2007 in the United Kingdom
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Events from the year 2007 in the United Kingdom.
Contents |
[edit] Incumbents
- Monarch - HM Queen Elizabeth II
- Prime Minister - Tony Blair, Labour Party (until 27 June), Gordon Brown, Labour
[edit] Events
[edit] January
- 1 January - Central Trains hold the second day of a two day industrial action, affecting many parts of England, especially the East and West Midlands.[1]
- 3 January -
- Celebrity Big Brother 5 launched on Channel 4, with celebrities such as Jermaine Jackson, Dirk Benedict and Leo Sayer.[2]
- 2007 National Express coach crash: A National Express coach from London Heathrow Airport to Aberdeen, Scotland crashes on a slip road between the M4 and the M25, killing two people and injuring thirty-six others.[3]
- 4 January - In response to the above, National Express withdraw all 12 of their double-decker coaches as a precaution.[4]
- 5 January -
- The England cricket team lost the 5th Ashes test in Sydney, Australia by 10 wickets, resulting in a 5-0 series whitewash, the first time this has occurred since the 1920-1921 Ashes Tour.[5]
- Umran Javed, a British Muslim, is found guilty at the Old Bailey, London, of inciting racial hatred at a London rally back in February 2006 protesting against the publication of a cartoon in a Danish newspaper depicting Muhammad (see Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy)[6]
- 7 January -
- Bristol International Airport closes its runway due to concerns by various airlines (including easyJet and BA Connect) over the safety of landing in wet weather. This follows two days of nine airlines refusing to use the runway.[7]
- Laura Pearce becomes the first contestant on Channel 4 show Deal or No Deal to win the top prize of £250,000 since the start of the show on October 31 2005. It took until the 351st attempt for the top prize to be won.[8].
- 9 January - New rules outlawing businesses from discriminating against homosexuals are upheld in the House of Lords, after a challenge by Lord Morrow of the Democratic Unionist Party [9]
- 10 January - Two military helicopters collide in mid-air near Market Drayton, Shropshire, killing one person and injuring three others.[10].
- 10 January–28 January - John Reid facing mounting problems continuing from those of his predecessors including further prisoner escapes especially from open prisons and also absconding of those under Control Orders,[11][12][13][14][15] and missing sex offenders.[16]
- 11 January - In an unexpected move, the Bank of England raises interest rates to 5.25%, an increase of 0.25%. This is the third rise in five months, after a year of stability.[17].
- 16 January - At the 64th Golden Globe Awards, Helen Mirren wins an award for her portrayal of Elizabeth II in The Queen and Sacha Baron Cohen for his role in Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. Other British winners were Hugh Laurie in House and Jeremy Irons in Elizabeth I.[18]
- 17 January -
- It is announced that methamphetamine - otherwise known as crystal meth - is to be reclassified to a Class A drug, to avert widespread use of the drug.[19]
- Protests in India and the UK against the British series of Celebrity Big Brother after Jade Goody, Danielle Lloyd and Jo O'Meara are alleged to be racially abusive to Bollywood star, Shilpa Shetty.
- 18 January - The UK is hit by torrential rain and gale force winds, resulting in the deaths of at least nine people and causing havoc to public transport and power supplies.[20]
- 20 January - The MSC Napoli is deliberately grounded to prevent it sinking, leading to concern about environmental damage to Branscombe beach in Devon.[21].
[edit] February
- 1 February - Defence Secretary Des Browne announces that the UK forces in Southern Afghanistan will be boosted by 800.
- 1 February - Passenger duty for flights from the UK doubles.[22]
- 1 February - Downing Street officials reveal that Tony Blair had been interviewed as a witness by police on 26th January, regarding the Cash-for-honours allegations.
- 3 February - The presence of the H5N1 virus in the avian flu outbreak at the Holton turkey plant in Suffolk is confirmed.[23]
- 11 February - The British Academy Film Awards are held; winners include Helen Mirren for Best Actress.[24]
- 11 February - The England Cricket team defeat Australia to win their first overseas One-Day International trophy since 1997.[25]
- 23 February - Grayrigg rail crash: A Virgin Pendolino train derails in Cumbria, killing one person and injuring dozens more.[26]
[edit] March
- March - Ford launches the third generation of its market-leading Mondeo large family car.
