< Portal:Current events
May 19, 2015 (Tuesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
Business and economy
- The inflation rate in the United Kingdom goes to -0.1 in April, marking the first time since 1960 it has been negative. (BBC)
- Takata Corporation doubles the size of its recall of faulty airbags in the United States with 34 million vehicles to be recalled. (Wall Street Journal)
- The Los Angeles City Council votes to increase the minimum wage in the American city of Los Angeles, California, to $15 an hour by 2020. (New York Times)
Disasters and accidents
- More than 20 garment workers are killed after a bus that they were travelling to work in collides with a tourist bus in Cambodia's Svay Rieng Province. (Cambodia Daily)
- The death toll from landslides in the Colombian town of Salgar rises to 56 with scores missing. (Agencies via Al Jazeera)
- Germanwings Flight 9525
- French prosecutors say the passengers onboard the Germanwings flight that crashed in southern France have all been identified, and their bodies can be returned home to their families. (Reuters via Daily Mail)
- At least 16 people are killed and scores are injured in a residential building fire in Baku, Azerbaijan. (Reuters UK)
- Norwegian Cruise Line's Norwegian Dawn ran aground three miles off Bermuda when departing for a return trip to Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.. (Boston Herald) (Irish Independent)
International relations
- Prince Charles becomes the first member of the British Royal Family to meet with Gerry Adams, the President of Sinn Féin, during a two-day visit to Ireland. (AFP via ABC News)
Law and crime
- Former nurse Victorino Chua has been found guilty of murder and poisoning patients at Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport, Greater Manchester, U.K., and sentenced to 35 years in jail. (BBC)
- Police arrest more than 50 people following a probe into match fixing in Italian football. (BBC)
- Mohawk Industries and five other companies agree to pay $275.5 million to settle lawsuits related to alleged price fixing of polyurethane foam. (Reuters)
Politics and elections
- The President of Burundi Pierre Nkurunziza says that the government will proceed with a presidential election despite protests and a recent failed coup. (BBC)
- The United States Congress sends a human trafficking bill to President Barack Obama for signature. (Washington Times)
Sports
- Deflategate
- In American football, Robert Kraft, the owner of the New England Patriots, says that team will not appeal the National Football League ruling. (ESPN)
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