports he touched a female journalist inappropriately in 2002. (BBC)
Science and technology
- Genetically modified organism
- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reports weed killer dicamba, used in fields with genetically modified crops, has damaged more than 3.6 million acres of normal soybean crops in 25 states this year. (The New York Times)
Sports
- 2017 World Series
- In baseball, the Houston Astros defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers 5–1 in the seventh and deciding game of the World Series. It is the first World Series title for the Astros, who had lost 111 games just four seasons earlier. The Astros' George Springer, who set records for most extra-base hits (8) and total bases (29) in a single World Series, and tied the record for most home runs in a single World Series (5), is named series MVP. (CNN) (CBS Sports)
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