- 1 March - Five British people are kidnapped in Ethiopia.[27]
- 2 March - The Attorney General for England and Wales, Lord Goldsmith, obtains an injunction from the High Court preventing the BBC from broadcasting an item about investigations into the alleged cash for honours political scandal.[28]
- 3 March - Contaminated petrol that was causing cars to fail is traced to a fuel depot in Essex.[29]
- 4 March - Two British soldiers serving with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization International Security Assistance Force force in Afghanistan are killed in Helmand province during clashes with Taliban forces.[30]
- 5 March
- 7 March
- Reform of the House of Lords: In a House of Commons vote a majority of MPs express support for a fully elected House of Lords. A smaller majority support an 80% elected, 20% appointed chamber. Other options with a lower elected component are rejected. The proposals were put forward by Leader of the House of Commons Jack Straw, who describes the votes as "a historic step forward".[33][34]
- The 2007 elections for the Northern Ireland Assembly begin. The election is being conducted using the single transferable vote applied to six seater constituencies, each of which corresponds to a UK parliamentary seat.[35]
- Jonathan Evans is announced as the next Director-General of MI5. Evans is currently Deputy Director-General and will take over in April following the retirement of Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller.[36]
- 9 March - Results from the Northern Ireland Assembly election show the DUP and Sinn Féin making gains, and ensuring that in order for direct rule to cease both parties must agree to cooperate in a powersharing Executive.[37]
- 11 March - The Ariane 5 rocket carrying the new generation Skynet 5 military satellite system is launched successfully from Kourou in French Guiana at 22:03 GMT.[38]
- 12 March - Nigel Griffiths resigns as the Deputy Leader of the House of Commons over the proposed expansion of the Trident missile program.[39]
- 12 March - The BBC's correspondent in the Gaza Strip, Alan Johnston, who is the only foreign reporter from a major media organisation based in Gaza, is kidnapped. All the main Palestinian militant groups have called for his release.[40]
- 13 March
- Five British Embassy workers kidnapped in Ethiopia twelve days ago have been set free in neighbouring Eritrea.[41]
- A draft Climate Change Bill is published in the United Kingdom, outlining a framework for achieving a mandatory 60% cut in carbon emissions by 2050.[42]
- 14 March - The Government wins support of the House of Commons to update the Trident missile system. There was a significant revolt within the Labour Party with two PPSs Stephen Pound and Chris Ruane resigning.[43]
- 16 March - coroner Andrew Walker finds that the death of soldier Matty Hull in the 190th Fighter Squadron, Blues and Royals "friendly fire" incident was "unlawful and criminal".[44] The U.S. Department of State rejects this ruling. [45]
- 17 March - Cheesy pop four piece Scooch controversially win the right to represent the United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest 2007 in Helsinki, Finland. The Making Your Mind Up selection show was marred by the fact that co-host Terry Wogan announced French songstress Cyndi Almouzni as the winner, whereas Fearne Cotton announced Scooch as winning. The final results showed Scooch having received 53% compared to Cyndi's 47%.
- 21 March
- Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown announces his 2007 Budget. Major points include a cut in the basic income tax rate from 22p to 20p, the abolition of the lower 10p income tax rate, and a 2p cut in corporation tax.[46]
- Two British sailors die and a third is injured as a result of an accident on the nuclear submarine HMS Tireless in the Arctic Ocean.[47]
- 23 March - 15 Royal Navy servicemen operating in Iraqi waters are seized by Iranian authorities after inspecting a ship suspected of smuggling. [48]
- 26 March - Northern Ireland Peace Process: Members of the Democratic Unionist Party and Sinn Féin, led by Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams, meet face-to face for the first time, and agree a timetable for implementing the St Andrews Agreement.[49]
- 30 March - Network Rail (the replacement for Railtrack) is fined £4 million for health and safety breaches leading to the Ladbroke Grove rail crash, in which 31 people died.[50]
[edit] April
- 2 April - a smoking ban comes into effect in all public places in Wales.[51]
- 4 April
- President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announces that the 15 British soldiers held captive in Iran are to be freed as a "gift" to Britain.
- Violence erupts during a UEFA Champions League game between Manchester United and AS Roma.[52]
- 5 April - Four British soldiers are killed in a bomb blast near the Iraqi city of Basra.[53]
- 6 April - Beginning of the 2007/08 Financial Year.
- 12 April - The anchor handling tug supply vessel Bourbon Dolphin capsizes in the North Sea. Three people are dead and four are missing.[54]
- 15 April - Two United Kingdom military helicopters collide near the town of Taji near Baghdad killing two soldiers.[55]
- 17 April - Inflation at an annual rate of 3% falls outside government target range causing for the first time, the Governor of the Bank of England to have to write a letter to the Chancellor of the Exchequer as required by Monetary Policy Committee rules, explaining the reasons for this.[56]
- 24 April - British anti-terrorism police arrest five people in London and one in Luton for alleged breaches of the Terrorism Act.[57]
- 28 April - An earthquake measuring 4.3 on the richter scale strikes in Kent, injuring one and causing damage to buildings.
