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2021

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2021 by topic:
Arts
Animation (Anime) – ArchitectureComicsFilm (Horror, Science fiction) – Home videoLiterature (Poetry) – Music (Classical, Country, Hip hop, Jazz, Latin, Metal, Rock, UK, US) – Radio – – Television (Italy, UK, Scotland, US) – Video games
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2021 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar2021
MMXXI
Ab urbe condita2774
Armenian calendar1470
ԹՎ ՌՆՀ
Assyrian calendar6771
Bahá'í calendar177–178
Balinese saka calendar1942–1943
Bengali calendar1428
Berber calendar2971
British Regnal year69 Eliz. 2 – 70 Eliz. 2
Buddhist calendar2565
Burmese calendar1383
Byzantine calendar7529–7530
Chinese calendar庚子(Metal Rat)
4717 or 4657
    — to —
辛丑年 (Metal Ox)
4718 or 4658
Coptic calendar1737–1738
Discordian calendar3187
Ethiopian calendar2013–2014
Hebrew calendar5781–5782
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat2077–2078
 - Shaka Samvat1942–1943
 - Kali Yuga5121–5122
Holocene calendar12021
Igbo calendar1021–1022
Iranian calendar1399–1400
Islamic calendar1442–1443
Japanese calendarReiwa 3
(令和3年)
Javanese calendar1954–1955
Juche calendar110
Julian calendarGregorian minus 13 days
Korean calendar4354
Minguo calendarROC 110
民國110年
Nanakshahi calendar553
Thai solar calendar2564
Tibetan calendar阳金鼠年
(male Iron-Rat)
2147 or 1766 or 994
    — to —
阴金牛年
(female Iron-Ox)
2148 or 1767 or 995
Unix time1609459200 – 1640995199

2021 (MMXXI) is the current year, and is a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2021st year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 21st year of the 3rd millennium, the 21st year of the 21st century, and the 2nd year of the 2020s decade.

2021 is hosting most major events that were originally scheduled for 2020, including the Eurovision Song Contest, the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference, and Expo 2020, along with many sporting events, including UEFA Euro 2020, the 2020 Summer Olympics and Paralympics, and the 2021 Copa América; events that were postponed or cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

The United Nations declared 2021 as the International Year of Peace and Trust,[2] the International Year of Creative Economy for Sustainable Development,[3] the International Year of Fruits and Vegetables,[4] and the International Year for the Elimination of Child Labour.[5] The Catholic Church has proclaimed 2021 as the Year of Saint Joseph.[6]

Events

January

  • January 1 – The African Continental Free Trade Area comes into effect.[7]
  • January 4
    • A British judge blocks the extradition of Julian Assange to the United States, while Mexico offers him political asylum.[8]
    • The border between Qatar and Saudi Arabia reopens.[9]
  • January 6 – Supporters of President Donald Trump attack the United States Capitol, disrupting certification of the 2020 presidential election and forcing Congress to evacuate. Five people died during the riot, including a police officer and a woman who is shot and killed inside the Capitol building.[10] The event is classified as a domestic terrorist attack and drew international condemnation.[11]
  • January 10Kim Jong-un is elected as the General Secretary of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea, inheriting the title from his father Kim Jong-il, who died in 2011.[12]
  • January 13 – In Lyon, France, the first transplant of both arms and shoulders is performed on an Icelandic patient at the Édouard Herriot Hospital.[13]
  • January 14 – The 2021 Ugandan general election is held.[14][15][16]
  • January 15
    • The Lao People's Revolutionary Party elects Thongloun Sisoulith as its new General Secretary, replacing retiring chief Bounnhang Vorachith. Sisoulith is elected for a five-year term as top leader in Laos.[17]
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The global death toll from COVID-19 passes 2 million.[18]
  • January 20Joe Biden is inaugurated as the 46th President of the United States, becoming the oldest individual to hold the office.[19]
  • January 22 – The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, the first legally binding international agreement to comprehensively prohibit nuclear weapons, comes into effect.[20]
  • January 242021 Portuguese presidential election: Incumbent president Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa is reelected.[21]
  • January 26 – COVID-19 pandemic: The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases exceeds 100 million worldwide.[22]
  • January 29 – COVID-19 pandemic: The European Union invokes Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol following a row over COVID-19 vaccine supplies before reversing the decision.[23]
  • January 31Nguyễn Phú Trọng is re-elected for a third five-year term as the General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam.[24]

February

  • February 1
    • A coup d'état in Myanmar removes Aung San Suu Kyi from power and restores military rule leading to widespread demonstrations across the country.[25][26][27]
    • Kosovo officially establishes diplomatic ties with Israel and announces plans to open an embassy in Jerusalem.[28]
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The number of vaccinations administered worldwide exceeds 100 million.[29][30]
  • February 3Canada becomes the first country to designate the Proud Boys as a terrorist organisation.[31]
  • February 4 – President Joe Biden announces that the United States will cease providing weapons to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for use in the Yemeni Civil War.[32]
  • February 9
    • COVID-19 pandemic: A joint WHOChina investigation into the source of the outbreak concludes. Investigators deem a Wuhan laboratory leak to be "extremely unlikely", with a "natural reservoir" in bats being a more likely origin.[33]
    • The UAE's uncrewed Hope spacecraft becomes the first Arabian mission to successfully enter orbit around Mars.[34]
  • February 1317 – A major winter storm kills at least 136 people and causes over 9.9 million power outages in the U.S.[35]
  • February 18NASA's Mars 2020 mission (containing the Perseverance rover and Ingenuity helicopter drone) lands on Mars at Jezero Crater, after seven months of travel.[36]
  • February 19 – The United States officially rejoins the Paris Agreement, 107 days after leaving.[37]
  • February 202020–21 H5N8 outbreak: 7 people test positive for H5N8 bird flu at a poultry farm in southern Russia, becoming the first known human cases.[38]
  • February 22
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The United States becomes the first country to surpass 500,000 deaths from the virus.[39]
    • Luca Attanasio, the Italian Ambassador to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is murdered near Goma.[40]
  • February 24 – COVID-19 pandemic: Ghana becomes the first country to receive vaccines through the COVAX vaccine-sharing initiative.[41]
  • February 25
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The global death toll from COVID-19 surpasses 2.5 million.[42]
    • The Armenian military calls for prime minister Nikol Pashinyan to resign. Pashinyan accuses the military of attempting a coup d'état.[43][44]

