Iraq war, Indian Ocean tsunami seen as biggest events of 2005 - survey (AFP) Updated: 2005-12-31 09:18
The ongoing bloodshed in Iraq and the devastating Indian Ocean tsunami were
seen as the main global events of 2005, according to a poll.
The survey of nearly 32,500 people in 27 countries also ranked the deadly US
hurricanes and the death of Pope John Paul II as the incidents most likely to be
remembered by history.
"Global citizens see 2005 mainly as a year of natural and man-made
disasters," said Doug Miller, of the Canadian pollsters GlobeScan, which
conducted the research for the BBC World Service.
The poll, published Friday, asked people what historians of the future would
consider to be the most important event of global significance over the past 12
months.
The ongoing violence in Iraq, triggered by the US-led war in March 2003, was
named by 15 percent of those questioned.
Some 43 percent of Iraqis cited the war, in contrast to just nine percent of
people in Britain -- one of the countries that has deployed troops to Iraq.
While the tsunami struck on December 26, last year, it was still considered
the one of the most significant events of 2005, drawing 15 percent of answers.
More than 220,000 people were killed and the lives of millions more were
altered forever by the giant waves, unleashed by one of the world's largest-ever
earthquakes which struck off the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
Respondents in the Asia-Pacific in particular regarded the tsunami as the
most important event. It was named by 57 percent of people polled in Sri Lanka
and 31 percent of Indonesians.
Katrina and Rita, the US hurricanes that devastated the US Gulf Coast in
August and September, came in third, cited by nine percent of respondents
overall.
But the percentage of people in the United States to name the hurricanes --
15 percent -- was less than some other countries. Eighteen percent of
respondents in both Afghanistan and Argentina cited the storms.
In fourth place, came the death of Pope John Paul II on April 2 and the
inauguration of Pope Benedict XVI, attracting six percent of all answers.
The London bombings on July 7 that left 56 people dead, including four
presumed Islamist suicide bombers, was regarded by four percent of people as the
most significant event of the year.
Interestingly, a mere seven percent of respondents in Britain named the
explosions on three subway trains and a bus.
It scored higher in other countries including Ghana, 11 percent, Australia,
eight percent, and Spain, eight percent.
More generally, global warming was seen as the most prominent feature of 2005
by three percent of those surveyed.
The poll found that the grouping of natural disasters in 2005 -- such as
floods, hurricanes and earthquakes -- accounted for 19 percent of all answers.
Steven Krull, director of the Program on International Policy Attitudes,
which was involved in conducting the survey with GlobeScan, noted how similar
people's views were in different parts of the world.
"The extent to which people in different countries perceive the same events
as significant is a sign of how much the world has become globalised," he was
quoted as saying on the BBC's website.
The poll questioned 32,439 people in 27 countries between October, November
and December.
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