[edit] May
- 3 May - Scottish Parliament and National Assembly for Wales general elections held; and local council elections in Scotland and parts of England.
- 8 May - Formation of the power sharing executive in the Northern Ireland Assembly.[58]
- 9 May - The Ministry of Justice comes into existence in the United Kingdom, reorganized from the Department for Constitutional Affairs and taking over some responsibilities from the Home Office.[59]
- 10 May - Tony Blair asks Labour's National Executive Committee to seek a new party leader and announces he will step down as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on 27 June.
- 10 May and 12 May - In Eurovision Song Contest, the UK entry comes joint second last in the final.[60]
- 16 May
- Alex Salmond is elected First Minister of Scotland in the Scottish Parliament, the first person from the Scottish National Party to hold the post. Supported by the Scottish Green Party, his party will form a minority administration.[61]
- The Ministry of Defence announces that HRH Prince Harry will not be deployed to Iraq as originally planned, due to the security risks to both himself and his regiment the Blues and Royals.[62]
- 23 May - The Government announce a carbon emissions trading scheme, the Carbon Reduction Commitment, that will apply to hotel chains, supermarkets, banks, and other large organisations.[63]
- 24 May - Jenny Bailey becomes the first transsexual mayor in the United Kingdom.
- 28 May - The Foreign Office submits a formal request to the Russian Government for the extradition of ex-KGB agent Andrei Lugovoi to face charges over the murder of his former colleague Alexander Litvinenko in London.[64]
- 29 May - The Longbridge car factory in Birmingham re-opens, two years after the bankruptcy of MG Rover. The re-opened factory is a scaled down operation which will initially just produce the MG TF sports car, though there are plans by Chinese owners Nanjing Automobile to build other cars there in the future.
- 30 May - A fire at a Magnox nuclear power station in Oldbury, South Gloucestershire, forces its indefinite closure. British Nuclear Group announces that the fire has not damaged the reactor and was in a "non-nuclear" area.[65]
[edit] June
- 13 June - Queen Elizabeth II awards Sir Tim Berners-Lee the Order of Merit for his pioneering work on the world wide web.[66] Salman Rushdie receives a knighthood sparking protests in Iran and Pakistan.[67][68]
- 24 June - At Special Labour Party conference, Gordon Brown becomes leader of the party and Harriet Harman is elected Deputy Leader.[69]
- 27 June - Tony Blair steps down as Prime Minister and is succeeded by Gordon Brown.[70]Blair becomes an envoy to the Middle East on behalf of the "Quartet" of the United Nations, United States, European Union and Russia.[71]
- 28 June - Gordon Brown announces his new cabinet. Jacqui Smith becomes the first female Home Secretary.[72]
- June 29- 2 car bombs found in central London and defused before they can explode
- June 30- 2007 Glasgow International Airport attack
[edit] July
- 1 July
- The Smoking ban begins in England, meaning that all of the United Kingdom is now covered by a ban on smoking in virtually all enclosed public places.[51]
- Concert for Diana held in memorial of Diana, Princess of Wales.
- 2 July
- Michael Mullen, 21, of Leeds, is sentenced to life imprisonment for the rape and murder of his two-year-old niece Casey Leigh Mullen, who died at her home in the city on 11 February this year. The trial judge recommends that Mullen should serve a minimum of 35 years before being considered for parole.
- Demolition work begins on the historic HP Sauce factory in Birmingham, which closed in May with the loss of 125 jobs and the end of more than 100 years of manufacturing when the production facility was transferred to Holland.
- July 6 - July 8 The 2007 British Grand Prix is held at the Silverstone Circuit.
- July 22
- Floods cause chaos through wide areas of Britain, especially the counties of Gloucestershire, Warwickshire, Worcestershire and Oxfordshire, leaving hundreds homeless and thousands of vehicles stranded on major roads.
[edit] August
- 1 August - Scouting's Sunrise to celebrate 100 years of Scouting worldwide and mark the beginning of the next century.
- 22 August - 11-year-old Rhys Jones is shot dead in Croxteth, Liverpool. His death is believed to have been a random shooting carried out by a local gang.
- 31 August - 10th Anniversary of the death of Princess Diana.
[edit] September
- 1 September - Eurovision Dance Contest to be held in London.
- 6 September - The 10th Anniversary of the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales. Commemorations will take place throughout the United Kingdom.