March

  • March 5 – COVID-19 pandemic: Moldova becomes the first country in Europe to receive vaccines through COVAX.[45]
  • March 6Pope Francis meets with Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in Najaf, Iraq. It is the first ever meeting between a pope and a grand ayatollah.[46]
  • March 7Switzerland becomes the seventh European nation to ban the wearing of the burqa in public, joining Austria, Denmark, France, Belgium, Latvia, and Bulgaria.[47][48]
  • March 17 – The Dutch general elections for the House of Representatives of the Netherlands take place.[49]
  • March 19North Korea severs diplomatic ties with Malaysia due to its citizens being extradited to the United States to face money-laundering charges. Malaysian authorities order North Korean officials to leave the country in 48 hours.[50]
  • March 20Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announces his country's withdrawal from the Istanbul Convention, the first country to do so.[51]
  • March 21Clashes in Apure between Colombian FARC dissidents and the Venezuelan Armed Forces cause at least eight casualties, as well as displacing 4,000 Venezuelans.[52][53]
  • March 23
    • The Israeli general elections take place, the fourth Knesset election in two years.[54]
    • Ever Given, one of the largest container ships in the world, runs aground and obstructs the Suez Canal, disrupting global trade.[55] The ship is freed on March 29.[56]
  • March 25COVID-19 pandemic: The number of vaccinations administered worldwide exceeds 500 million.[57]

April

  • April 2Russia warns NATO against sending any troops to aid Ukraine, amid reports of a large Russian military build-up on its borders.[58]
  • April 4
  • April 9Roscosmos launches the Soyuz MS-18 mission, carrying three Expedition 65 crewmembers to the International Space Station.[61]
  • April 11
    • Peru holds a general election.[62][63]
    • Iran accuses Israel of "nuclear terrorism" and vows revenge after a large explosion destroys the internal power system of the Natanz uranium enrichment plant.[64]
    • Hideki Matsuyama wins the 2021 Masters Tournament, becoming the first man from Japan to win a major golf championship.[65]
  • April 13
    • Japan's government approves the dumping of radioactive water of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant into the Pacific Ocean over the course of 30 years, with full support of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The decision is opposed by China, South Korea, and Taiwan.[66]
    • The Janssen COVID-19 vaccine is paused over causing rare blood clots.[67]
  • April 15 – Scientists announce they successfully injected human stem cells into the embryos of monkeys, creating chimera-embryos.[68]
  • April 17
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The global death toll from COVID-19 surpasses 3 million.[69]
    • The Czech government concludes that the Russian GRU was responsible for the blast of two ammo warehouses in Vrbětice in 2014. 18 Russian diplomats and alleged spies are subsequently expelled.[70]
    • The Soyuz MS-17 mission concludes, returning three crewmembers of Expedition 64 to Earth from the International Space Station.[71]
  • April 18
    • Twelve football clubs, including three from La Liga and leading clubs from the Premier League and Serie A, agree to join a new breakaway European Super League, prompting international condemnation.[72] Two days later, following major protests from supporters, other clubs and politicians, Manchester City withdraw from the league; this prompts all the remaining Premier League clubs and three others to do the same.[73]
    • The 2021 Cape Verdean parliamentary election takes place.[74]
  • April 19
    • NASA's Ingenuity helicopter, part of the Mars 2020 mission, performs the first powered flight on another planet in history.[75][76]
    • Raúl Castro resigns as First Secretary of the Cuban Communist Party, ending more than 62 years of rule by the Castro brothers in Cuba.[77]
  • April 20Idriss Déby, President of Chad, is killed in clashes with rebel forces after 30 years in office. The constitution is suspended and a Transitional Military Council is established to govern the country for 18 months.[78]
  • April 21COVID-19 pandemic: With global case numbers approaching a second peak, India reports 315,000 infections within 24 hours, the highest one-day tally recorded anywhere in the world to date.[79]
  • April 22 – World leaders mark Earth Day by hosting a virtual summit on climate change, during which more ambitious targets for greenhouse gas emission reductions are proposed, including a 40% cut by 2030 for the United States.[80]
  • April 23
    • SpaceX launches the Crew-2 mission, carrying four crew members of Expedition 65 and 66 to the International Space Station aboard Crew Dragon Endeavour.[81]
    • UEFA announces that due to a lack of guarantees regarding spectators caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland would be removed as a tournament host for the UEFA Euro 2020.[82]
  • April 24
    • Following an international search and rescue effort, the Indonesian navy reports the sinking of KRI Nanggala with 53 crew members, the largest loss of life aboard a submarine since 2003.[83]
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The number of vaccinations administered worldwide exceeds 1 billion. Half of these doses have been administered in just three countries (the United States, China and India).[84]
  • April 25Albania holds parliamentary elections.[85][86][87]
  • April 28
    • At least 55 people are killed and nearly 50,000 more are displaced in one of the most serious clashes in Central Asia following border disputes between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.[88]
    • The European Union approves the EU–UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement, governing the relationship between the EU and UK after Brexit.[89]
    • Protestors rally in major Colombian cities against increased taxes and healthcare reforms proposed by President Iván Duque Márquez, resulting in police violence and the deaths of dozens of protestors, which is condemned by the United Nations and Human Rights Watch.[90][91]
  • April 29
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases exceeds 150 million worldwide.[92]
    • The China National Space Administration launches the first module of its Tiangong space station, named Tianhe, beginning a two-year effort to build the station in orbit.[93]
  • April 30 – In Israel, 45 people are killed and another 150 injured in a crowd crush at a religious festival on Mount Meron.[94]

