Todo mundo recuerda en dónde estaba cuando sucedieron estos parteaguas. Bienvenido a Watchmojo Español, hoy conocemos los acontecimientos más significativos del siglo XXI que captaron la atención del mundo.
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00:00The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an outlaw regime.
00:05Hey, hola y bienvenidos a WatchMojo Español.
00:08Yo soy G, y hoy conoceremos los acontecimientos más significativos del siglo XXI
00:14que captaron la atención del mundo.
00:16If you want to go forward, you press forward.
00:18If you want to go back, you press back.
00:20If you want to turn to the left, it's like that.
00:22If you want to turn to the right, you turn to the right.
00:24Número 20. La muerte de la reina Isabel.
00:27Buckingham Palace has announced the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
00:33For many years, we saw how history unfolded before our eyes.
00:37Isabel II, who ascended to the throne in 1952,
00:41held the title of British monarch who has reigned the longest,
00:45until her death on September 8, 2022.
00:48She was in power for 70 years and 214 days,
00:53and surpassed Queen Victoria with 63 years and 216 days.
00:58Her death in 2022 became one of the most significant events of the modern era.
01:04We just saw all the crowds, and I said to my husband,
01:08I think the Queen has died.
01:10The news of her death was understandably huge,
01:13given its historical importance.
01:15It is estimated that 26.5 million people in the United Kingdom
01:19tuned in to the State Funeral,
01:22which made it the second most watched broadcast in the 21st century.
01:26In the distance, the final procession began.
01:31Número 19. El sumergible Titán.
01:34For a very similar tragedy, where warnings went unheeded
01:38to take place at the same exact site,
01:41with all the diving that's going on all around the world,
01:45I think it's just astonishing. It's really quite surreal.
01:49For a couple of days in June 2023,
01:52the world could not think of anything other than the submergible Titán.
01:56On June 18, the tiny boat descended towards the remains of the Titanic
02:00when it lost contact with the main ship.
02:03For the next four days,
02:05the world watched curiously and wondered what had happened.
02:09You know, first thing I said, you know, I won't repeat it,
02:11but, you know, what the hell are they doing?
02:14You know, is that how they're going to get that out to the Titanic site?
02:18The event was widely discussed on social media,
02:21since millions of people were fascinated
02:24by the various elements of the strange story.
02:27Some expressed their concern,
02:29while others joked about the construction of the submarine.
02:32In any case, the interest was widespread and huge,
02:35until we finally learned that the hull had broken
02:38and the ship had imploded.
02:40I like to tell people, this is not your grandfather's submarine.
02:43It's got one button, and that's it.
02:47Number 18.
02:48The forest fires of Black Saturday.
02:50It's very hard to stand on the oval and realize
02:54the entire town was going up.
02:56It was just impossible to think about.
02:58The former Australian Deputy Prime Minister, Julia Gillard,
03:01described Black Saturday as one of the darkest days
03:04in the history of the country in times of peace.
03:07And she's not exaggerating.
03:08Although these fires are named after a specific day,
03:11they actually covered several weeks between February and March 2009.
03:15They were caused by various factors,
03:17such as lightning and fires.
03:20I thought it was out when I threw out the paint and shit out the window.
03:23The fires hit the state of Victoria,
03:26destroyed more than 3,000 buildings
03:28and took 173 lives.
03:31Black Saturday refers to February 7,
03:34when more than 400 individual fires were observed
03:37throughout the state.
03:38The international reaction was rapid
03:40and many countries provided both physical and economic help.
03:44Can you communicate to the rest of Australia
03:47what your personal thoughts and feelings were
03:49when you visited those areas?
03:54Not really.
03:55Number 17.
03:57The Manchester Arena attack.
03:59Initially, I went right home.
04:00I went to Florida and I was like,
04:02I can't.
04:04I was like, I'm not putting those costumes on again.
04:05I can't sing those songs again.
04:07On May 22, 2017,
04:09pop star Ariana Grande gave a concert at the Manchester Arena,
04:12which was attended by thousands of people.
04:15Shortly after the event ended,
04:17at 10.31 p.m.,
04:19there was a terrorist attack on the stadium's lobby,
04:22in which 22 innocent people died
04:25and more than 1,000 were injured.
04:27The investigation continues.
04:29Emergency services still working the scene
04:31as day breaks on this somber city.
04:34The attack attracted a lot of attention
04:36and then Prime Minister Theresa May
04:39immediately formed the Commission for Countering Extremism,
04:42or Comisión para la Lucha Contra el Extremismo.
04:45Much of the international reaction
04:47was due to Grande's involvement
04:49and her response became the most reposted post on X,
04:52before Twitter.
04:53Only two weeks after the tragedy,
04:56she organized the charity concert One Love Manchester,
04:59which was attended by more than 50,000 people.
05:01She raised more than £17 million
05:04for the victims and their families.
05:1216. THE DEATH OF MICHAEL JACKSON
05:19Both the Los Angeles Times and CBS News
05:23are both now reporting that Michael Jackson has died.
05:27The death of Michael Jackson
05:28was not like that of any other celebrity.
05:30It was a transcendental event.