- 6 September - Murder victim Rhys Jones is buried following a funeral service at Liverpool Anglican Cathedral.
- 10 September - Television entertainer Michael Barrymore is told that he will not face charges in connection with the death of Stuart Lubbock, the man who was found dead in a swimming pool at his house more than six years ago.
[edit] October
- 15 October - Sir Menzies Campbell resigns as leader of the British Liberal Democrats.
- 20 October - South Africa defeats England at the Rugby World Cup 2007 final in Stade de France, Paris.
[edit] November
- 1 November - London's Metropolitan Police Service is found guilty of endangering the public following the fatal shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes, an innocent Brazilian who officers mistook for a suicide bomber.
- 2 November - Four firefighters feared dead in the 2007 Atherstone fire disaster.
- 14 November - High Speed 1 from London to the Channel Tunnel is opened to passengers.
- 20 November - 2007 UK child benefit data scandal: HM Revenue and Customs admits that it has misplaces two computer discs which contained the records of child benefit claimants data, including bank details and National Insurance numbers, leaving up to 7.25 million households susceptible to identity theft.
- 26 November - Donorgate: Labour Party official Peter Watt resigns over loans received by the party from David Abrahams.[73]
[edit] December
- 18 December - Nick Clegg wins the Liberal Democrats leadership election.
- 24 December - Freddie Fuller, the boyfriend of Sugababes star Amelle Berrabah,is stabbed outside the Queen Victoria pub in Aldershot, Hampshire but survives.
[edit] Births
[edit] Deaths
- 3 January - Sir Cecil Walker, 82, Ulster Unionist Member of Parliament for North Belfast (1983–2001), heart attack. (b. 1924)[74]
- 4 January - Grenfell (Gren) Jones, 72, newspaper cartoonist. (b. 1934)[75]
- 7 January - Magnus Magnusson, 77, journalist, broadcaster and host of BBC quiz show Mastermind from 1972 to 1997, pancreatic cancer. (b. 1929)[76]
- 8 January -
- David Ervine, 53, leader of the Progressive Unionist Party, heart attack leading to stroke and brain haemorrhage. (b. 1953).[77]
- Francis Cockfield, Baron Cockfield, 90, politician and European Commissioner, cause of death unknown (b. 1916)[78]
- 27 January - Paul Channon, Baron Kelvedon, Member of Parliament, (b. 1935)[79]
- 30 January - Griffith Jones, actor (b. 1910)
- 9 February - Ian Richardson, actor (b. 1934)
- 16 February - Sheridan Morley, theatre critic (b. 1941)
- 4 March - Ian Wooldridge, sports journalist (b. 1932)
- 7 March - Lady Thorneycroft, philanthropist (b. 1914)
- 8 March - John Inman, actor (b. 1935)
- 14 March - Tommy Cavanagh, footballer and football manager (b. 1928)
- 14 March - Gareth Hunt, actor (b. 1942)
- 16 March - Sally Clark, lawyer and victim of a miscarriage of justice (b. 1964)
- 16 March - Sir Arthur Marshall, aviation pioneer and businessman (b. 1903)
- 17 March - Freddie Francis, cinematographer and film director (b. 1917)
- 18 March - Bob Woolmer, cricketer and cricket coach (b. 1948)
- 28 March - Sir Thomas Hetherington, barrister (b. 1926)
- 30 March - Fay Coyle, footballer (b. 1933)
- 30 March - Michael Dibdin, crime writer (b. 1947)
- 24 April - Alan Ball, footballer and football manager (b. 1945)
- 18 June - Bernard Manning, comedian (b. 1930)
- 29 July - Mike Reid, comedian and actor (b. 1940)
- 31 July - R. D. Wingfield, novelist and radio dramatist (b.1928).
- 10 September - Anita Roddick, environmentalist, political campaigner, businesswoman (Founder of The Body Shop) (b. 1942)]].
- 11 September - Ian Porterfield, footballer and football manager (b. 1946)
- 22 November - Verity Lambert, television producer (born 1935)
- 29 December - Phil O'Donnell, footballer (born 1972)
[edit] References
- ^ Train strike runs into second day, BBC News
- ^ Big Brother launch watched by 7m, BBC News
- ^ Two dead after M-way coach crash, BBC News
- ^ Coach crash firm withdraw buses, BBC News
- ^ Australia complete series whitewash, BBC Sport
- ^ Cartoons protester found guilty, BBC News
- ^ Bristol runway shut in safety row, BBC News
- ^ First Deal or No Deal jackpot won, BBC News
- ^ Gay rights laws challenge fails, BBC News
- ^ One dead as helicopters collide, BBC News
- ^ Reid seeks to reassure. BBC News (2007-01-10).