May

  • May 2 – The SpaceX Crew-1 mission ends, returning four crew members of Expedition 64 and 65 to Earth from the International Space Station aboard Crew Dragon Resilience.[95]
  • May 5SpaceX successfully flies, lands, and recovers a Starship prototype for the first time, after four unsuccessful previous attempts.[96][97]
  • May 7 – COVID-19 pandemic: The World Health Organization gives emergency use listing to the Sinopharm BBIBP-CorV COVID-19 vaccine, the first non–Western vaccine to be authorized.[98]
  • May 112021 Israel–Palestine crisis: Israel hits the Gaza Strip with airstrikes as Hamas increases rocket fire.[99] This occurred after Israel began displacing Palestinians in the Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood of East Jerusalem.[100]
  • May 14 – The China National Space Administration lands its Zhurong rover at Utopia Planitia on Mars, making China the fourth country to land a spacecraft on the planet and only the second to land a rover.[101][102]
  • May 15 – Fighting between Israeli forces and Palestinian militants continues to escalate, as the death toll exceeds 150. An Israeli airstrike destroys a high-rise office building in Gaza occupied by Associated Press, Al Jazeera, and other media outlets.[103]
  • May 17Discovery, Inc. agrees to buy media conglomerate WarnerMedia and all of its subsidiaries, from AT&T for US$43 billion. The merger is set to be complete the following year.[104]
  • May 1822 – The Eurovision Song Contest 2021 is held in Rotterdam, Netherlands, after the cancellation of the 2020 contest due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[105][106] The 2021 contest is won by Italian entrants Måneskin with the song "Zitti e buoni".[107]
  • May 20 – Following international pressure, and nearly 250 deaths, Israel agrees to a ceasefire deal to end the conflict with Gaza militants, effective the next day at 2:00 AM local time.[108]
  • May 23Ryanair Flight 4978 is forced to land by Belarusian authorities to detain dissident journalist Roman Protasevich.[109]
  • May 24 – A coup d'état in Mali removes interim President Bah Ndaw and the acting Prime Minister, Moctar Ouane, from power and restores military rule leading to the country being suspended from the Economic Community of West African States and the African Union, as well as France suspending its military operations in the country.[110][111]
  • May 26
    • Shell becomes the first company to be legally mandated to align its carbon emissions with the Paris climate accord, following a landmark court ruling in the Netherlands.[112]
    • The 2021 Syrian presidential election is held.[113]
  • May 29Chelsea beats fellow English club Manchester City in the final 1–0 to win the UEFA Champions League for the second time.[114]

June

  • June 1COVID-19 pandemic: The World Health Organization gives emergency use listing to the Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine, the second non–Western vaccine to be authorized.[115]
  • June 2 – The 2021 Israeli presidential election is held, and won by Isaac Herzog.[116][117] In order to remove Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from power, Naftali Bennett agrees to form a coalition with the Israeli opposition as a rotation government that will come to take effect after eleven days.[118]
  • June 5 – The G7 agrees on a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15% intended to prevent tax avoidance by some of the world's biggest multinationals.[119]
  • June 7 – The Juno spacecraft performs its only flyby of Jupiter's moon Ganymede, the first flyby of the moon by any spacecraft in over 20 years.[120][121]
  • June 9
  • June 10 – An annular solar eclipse is visible from parts of the Northeast United States, Canada, Greenland, the North Pole, and the Russian Far East.[126]
  • June 11July 11 – The UEFA Euro 2020, hosted by 11 different countries, is held,[127] and is won by Italy.[128]
  • June 11June 13 – World leaders meet at the 47th G7 summit, hosted by the United Kingdom, with topics of discussion including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, and the corporate taxation of multinationals.[129]
  • June 13July 10 – The 2021 Copa América, hosted behind closed doors by Brazil, is held,[130] and is won by Argentina.[131]
  • June 13Benjamin Netanyahu, the longest-serving prime minister of Israel, is voted out of office; Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid are sworn in as Prime Minister of Israel and as Alternate Prime Minister of Israel, respectively.[132]
  • June 14COVID-19 pandemic: Novavax announces 90.4% overall efficacy in its Phase 3 U.S. and Mexico trial.[133]
  • June 16 – COVID-19 pandemic: CureVac announces an overall efficacy of just 47% of their vaccines based on interim analysis of Phase III clinical trials, lower than similar mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna.[134]
  • June 17 – The China National Space Administration sends its first three astronauts to occupy the Tiangong Space Station, the country's first space station.[135]
  • June 20
    • COVID-19 pandemic: Brazil becomes the second country to surpass half a million deaths from the virus.[136]
    • 2021 Armenian parliamentary election: Acting PM Nikol Pashinyan wins the country's snap election, with his Civil Contract party gaining 54% of the vote.[137]
  • June 232021 ICC World Test Championship Final: New Zealand wins the 2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship.[138]
  • June 24Surfside condominium collapse: A portion of the Champlain South Towers condominium building collapses in Surfside, Florida, leaving 98 people dead.[139][140][141] One survivor was pulled from the wreckage while 35 others were evacuated from the uncollapsed section of the building.[142]
  • June 28Tigray War: The Tigray Defense Force seizes the Tigrayan capital Mekelle shortly after the Ethiopian government declares a ceasefire.[143]
  • June 29 – COVID-19 pandemic: The number of vaccinations administered worldwide exceeds 3 billion.[144]

July

  • July 3 – Over 130 wildfires, fuelled by lightning strikes, burn through Western Canada following a record-breaking heatwave in North America that results in over 600 deaths.[145][146][147][148]
  • July 4Liu Boming and Tang Hongbo conduct the first spacewalk based off the Tiangong Space Station.[149]
  • July 5 – More than 1,000 Afghan soldiers flee to neighbouring Tajikistan after clashing with Taliban militants.[150]
  • July 7Assassination of Jovenel Moïse: Haitian President Jovenel Moïse is shot to death at 1:00 am local time in his home. First Lady Martine Moïse is injured and hospitalized.[151]
  • July 8COVID-19 pandemic: The number of deaths from COVID-19 surpasses 4 million.[152]
  • July 10August 1 – The 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup is held in, and is won by, the United States.[153][154]
  • July 11
    • Thousands of Cubans, most of them young, attend a rare anti-government protest in San Antonio de los Baños to protest the increased food and medicine shortages brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.[155][156]
    • Moldova holds a parliamentary election, with the Party of Action and Solidarity leading according to preliminary results.[157]
    • Bulgaria holds a parliamentary election, with the There Is Such a People Party leading.[158]
  • July 122021 European floods: Heavy rain causes flooding in the border region of Germany and Belgium, resulting in 229 deaths, including 184 in Germany and 42 in Belgium with one person still missing there. The event is attributed to a slowed jetstream caused by climate change.[159]
  • July 13 – After the Supreme Court declares his incumbency unconstitutional, KP Oli is succeeded by Sher Bahadur Deuba as 43rd Prime Minister of Nepal.[160]
  • July 18An international investigation reveals that Israel's NSO Group is using spyware to target heads of state, along with thousands of activists, journalists and dissidents around the world.[161][162]
  • July 19
    • Blue Origin successfully conducts its first human test flight, with a reusable New Shepard rocket delivering four crew members into space: its founder Jeff Bezos, Bezos' brother Mark, 18-year-old Oliver Daemen (who becomes the youngest person to go into space), and 82-year-old aviator and Mercury 13 member Wally Funk (who becomes the oldest person to go into space).[163][164]
    • Leftist schoolteacher Pedro Castillo is confirmed as President of Peru over a month after the 2021 Peruvian general election.[165]
    • Day of Hajj: Women are permitted to attend without a male guardian (mehrem) provided they go in a trustworthy group.[166]
  • July 21 – The International Olympic Committee awards Brisbane the right to host the 2032 Summer Olympics.[167]
  • July 23August 8 – The 2020 Summer Olympics were held in Tokyo, Japan. They were originally scheduled for 24 July–9 August 2020, but were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[168]
  • July 23 – The Court of Appeal of Samoa deemed the swearing-in of Fiamē Naomi Mataʻafa and her government as constitutional, ending a three-month constitutional crisis.[169]
  • July 25Tunisian president Kais Saied formally takes power in the country, suspending the parliament and sacking the prime minister.[170]
  • July 28 – The first direct observation of light from behind a black hole is reported, confirming Einstein's theory of general relativity.[171][172]
  • July 29
    • Roscosmos' Nauka laboratory docks with the International Space Station following a protracted seventeen-year development and launch on 21 July. Hours after docking, a malfunction of its thrusters causes a temporary loss of control of the station, spinning it up to 45 degrees from its normal orbital attitude.[173]
    • The oil tanker Mercer Street is attacked off the coast of Oman.[174][175]

