October 19

SIEV X (19 October 2001) 2001

SIEV X (19 October 2001)

On the night of October 19, 2001, an overcrowded wooden asylum-seeker boat known to Australian authorities as SIEV X foundered in the open waters south of Lombok and Sumbawa while en route to Christmas Island. Hundreds of men, women and children died; a small number were rescued by Indonesian fishing boats. The disaster became a flashpoint in Australia’s contentious post‑Tampa policy era, raising enduring questions about rescue responsibilities, government transparency and the human cost of deterrence. Read more


Black Monday (1987) 1987

Black Monday (1987)

On Monday, October 19, 1987, stock markets around the world plunged in near‑synchrony; the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 508 points, a 22.61 percent one‑day decline. What began as a day of sharp selling in New York quickly became a global cascade, driven by fragile liquidity, computerized trading programs, and a feedback loop of mechanically triggered sales. The crash did not cause a sudden banking collapse or widespread physical harm, but it reshaped market rules, prompted emergency central‑bank action, and left a lasting cautionary lesson about the interaction of technology, leverage, and human panic. Read more


1986 Mozambican Tupolev Tu-134 crash 1986

1986 Mozambican Tupolev Tu-134 crash

On October 19, 1986, a Tupolev Tu-134 carrying Mozambican President Samora Machel and his delegation crashed into a hill near Mbuzini—roughly 70 kilometers west of Maputo—killing all 35 people aboard. The disaster happened against the charged backdrop of apartheid-era southern Africa, produced competing official inquiries, and left a legacy of grief, suspicion, and political change in Mozambique. Read more


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First Battle of Ypres 1914

First Battle of Ypres

The First Battle of Ypres (19 October–22 November 1914) was the climactic struggle in the northern reaches of the Western Front’s 1914 “Race to the Sea.” In a month of grinding attacks, counterattacks and entrenchment across the low ridges and muddy fields around Ypres, British, French and Belgian defenders stopped repeated German attempts to reach the Channel ports, fixed a deadly salient in Flanders, and helped turn mobile warfare into the static trenches that would define the next four years.

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