March 26, 2008
(Wednesday)
- The Space Shuttle Endeavour lands at Cape Canaveral, Florida in a rare nighttime landing ending a 16-day mission to the International Space Station. (The New York Times)
- Ford Motor Company announces it will sell its British luxury-car brands Jaguar and Land Rover to India's Tata Motors for $2.3 billion. (MarketWatch)
- The United States embassy in Cairo confirms that the crew of a United States Navy-contracted ship killed an Egyptian when it opened fire on a small boat near the Suez Canal. (AFP via Google News)
- 2008 unrest in Tibet:
- The first foreign journalists allowed in Tibet since the outbreak of the unrest arrive in Lhasa. (AP via Google News)[permanent dead link]
- The President of the United States of America George W. Bush calls the President of the People's Republic of China Hu Jintao to raise concerns about events in Tibet. (AP via Fox News)
- Iraq war:
- The death toll from the Battle of Basra (2008) rises to 40 dead and 200 injured in two days of fighting between Shiite militias and the Iraqi military. (UK Press via Google News)[permanent dead link]
- A federal indictment of a former official of Life for Relief and Development claims that Saddam Hussein's Iraqi Intelligence Service paid for a U.S. congressional delegation's trip to the country during the buildup to the war. A spokesman for the Department of Justice said the congressmen on the State Department-approved trip were not aware of this, and that "[n]one of the congressional representatives are accused of any wrongdoing." (CNN)
- The South Korean government decides to vote for a resolution on North Korean human rights violations in the United Nations Human Rights Council. (Chosun Ilbo)
- A 41 km × 2.5 km chunk of ice (102.5 km², see size comparisons) breaks away from the Antarctic Wilkins ice shelf, heralding the disintegration of the remaining 14,000 km2. (BBC News) (CNN)
- A Californian federal judge has ruled that the heirs of Jerry Siegel have a valid claim to a share in the United States copyright which Time Warner holds in the Superman character. (NY Times)