August

  • August 3
    • The oil tanker Asphalt Princess is hijacked off the coast of the United Arab Emirates.[176]
    • Wildfires in Greece begin.[177]
  • August 4
    • 2020 Summer Olympics: Belarusian sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya is given political asylum in Poland through a humanitarian visa after attempts by the Belarus Olympic Committee to repatriate her against her will.[178]
    • COVID-19 pandemic: The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases surpasses 200 million worldwide.[179]
  • August 5Tigray War: The Tigray Defense Forces seize the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Lalibela.[180]
  • August 9 – The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change releases the first part of its Sixth Assessment Report, which concludes that the effects of human-caused climate change are now "widespread, rapid, and intensifying".[181][182][183]
  • August 12 – The 2021 Zambian general election is held.[184][185]
  • August 14A 7.2-magnitude earthquake strikes Haiti, killing more than 2,100 people.[186]
  • August 152021 Taliban offensive: The Taliban capture Kabul; the Afghan government surrenders to the Taliban.[187]
  • August 24September 5 – The 2020 Summer Paralympics were held in Tokyo, Japan. They were originally scheduled for 25 August–6 September 2020, but were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[188]
  • August 262021 Kabul airport attacks: At least 182 people are killed, including 13 U.S. service members, in a suicide bomb attack at Kabul airport.[189][190]
  • August 27 – The United States launches an airstrike killing the Islamic State member who is believed to have planned the Kabul airport bombings.[191]
  • August 30
    • The UN Environment Programme announces that leaded petrol in road vehicles has been phased out globally, a hundred years after its introduction.[192][193]
    • The United States withdraws its last remaining troops from Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, ending 20 years of operations in Afghanistan.[194][195]

September

  • September 52021 Guinean coup d'état: Guinea's President Alpha Condé is detained by an elite military unit led by a former French legionnaire, Lt. Col. Mamady Doumbouya, claiming to have seized power.[196]
  • September 7
    • El Salvador becomes the first country in the world to accept Bitcoin as an official currency.[197]
    • The Mexican Supreme Court unanimously rules to decriminalise abortion in Mexico.[198]
  • September 13
    • Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob and Anwar Ibrahim, the leader of the main Malaysian opposition coalition Pakatan Harapan, sign a confidence and supply agreement ending the 18-month political crisis that has led to the fall of two successive governments in Malaysia.[199]
    • The 2021 Norwegian parliamentary election is held.[200]
  • September 14
    • North Korea demonstrates two short-range ballistic missiles that land just outside Japan's territorial waters; and then only hours later South Korea demonstrates its first submarine-launched ballistic missile.[201]
    • The inaugural season of the Europa Conference League, the third tier of European club football, kicks off with Israeli club Maccabi Tel Aviv winning 4–1 against Armenian club FC Alashkert.
  • September 15AUKUS: A trilateral security pact between Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States is formed, to counter the influence of China. This includes enabling Australia to build its first nuclear-powered submarine fleet.[202]
  • September 16Inspiration4 launched by SpaceX becomes the first all-civilian spaceflight, carrying a four-person crew on a three-day orbit of the Earth.[203]

Predicted and scheduled events

  • September 192021 Russian legislative election
  • September 202021 Canadian federal election
  • September 252021 Icelandic parliamentary election
  • September 262021 German federal election
  • October 1 – The 2020 World Expo in Dubai is scheduled to begin. Its opening was originally scheduled for 20 October 2020 but was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[204]
  • October 5Roscosmos will launch the Soyuz MS-19 mission, which will carry an Expedition 66 crewmember and two Channel One Russia personnel to the International Space Station. The two Channel One crew will perform principal photography on the film Vyzov aboard the station.[205][206]
  • October 610 – The 2021 UEFA Nations League Finals is scheduled to be held in Italy. They were originally scheduled for 2–6 June 2021, but were moved to 6–10 October 2021 following the rescheduling of UEFA Euro 2020 to June and July 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[207]
  • October 15Alitalia will officially cease operations after 75 years of business.
  • October 16 – The Southwest Research Institute's Lucy mission will launch, beginning a twelve-year journey to visit six different asteroids, including five from the previously unexplored Jupiter trojans.[208][209]
  • October 212021 Czech legislative election
  • October 222021 Japanese general election
  • October 23SpaceX will launch their Crew-3 mission, which will carry four Expedition 66 crewmembers to the International Space Station.[210][211]
  • October 242021 Uzbek presidential election
  • NovemberNASA, ESA, the Canadian Space Agency, and the Space Telescope Science Institute plan to launch the James Webb Space Telescope, a successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.[212]
  • November – Planned launch of NASA's Artemis 1 mission to the Moon, the first integrated flight of the agency's Orion MPCV and Space Launch System (SLS) rocket.[213]
  • October 31November 12 – The 2021 UN Climate Change Conference is scheduled to take place in Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom. It was originally scheduled for 9–20 November 2020, but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[214]
  • November 72021 Haitian parliamentary election
  • November 142021 Argentine legislative election
  • November 21 – Scheduled date for the 2021 Chilean general election, to elect the President and National Congress. In the 2021 elections 27 members of the Senate (out of a total of maximum 50) will be elected, replacing 20 outgoing senators.[215]
  • November 24 – The Applied Physics Laboratory's Double Asteroid Redirection Test will launch. The mission will perform a deliberate high-velocity impact with the minor-planet moon Dimorphos to study asteroid impact avoidance techniques. The spacecraft will spend a year in transit to the moon prior to impact.[216][217]
  • November 30Barbados will become a republic, on its 55th anniversary of independence.[218]
  • November 30December 18 – The 2021 FIFA Arab Cup will be held in Qatar.[219][220]
  • December 4 – A total solar eclipse will be visible from parts of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.[221]
  • December 8Roscosmos and Space Adventures will launch the Soyuz MS-20 mission, which will carry three EP-20 crewmembers to the International Space Station for a twelve-day stay before returning to Earth.[222][223]
  • December 19 – The Hong Kong Special Administration Region in China will hold an election for the Legislative Council. It was originally scheduled for 6 September 2020, but was postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic.

