Thursday, 3 September 2015

TODAY IN HISTORY: SEPTEMBER 3



September 3 1934
Habib Ali Bourguiba and the leaders of the Neo Destour party in Tunisia were put under house arrest.

September 3 1939: Britain and France declare war on Germany
On this day in 1939, in response to Hitler’s invasion of Poland, Britain and France, both allies of the overrun nation declare war on Germany.
The first casualty of that declaration was not German but the British ocean liner Athenia, which was sunk by a German U-30 submarine that had assumed the liner was armed and belligerent.

There were more than 1,100 passengers on board, 112 of whom lost their lives. Of those, 28 were Americans, but President Roosevelt was unfazed by the tragedy, declaring that no one was to “thoughtlessly or falsely talk of America sending its armies to European fields.” The United States would remain neutral.
As for Britain’s response, it was initially no more than the dropping of anti-Nazi propaganda leaflets—13 tons of them—over Germany. They would begin bombing German ships on September 4, suffering significant losses. They were also working under orders not to harm German civilians. The German military, of course, had no such restrictions. France would begin an offensive against Germany’s western border two weeks later. Their effort was weakened by a narrow 90-mile window leading to the German front, enclosed by the borders of Luxembourg and Belgium—both neutral countries. The Germans mined the passage, stalling the French offensive.

September 3 1960
Julius Kambarage Nyerere became Chief Minister (later to be Prime Minister and then President) when his Tanganyika African National Union (TANU) party won 70 of the 71 seats in an election.

September 3 1987

President Jean-Baptiste Bagaza of Burundi was ousted by military coup, Pierre Buyoya replaced him as the Chairman of the Military Committee for National Salvation.


Source: history.com, africanhistory.about.com

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