05:33Despite the controversy during the last years of his life,
05:36his death, caused by an overdose on June 25, 2009,
05:41shocked many.
05:42Several factors influenced the mourning,
05:45such as the enormous popularity of Jackson,
05:47the sudden nature of the situation
05:49and his relatively young age,
05:5150 years old.
05:53Then the children left their own floral tributes.
05:56They'd reportedly written notes to him
05:58which had been placed inside the coffin.
06:01His death caused a huge uproar
06:03in the purchases of his albums,
06:05with more than 35 million copies,
06:07which made him the artist with the highest sales in 2009.
06:11Jackson was so popular
06:13that at his funeral, celebrated in Staples Center in Los Angeles,
06:16he was broadcasted by about 3 billion people,
06:20a little less than half the world.
06:22Sure, there were some sad times
06:26and maybe some questionable decisions on his part,
06:29but Michael Jackson accomplished everything he dreamed of.
06:37Number 15. The Beirut explosion.
06:39In video from the scene, you can see small explosions,
06:42small lights flickering in the main plume of smoke
06:46and then a massive shockwave.
06:492020 was a year of important news.
06:52On August 4, the world briefly put aside the COVID pandemic
06:56to focus on Lebanon,
06:57when ammonium nitrate warehouses exploded in the port of Beirut.
07:02The explosion was huge.
07:04It physically shook the whole country
07:06and was even heard in places as far away as Cyprus.
07:20In fact, it was one of the most powerful non-nuclear explosions in history
07:24and caused the resignation of the Prime Minister Hassan Diab.
07:28Monuments were lit all over the world in support of Lebanon
07:31and some countries withdrew their ammonium nitrate warehouses
07:34to avoid a similar disaster.
07:36It was also an important event on social media,
07:39where many people spread shocking images of the explosion.
07:50There is something peaceful about it.
07:51Number 14. The shooting in Las Vegas.
07:54All I can remember now, actually,
07:56are the popping sounds of the rifle rounds or whatnot.
08:00On October 1, 2017,
08:03the United States suffered the deadliest mass shooting
08:06at the hands of a single attacker,
08:08which aggravated a serious arms crisis in the country.
08:11A shooter pointed to the attendants of the Route 91 Harvest festival
08:16on the Las Vegas Strip,
08:17from the nearby Hotel Mandala Bay.
08:20He killed 60 people,
08:22injured more than 400,
08:23and there were more victims in the midst of the subsequent chaos.
08:26Police officers step in as paramedics.
08:29You see officers stopping to render aid.
08:31You see officers bleeding from bullet wounds.
08:33In response, American legislators
08:36banned the sale of security devices
08:38that allowed the shooter's weapons to fire at greater speed.
08:42Disinformation and conspiracy theories
08:45spread widely on social media.
08:47And Mandala Bay closed access to the shooter's area.
08:51In addition, the Vegas Golden Knights
08:53withdrew number 58
08:55to honor the immediate victims of the attack.
08:58It's a constant reminder, you know?
08:59I'm never forgetting what happened that day.
09:02Number 17. Flight 370 from Malaysia Airlines.
09:06We are all puzzled by this mystery,
09:09and we want to bring it to a close.
09:12We would dearly love for another search
09:14to be undertaken.
09:38Initially, when the airplane made a turn
09:41without talking to air traffic control,
09:44in my mind, all bets were off.
10:03The aircraft was still flying, as we know now.
10:05That just is so painful to think about,
10:08that four hours later, no one's looking yet.
10:14There's Mr. Mandela.
10:16Mr. Nelson Mandela, a free man
10:18taking his first steps into a new South Africa.
10:44Today, the majority of South Africans,
10:49black and white,
10:51recognize that apartheid has no future.
11:14The founding president of our democratic nation has departed.
11:45And there's 30,000 of these workers every day
11:49that go on the Gulf to do this work.
11:50And they're well-trained,
11:52and they work to try to not have these accidents.
11:55But on this day, something went wrong,
11:57and now we're working with BP and with Transocean
12:00to try to find the cause.
12:14Birds are still on these islands,
12:16coming in here feeding.
12:18So you can just imagine the contamination
12:20that takes place within the wildlife.
12:45It's the responsibility of the army for the intelligence.
12:49It's our responsibility to guard the people of Israel.
12:52We failed on Saturday.
12:54This is our responsibility.
12:56But now we're fighting.
13:15This is a massive terrorist attack
13:18that is gunning down Israeli civilians in their towns.
13:44There were stories of heroism
13:46and an emergency response confused by poor communications and misinformation.
14:14It is through terrorism that the people that have committed this terrible act express their values.
14:28And it's right at this moment that we demonstrate ours.
14:45When international delegates kept a respectful minute of silence
14:49during the opening ceremony.
15:01On December 26, 2004,
15:03the strongest earthquake of the 21st century to date
15:06shook the western coast of northern Sumatra, Indonesia.
15:11Both this event and the subsequent tsunami
15:13left more than 227,000 dead.
15:26Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand
15:29were the most affected countries.
15:31The catastrophe caused an international humanitarian response.
15:35The World Food Programme donated food
15:37and several countries contributed $14 billion in aid.