Date unknown

  • The Large Hadron Collider will recommence operations after a period of renovations.[224]
  • The Grand Egyptian Museum, described as the largest archaeological museum in the world, is expected to be completed.[225]
  • Plan S, an initiative for open access science publishing launched in 2018,[226][227] requires that from 2021 papers from over 10 European countries that resulted from research funded by public grants must be published under an open license in compliant journals or platforms, available to all.[228][229]

Births

Deaths

January

Modibo Keita
Martinus J. G. Veltman
Phil Spector
Cloris Leachman
  • January 1Elmira Minita Gordon, 1st Governor-General of Belize (b. 1930)[233]
  • January 2
    • Modibo Keita, 8th Prime Minister of Mali (b. 1942)[234]
    • Michael McKevitt, Irish republican paramilitary leader (b. 1949)[235]
  • January 3Gerry Marsden, English musician (b. 1942)[236]
  • January 4
    • Tanya Roberts, American actress (b. 1955)[237]
    • Martinus J. G. Veltman, Dutch Nobel theoretical physicist (b. 1931)[238]
    • Albert Roux, French chef and restaurateur (b. 1935)[239]
  • January 5Colin Bell, English footballer (b. 1946)[240]
  • January 7Michael Apted, English filmmaker (b. 1941)[241]
  • January 11
    • Sheldon Adelson, American businessman and casino magnate (b. 1933)[242]
    • Kathleen Heddle, Canadian Olympic rower (b. 1965)[243]
  • January 13Siegfried Fischbacher, German-born American magician (b. 1939)[244]
  • January 16Phil Spector, American record producer and convicted murderer (b. 1939)[245]
  • January 18
    • Jean-Pierre Bacri, Algerian-born French actor (b. 1951)[246]
    • Dündar Ali Osman, Turkish prince, 45th Head of the House of Osman (b. 1930)[247]
  • January 20
  • January 21Nathalie Delon, French actress (b. 1941)[250]
  • January 22Hank Aaron, American baseball player (b. 1934)[251]
  • January 23
    • Hal Holbrook, American actor (b. 1925)[252]
    • Larry King, American talk show host (b. 1933)[253]
  • January 24Gunnel Lindblom, Swedish actress (b. 1931)[254]
  • January 27
  • January 28
    • Paul J. Crutzen, Dutch Nobel atmospheric chemist (b. 1933)[257]
    • Vasily Lanovoy, Soviet and Russian actor (b. 1934)[258]
    • Cicely Tyson, American actress (b. 1924)[259]
  • January 29
    • Yvon Douis, French footballer (b. 1935)[260]
    • Hilton Valentine, English guitarist (b. 1943)[261]
  • January 30Sophie, Scottish record producer, songwriter and DJ (b. 1986)[262]

February

Haya Harareet
Christopher Plummer
Carlos Menem
Sir Michael Somare
  • February 1Edward Babiuch, 5th Prime Minister of the Polish People's Republic (b. 1927)[263]
  • February 2
    • Captain Sir Tom Moore, British Army officer and charity campaigner (b. 1920)[264]
    • Fausta Morganti, former Captain Regent of San Marino (b. 1944)[265]
  • February 3
    • Haya Harareet, Israeli actress (b. 1931)[266]
    • Tony Trabert, American tennis player and commentator (b. 1930)[267]
  • February 4Millie Hughes-Fulford, American astronaut and molecular biologist (b. 1945)[268]
  • February 5
    • Christopher Plummer, Canadian actor (b. 1929)[269]
    • Leon Spinks, American professional boxer (b. 1953)[270]
  • February 6George Shultz, American politician, diplomat and economist (b. 1920)[271]
  • February 7Giuseppe Rotunno, Italian cinematographer (b. 1923)[272]
  • February 8
  • February 9Chick Corea, American jazz keyboardist (b. 1941)[275]
  • February 10Larry Flynt, American porn publisher (b. 1942)[276]
  • February 11Isadore Singer, American mathematician (b. 1924)[277]
  • February 12Milford Graves, American jazz drummer, percussionist, and free jazz pioneer (b. 1941)[278]
  • February 13Yury Vlasov, Soviet and Russian weightlifter and writer (b. 1935)[279]
  • February 14Carlos Menem, 44th President of Argentina (b. 1930)[280]
  • February 15Leopoldo Luque, Argentine footballer (b. 1949)[281]
  • February 16
    • Bernard Lown, Lithuanian-American Nobel cardiologist and inventor (b. 1921)[282]
    • Joan Margarit, Spanish poet (b. 1938)[283]
    • Gustavo Noboa, 42nd President of Ecuador (b. 1937)[284]
  • February 17Rush Limbaugh, American radio personality (b. 1951)[285]
  • February 18Andrey Myagkov, Soviet and Russian actor (b. 1938)[286]
  • February 19Đorđe Balašević, Serbian recording artist and singer-songwriter (b. 1953)[287]
  • February 21Zlatko Saračević, Croatian handball player and coach (b. 1961)[288][289]
  • February 22
    • Luca Attanasio, Italian diplomat and ambassador (b. 1977)[290]
    • Lawrence Ferlinghetti, American poet and publisher (b. 1919)[291]
  • February 23Fausto Gresini, Italian motorcycle racer and team manager (b. 1961)[292]
  • February 24
    • Philippe Jaccottet, Swiss poet and translator (b. 1925)[293]
    • N'Singa Udjuu, First State Commissioner of Zaire (b. 1934)[294]
  • February 25
    • Sir Michael Somare, 1st Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea (b. 1936)[295]
    • Hannu Mikkola, Finnish rally driver (b. 1942)[296]