- ^ Reid hits back in crime files row. BBC News (2007-01-12).
- ^ Missing suspect a threat - Tories. BBC News (2007-01-10).
- ^ Cameron attacks Blair on records. BBC News (2007-01-17).
- ^ Reid hits back in sentencing row. BBC News (2007-01-26).
- ^ Convicted sex offenders 'missing'. BBC News (2007-01-28).
- ^ Shock as UK rates rise to 5.25%, BBC News
- ^ Dame Helen is Queen of the Globes, BBC News
- ^ Crystal meth made class A drug, BBC News
- ^ Nine dead as UK struck by storms, BBC News
- ^ "Stricken cargo ship run aground", BBC News
- ^ "Air tax increase comes into force" BBC News
- ^ "Timeline: Bird flu in the UK", BBC News
- ^ "Mirren adds Bafta to awards haul"
- ^ "Commonwealth Bank Series", BBC Sport
- ^ One dead in Cumbria train crash (BBC)
- ^ "Eritrea denies kidnap accusation", BBC News
- ^ "Attorney general halts BBC probe", BBC News)
- ^ "Rogue fuel traced to depot tanks", BBC News
- ^ "UK soldiers killed in Afghanistan", BBC News
- ^ Wikinews
- ^ "Kidnapped Britons' vehicles found", BBC News
- ^ "MPs back all-elected Lords plan", BBC News
- ^ "MPs back fully elected House of Lords", Telegraph
- ^ "Northern Ireland politics ", BBC News
- ^ "MI5 deputy to take over as head", BBC News
- ^ "Time 'critical' for NI devolution", BBC News
- ^ "British Skynet satellite launched", BBC News
- ^ "Griffiths quits over Trident", The Scotsman
- ^ "Fears for BBC Gaza correspondent", BBC News
- ^ "Five kidnapped Britons freed in Eritrea", The Times
- ^ "'Binding' carbon targets proposed", BBC News
- ^ "Labour rebels vote against Blair on Trident", UK Telegraph
- ^ "'Friendly fire' killing unlawful", BBC News
- ^ "US rejects ruling on UK soldier", BBC News
- ^ "Brown cuts basic tax rate by 2p", BBC News
- ^ "Two sailors killed on submarine", BBC News
- ^ "UK sailors captured at gunpoint", BBC News
- ^ "NI deal struck in historic talks", BBC News
- ^ "Network Rail fined £4m for Paddington crash", Guardian
- ^ a b England smoke ban to start 1 July, BBC News
- ^ "Fans in hospital after violence", BBC News
- ^ "Four UK soldiers killed in Iraq", BBC News
- ^ "Three dead after vessel capsizes", BBC News
- ^ "Dozens dead, wounded in bombings across Iraq" AP/CNN
- ^ Gabriel Rozenberg, Economics Reporter (2007-04-18). Letter to Brown as inflation passes 3%. the Times.
- ^ "Anti-terror raids net 6 suspects", CNN
- ^ No McGuinness handshake - Paisley. BBC News.
- ^ "Blair defends Home Office split", BBC News
- ^ Eurovision Song Contest 2007 Final Scoreboard. European Broadcasting Union (eurovision.tv) (2007-05-12). Retrieved on 2007-05-13.
- ^ "Salmond elected as first minister", BBC News
- ^ "Prince Harry will not go to Iraq", BBC News
- ^ Action in the UK - Carbon Reduction Commitment, DEFRA
- ^ "UK requests Lugovoi extradition", BBC News
- ^ "Fire closes nuclear power station", BBC News
- ^ "Web inventor gets Queen's honour", BBC News
- ^ "Iran condemns Rushdie knighthood", BBC News
- ^ "Rushdie title 'may spark attacks'", BBC News
- ^ "Harman wins deputy leader contest", BBC News
- ^ "Brown is UK's new prime minister", BBC News
- ^ "Blair becomes Middle East envoy", BBC News
- ^ "Brown unveils huge Cabinet revamp"
- ^ "Labour donations timeline", BBC News. Retrieved on 2007-12-23.
- ^ Former MP Cecil Walker dies at 81, BBC News
- ^ Iconic newspaper cartoonist dies, BBC News
- ^ Obituary: Magnus Magnusson, BBC News
- ^ PUP's Ervine has died in hospital, BBC News
- ^ Obituary in The Guardian
- ^ Lord Kelvedon's obituary in the Telegraph