15:42There were also various fundraising events around the world,
15:46such as the World Cricket Tsunami Appeal,
15:48the Tsunami Relief Cardiff charity concert
15:51and FIFA's Football for Hope.
16:02Number 7.
16:03Attack on the US Capitol in 2021.
16:06On January 6, 2021,
16:08the scenes of this attack in the capital of the United States, Washington, D.C.,
16:11shocked the Americans who watched the riots on television.
16:18In a meeting before the attack,
16:20outgoing President Donald Trump told his supporters
16:23that the elections had been fraudulent
16:25and urged them to march to the Capitol.
16:28Dismissed by courts, state auditoriums and federal agencies,
16:32this statement was part of a campaign
16:34to cancel the election results
16:36and reinstate Trump as president.
16:46In a matter of hours,
16:472,000 furious Trump supporters
16:49broke into the Capitol building,
16:51attacked the police
16:53and sought the legislators
16:55to formalize Joe Biden's victory.
16:58Among them were members of far-right militias
17:01and some armed neo-fascist groups.
17:03The insurrection failed
17:05and the legislators ran to safety
17:07before the mob caught up with them.
17:10Number 6.
17:11Osama Bin Laden's death.
17:13After the September 11, 2001 attacks,
17:15US President George W. Bush
17:18announced the beginning of a war against terrorism.
17:21The first stage was the US invasion of Afghanistan
17:25to find Osama Bin Laden and his terrorist group al-Qaeda.
17:31America faces an enemy who has no regard
17:33for conventions of war
17:35or rules of morality.
17:37This persecution continued for almost a decade
17:40in which Bin Laden was still uncaptured.
17:42However, in 2011,
17:44the CIA located him in a Pakistan complex.
17:46In a helicopter raid
17:48baptized with the code name
17:50of Operation Neptune Launcher,
17:52on May 2, he was finally killed.
17:54After a firefight,
17:56they killed Osama Bin Laden
17:58and took custody of his body.
18:00While vividly recalling the events of September 11,
18:03President Obama's announcement
18:05that the leader of al-Qaeda had died
18:07was a historical event.
18:13Number 5.
18:14The Paris attacks in November 2015.
18:16In January 2015,
18:18France was shocked
18:20by an Islamic terrorist attack
18:22against the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo,
18:24in which 12 employees died.
18:31Other less shocking attacks
18:33occurred that same year,
18:35and on November 13,
18:37they culminated in the deadliest of all.
18:39That night,
18:41in a series of coordinated attacks,
18:43the terrorists detonated explosive vests
18:45and opened fire on the streets
18:47and public places in Paris.
18:53Three armed men
18:55broke into a concert at the Bataclan theater
18:57and killed 90 people.
19:00The toll was 130 lives.
19:02The attacks not only shocked France,
19:04but resonated all over the world.
19:06Number 4.
19:08The Russian invasion of Ukraine.
19:10For months, the accumulation of Russian forces
19:12on the Ukrainian border
19:14had the world in suspense.
19:16Would President Vladimir Putin
19:18really order an invasion?
19:20In 2014, the Ukrainians had rebelled
19:22against a pro-Moscow government,
19:24fed up with corruption and abuse of power.
19:26Their success led Russia
19:28to invade the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea.
19:30In February 2022,
19:32Putin launched a large-scale invasion of Ukraine,
19:34furious because the country wanted to enter the NATO.
19:46In response, the international community
19:48punished Russia with severe economic sanctions.
19:50The whole world witnessed
19:52how the Ukrainians,
19:54armed, resisted the invading forces.
19:58Number 3.
20:00Hurricane Katrina.
20:02This category 5 hurricane
20:04was devastating not only for its intensity,
20:06but also for the failure of the flood control systems
20:08and the slow response of the government.
20:10On August 29, 2005,
20:12it hit land in Louisiana.
20:28The cyclonic tides
20:30broke the dikes of New Orleans
20:32and flooded the city.
20:34Tens of thousands of residents
20:36had not been evacuated.
20:38It didn't matter if they weren't there.
20:40Television and radio audiences
20:42could feel the anguish
20:44and panic in the air.
20:46Critics argued that race
20:48and social class were factors
20:50that influenced the slowness
20:52of the local and federal response.
20:58It tells you the how-to story
21:00of dealing with disaster.
21:02It also tells you what not to do.
21:24We saw the plane on the other side
21:26of the building and there was smoke everywhere
21:28and people were jumping out the windows.
21:40I just was in the lobby trying to get
21:42a cup of coffee. I heard the bang
21:44and I'm just going around the corner
21:46to see if my friends are alright. I can't talk.
21:56You could hear him yelling
21:58in the cockpit.
22:10The other trade center is down.
22:12It's down.
22:26We have therefore made the assessment
22:28that COVID-19
22:30can be characterized
22:32as a pandemic.
22:56To ensure compliance
22:58with the government's instruction
23:00to stay at home,
23:02we will immediately
23:04close all shops
23:06selling non-essential goods.
23:08Boosters are important
23:10but the most important thing
23:12we need to do
23:14is get more people vaccinated.
23:38I am Spanish.