March

Bunny Wailer
Lou Ottens
John Magufuli
Nawal El Saadawi
Didier Ratsiraka
  • March 1
  • March 2
    • Chris Barber, English jazz musician (b. 1930)[299]
    • Bunny Wailer, Jamaican reggae singer and songwriter (b. 1947)[300]
  • March 6Lou Ottens, Dutch inventor (b. 1926)[301]
  • March 9
    • James Levine, American conductor and pianist (b. 1943)[302]
    • John Polkinghorne, English theoretical physicist and Anglican priest (b. 1930)[303]
  • March 10
    • Hamed Bakayoko, 11th Prime Minister of Ivory Coast (b. 1965)[304]
    • Ali Mahdi Muhammad, 4th President of Somalia (b. 1939)[305]
    • Manuel Saturnino da Costa, 6th Prime Minister of Guinea-Bissau (b. 1942)[306]
  • March 12Goodwill Zwelithini, South African royal (b. 1948)[307]
  • March 13
    • Marvelous Marvin Hagler, American boxer (b. 1954)[308]
    • Murray Walker, British motor racing commentator (b. 1923)[309]
  • March 15Yaphet Kotto, American actor (b. 1939)[310]
  • March 16
    • Moudud Ahmed, 7th Prime Minister of Bangladesh (b. 1940)[311]
    • Sabine Schmitz, German motor racer and television presenter (b. 1969)[312]
  • March 17John Magufuli, 5th President of Tanzania (b. 1959)[313]
  • March 20Peter Lorimer, Scottish international footballer (b. 1946)[314]
  • March 21
    • Nawal El Saadawi, Egyptian feminist writer (b. 1931)[315]
    • Adam Zagajewski, Polish poet, essayist and translator (b. 1945)[316]
  • March 22
    • Johnny Dumfries, Scottish peer and racing driver (b. 1958)[317]
    • Elgin Baylor, American professional basketball player, coach, and executive (b. 1934)[318]
  • March 23George Segal, American actor (b. 1934)[319]
  • March 24Jessica Walter, American actress (b. 1941)[320]
  • March 25
    • Beverly Cleary, American author (b. 1916)[321]
    • Larry McMurtry, American author (b. 1936)[322]
    • Bertrand Tavernier, French film director and actor (b. 1941)[323]
  • March 28Didier Ratsiraka, 3rd President of Madagascar (b. 1936)[324]
  • March 29Bashkim Fino, 29th Prime Minister of Albania (b. 1962)[325]
  • March 31Kamal Ganzouri, 46th Prime Minister of Egypt (b. 1933)[326]

April

Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
Michael Collins
  • April 1Isamu Akasaki, Japanese Nobel physicist (b. 1929)[327]
  • April 2Christian Tumi, Cameroonian cardinal (b. 1930)[328]
  • April 4Robert Mundell, Canadian Nobel economist (b. 1932)[329]
  • April 5
    • Paul Ritter, British actor (b. 1966)[330]
    • Marshall Sahlins, American anthropologist (b. 1930)[331]
  • April 6Hans Küng, Swiss Catholic priest, theologian and author (b. 1928)[332]
  • April 9
    • DMX, American rapper, songwriter and actor (b. 1970)[333]
    • Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (b. 1921)[334]
  • April 14
    • Yıldırım Akbulut, 20th Prime Minister of Turkey (b. 1935)[335]
    • Bernie Madoff, American investment advisor, financier and convicted fraudster (b. 1938)[336]
  • April 16
    • Helen McCrory, English actress (b. 1968)[337]
    • Charles Geschke, American businessman and computer scientist (b. 1939)[338]
    • Andrew Peacock, Australian politician (b. 1939)[339]
  • April 19
    • Walter Mondale, 42nd Vice President of the United States (b. 1928)[340]
    • Jim Steinman, American rock lyricist and composer (b. 1947)[341]
    • Willy van der Kuijlen, Dutch footballer (b. 1946)[342]
  • April 20Idriss Déby, 6th President of Chad (b. 1952)[343]
  • April 23Milva, Italian singer and actress (b. 1939)[344]
  • April 24Christa Ludwig, German mezzo-soprano (b. 1928)[345]
  • April 26Tamara Press, Soviet Olympic shot put and discus thrower (b. 1937)[346]
  • April 28

May

Olympia Dukakis
Humberto Maturana
Franco Battiato
Yuan Longping
Paulo Mendes da Rocha
  • May 1Olympia Dukakis, American actress (b. 1931)[349]
  • May 2Bobby Unser, American Hall of Fame racing driver (b. 1934)[350]
  • May 3Lloyd Price, American singer-songwriter and businessman (b. 1933)[351]
  • May 4
  • May 6
    • Humberto Maturana, Chilean philosopher and biologist (b. 1928)[355]
    • Kentaro Miura, Japanese manga artist (b. 1966)[356]
  • May 7
  • May 8
  • May 9José Manuel Caballero Bonald, Spanish poet and novelist (b. 1926)[362]
  • May 10Svante Thuresson, Swedish jazz musician (b. 1937)[363]
  • May 11Norman Lloyd, American actor, producer and director (b. 1914)[364]
  • May 13Christa Stubnick, German sprinter and Olympic silver medalist (b. 1933)[365]
  • May 15
  • May 16Rildo da Costa Menezes, Brazilian footballer (b. 1942)[368]
  • May 18
    • Franco Battiato, Italian singer-songwriter, composer and filmmaker (b. 1946)[369]
    • Charles Grodin, American actor and comedian (b. 1935)[370]
  • May 19
    • Lee Evans, American Olympic athlete (b. 1947)[371]
    • Aleksandr Privalov, Soviet and Russian Olympic biathlete (b. 1933)[372]
  • May 20
    • Francisco Brines, Spanish poet (b. 1932)[373]
    • Abubakar Shekau, Nigerian Islamic leader and militant (b. 1965, 1969 or 1975)[374]
  • May 21
    • Tahir Salahov, Soviet, Azerbaijani and Russian painter and draughtsman (b. 1928)[375]
    • Sunderlal Bahuguna, Indian environmentalist (b. 1927)[376]
  • May 22
  • May 23
    • Eric Carle, American children's writer and illustrator (b. 1929)[381]
    • Cristóbal Halffter, Spanish classical composer and conductor (b. 1930)[382]
    • Ron Hill, English marathon runner (b. 1938)[383]
    • Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Brazilian architect (b. 1928)[384]
    • Max Mosley, British racing driver and lawyer (b. 1940)[385]
  • May 25Gregory Peter XX Ghabroyan, Syrian-born Lebanese Armenian Catholic hierarch (b. 1934)[386]
  • May 26Tarcisio Burgnich, Italian footballer and manager (b. 1939)[387]
  • May 27
    • Carla Fracci, Italian ballet dancer and actress (b. 1936)[388]
    • Cornelis de Jager, Dutch astronomer (b. 1921)[389]
    • Poul Schlüter, 22nd Prime Minister of Denmark (b. 1929)[390]
  • May 30Rick Mitchell, Australian sprinter and Olympic silver medalist (b. 1955)[391]

June

Sir Anerood Jugnauth
Ei-ichi Negishi
Kenneth Kaunda
John McAfee
Benigno Aquino III
  • June 1Prince Amedeo, Duke of Aosta (b. 1943)[392]
  • June 3 – Sir Anerood Jugnauth, 2nd Prime Minister and 4th President of Mauritius (b. 1930)[393]
  • June 4
  • June 5T. B. Joshua, Nigerian televangelist (b. 1963)[397]
  • June 6
    • Revaz Gabriadze, Georgian filmmaker, painter and playwright (b. 1936)[398]
    • Ei-ichi Negishi, Japanese Nobel chemist (b. 1935)[399]
    • Mansour Ojjeh, French Saudi Arabian entrepreneur (b. 1952)[400]
  • June 7
    • Yoo Sang-chul, South Korean footballer (b. 1971)[401]
    • Ali Akbar Mohtashamipur, Iranian Shia cleric and terrorist (b. 1947)[402]
  • June 9
    • Gottfried Böhm, German architect and sculptor (b. 1920)[403]
    • Edward de Bono, Maltese physician, psychologist and philosopher (b. 1933)[404]
  • June 11Paola Pigni, Italian middle-distance runner and Olympic bronze medallist (b. 1945)[405]
  • June 13Ned Beatty, American actor (b. 1937)[406]
  • June 14
  • June 15Vladimir Shatalov, Soviet and Russian cosmonaut (b. 1927)[409]
  • June 17Kenneth Kaunda, 1st President of Zambia (b. 1924)[410]
  • June 18
    • Giampiero Boniperti, Italian footballer (b. 1928)[411]
    • Milkha Singh, Indian athlete (b. 1929)[412]
  • June 20Luis del Sol, Spanish footballer (b. 1935)[413]
  • June 23John McAfee, English-born American computer programmer and businessman (b. 1945)[414]
  • June 24
    • Benigno Aquino III, 15th President of the Philippines (b. 1960)[415]
    • Trần Thiện Khiêm, 7th Prime Minister of South Vietnam and army officer (b. 1925)[416]
  • June 26
    • Jon Hassell, American trumpeter and composer (b. 1937)[417]
    • Mir Hazar Khan Khoso, Acting Prime Minister of Pakistan (b. 1929)[418]
    • Frederic Rzewski, American composer and pianist (b. 1938)[419]
  • June 29Donald Rumsfeld, American politician and government official (b. 1932)[420]
  • June 30Bonfoh Abass, Acting President of Togo (b. 1948)[421]

July

Dilip Kumar
Steven Weinberg
Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho
  • July 1Louis Andriessen, Dutch composer (b. 1939)[422]
  • July 2Nikolai Slichenko, Soviet and Russian singer and actor (b. 1934)[423]
  • July 4Richard Lewontin, American evolutionary biologist (b. 1929)[424]
  • July 5
    • Raffaella Carrà, Italian singer, TV presenter and actress (b. 1943)[425]
    • Richard Donner, American film director (b. 1930)[426]
    • Vladimir Menshov, Soviet and Russian actor and film director (b. 1939)[427]
  • July 6
  • July 7
    • Ahmed Jibril, Palestinian militant (b. 1938)[430]
    • Dilip Kumar, Indian actor, film producer and philanthropist (b. 1922)[431]
    • Jovenel Moïse, 42nd President of Haiti (b. 1968)[432]
    • Carlos Reutemann, Argentine F1 driver and politician (b. 1942)[433]
  • July 9
    • Frank Lui, 3rd Premier of Niue (b. 1935)[434]
    • Paul Mariner, English football player and manager (b. 1953)[435]
  • July 10
    • Esther Béjarano, German singer and Holocaust survivor (b. 1924)[436]
    • Carmel Budiardjo, British human rights activist (b. 1925)[437]
  • July 13Shirley Fry, American tennis player (b. 1927)[438]
  • July 14
    • Mamnoon Hussain, 12th President of Pakistan (b. 1940)[439]
    • Kurt Westergaard, Danish cartoonist (b. 1935)[440]
  • July 16Surekha Sikri, Indian actress (b. 1945)[441]
  • July 17Pilar Bardem, Spanish actress and activist (b. 1939)[442]
  • July 19Arturo Armando Molina, 36th President of El Salvador (b. 1927)[443]
  • July 22Boris Chochiev, Acting Prime Minister of South Ossetia (b. 1957)[444]
  • July 23
    • Toshihide Maskawa, Japanese Nobel theoretical physicist (b. 1940)[445]
    • Tuomo Ylipulli, Finnish ski jumper and Olympic champion (b. 1965)[446]
    • Steven Weinberg, American Nobel theoretical physicist (b. 1933)[447]
  • July 25Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho, Portuguese military official and politician (b. 1936)[448]
  • July 26
    • Albert Bandura, Canadian-American psychologist (b. 1925)[449]
    • Joey Jordison, American drummer (b. 1975)[450]
    • Ivan Toplak, Serbian footballer and manager (b. 1931)[451]
  • July 27Jean-François Stévenin, French actor (b. 1944)[452]
  • July 28
    • Roberto Calasso, Italian writer and publisher (b. 1941)[453]
    • Dusty Hill, American musician and singer-songwriter (b. 1949)[454]

August

Sir Lester Bird
Charlie Watts
  • August 1Abdalqadir as-Sufi, Scottish Islamic scholar and writer (b. 1930)[455]
  • August 3Arthur Dion Hanna, 7th Governor-General of the Bahamas (b. 1928)[456]
  • August 5Yevhen Marchuk, 4th Prime Minister of Ukraine (b. 1941)[457]
  • August 8Jaan Kaplinski, Estonian poet and philosopher (b. 1941)[458]
  • August 9
  • August 10Eduardo Martínez Somalo, Spanish cardinal (b. 1927)[461]
  • August 13
    • Carolyn S. Shoemaker, American astronomer (b. 1929)[462]
    • Gino Strada, Italian surgeon and human rights activist (b. 1948)[463]
  • August 14Carlos Correia, 5th Prime Minister of Guinea-Bissau (b. 1933)[464]
  • August 15
    • Abdelhamid Brahimi, 3rd Prime Minister of Algeria (b. 1936)[465]
    • Gerd Müller, German football player (b. 1945)[466]
  • August 16Volodymyr Holubnychy, Soviet and Ukrainian race walker and Olympic champion (b. 1936)[467]
  • August 19Sonny Chiba, Japanese actor and martial artist (b. 1939)[468]
  • August 21
    • Don Everly, American musician (b. 1937)[469]
    • Marie, Princess of Liechtenstein (b. 1940)[470]
  • August 23
    • Jean-Luc Nancy, French philosopher (b. 1940)[471]
    • Rosita Quintana, Argentine-Mexican actress, singer, and songwriter (b. 1925)[472]
  • August 24
    • Hissène Habré, 1st Prime Minister and 5th President of Chad (b. 1942)[473]
    • Wilfried Van Moer, Belgian footballer (b. 1945)[474]
    • Charlie Watts, English drummer (b. 1941)[475]
  • August 25Mohsin Ahmad al-Aini, 7th Prime Minister of Yemen (b. 1932)[476]
  • August 27Edmond H. Fischer, American-Swiss Nobel biochemist (b. 1920)[477]
  • August 29
    • Ed Asner, American actor (b. 1929)[478]
    • Lee "Scratch" Perry, Jamaican record producer and singer (b. 1936)[479]
    • Jacques Rogge, Belgian Olympic sailor and 8th President of the International Olympic Committee (b. 1942)[480]
  • August 31Francesco Morini, Italian footballer (b. 1944)[481]

September

Mikis Theodorakis
Jean-Paul Belmondo
  • September 2Mikis Theodorakis, Greek composer and politician (b. 1925)[482]
  • September 5
  • September 6
    • Jean-Pierre Adams, French footballer (b. 1948)[485]
    • Jean-Paul Belmondo, French actor (b. 1933)[486]
  • September 7Jahangir Butt, Pakistani Olympic field hockey player (b. 1943)[487]
  • September 8Dietmar Lorenz, German Olympic judoka (b. 1950)[488]
  • September 9Danilo Popivoda, Slovenian footballer and manager (b. 1947)[489]
  • September 10
    • Charles Konan Banny, 6th Prime Minister of the Ivory Coast (b. 1942)[490]
    • Jorge Sampaio, 18th President of Portugal (b. 1939)[491]
    • Saadi Yacef, Algerian independence fighter, politician and actor. (b. 1928)[492][importance?]
  • September 11Abimael Guzmán, Peruvian Maoist leader and militant (b. 1934)[493]
  • September 13
  • September 14
    • Norm Macdonald, Canadian comedian, actor, and screenwriter (b. 1959).[496][importance?]
    • Yuriy Sedykh, Russian track and field athlete and Olympic champion (b. 1955)[497]
  • September 16

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  461. ^ Morto il cardinale Martínez Somalo, l’uomo che i Papi volevano accanto (in Italian)
  462. ^ In Memoriam: Carolyn Shoemaker, 1929–2021
  463. ^ Obituary: Gino Strada believed health care was a human right, The Economist
  464. ^ Carlos Correia: Morreu o ex-PM guineense e dirigente do PAIGC (in Portuguese)
  465. ^ Décès de l'ancien Premier ministre Abdelhamid Brahimi à l'âge de 85 ans (in French)
  466. ^ Bayern Munich & Germany legend Gerd Muller dies aged 75
  467. ^ В Сумах умер легенда мирового спорта Владимир Голубничий (in Russian)
  468. ^ 千葉真一さん死去 82歳 新型コロナ感染し療養も肺炎悪化、8日入院も (in Japanese)
  469. ^ Don Everly, of harmonising rock ‘n’ roll pioneers Everly Brothers, dies at 84
  470. ^ Marie, Princess of Liechtenstein has died at the age of 81
  471. ^ E' morto Jean-Luc Nancy, il filosofo che indagava sui limiti della democrazia (in Italian)
  472. ^ Fallece la actriz Rosita Quintana (in Spanish)
  473. ^ Chad's former president Hissène Habré dies at 79
  474. ^ "Kleine Generaal" Wilfried Van Moer (76) is overleden
  475. ^ Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts dies at 80
  476. ^ وفاة رئيس الوزراء اليمني الأسبق محسن العيني (in Arabic)
  477. ^ Nobel Laureate Edmond H. Fischer 1920 – 2021
  478. ^ Ed Asner, Emmy-Winning ‘Lou Grant’ Star, Dies at 91
  479. ^ Kreps, Danel (29 August 2021). "Lee 'Scratch' Perry, Reggae Giant and Dub Pioneer, Dead at 85". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  480. ^ IOC announces passing of former IOC President Jacques Rogge
  481. ^ Francesco Morini, former Juve defender, was 77 years old died
  482. ^ Renowned composer Mikis Theodorakis dies
  483. ^ Kaiac-canoe: Multimpul campion olimpic Ivan Patzaichin a decedat la vârsta de 71 de ani (in Romanian)
  484. ^ Preminuo bivši gradonačelnik BL Živko Radišić (in Serbian)
  485. ^ Jean-Pierre Adams est mort (in French)
  486. ^ Mort de Jean-Paul Belmondo, le Magnifique du cinéma français (in French)
  487. ^ Olympian Jahangir Butt passes away
  488. ^ Judoka Dietmar Lorenz ist gestorben (in German)
  489. ^ Umrl Danilo Popivoda, legenda Olimpije in slovenskega nogometa (in Slovene)
  490. ^ Former I. Coast PM dies of coronavirus
  491. ^ Jorge Sampaio, who showed teeth in Portuguese presidential powers, dies at 81
  492. ^ "Yacef Saâdi est mort : un grand nom de le révolution s'éteint". Algerie360. 10 September 2021.
  493. ^ Abimael Gumzan, founder of Peruvian rebel group Shining Path, dies
  494. ^ Professor Antony Hewish (1924 – 2021)
  495. ^ Preminuo Borisav Jović (in Bosnian)
  496. ^ Norm Macdonald dies: influential comedian & former ‘SNL’ Weekend Update anchor was 61
  497. ^ Умер рекордсмен мира в метании молота Юрий Седых (in Russian)
  498. ^ https://news.sky.com/story/islamic-state-france-says-it-has-killed-adnan-abu-walid-al-sahrawi-the-terror-groups-leader-in-the-greater-sahara-12409293
  499. ^ Gabon : Décès de Casimir Oye Mba à Paris (in French)
  500. ^ Jane Powell Dies: Hollywood Golden Age Actress & ‘Royal Wedding’ Star Was 92
  501. ^ Home computing pioneer Sir Clive Sinclair dies aged 81

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