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For the first time in its 900-year history, a woman is appointed to join the Yeoman Warders, known as the Beefeaters, who guard the Tower of London.
Jan. 28, 2007
Sinn Féin agrees to endorse the Northern Ireland police force, which is to change over the next 15 years from being mostly Protestant to being proportionately representative of both the Protestant and the Roman Catholic communities.
Jan. 30, 2007
Michael Levy, Baron Levy, the top Labour Party fund-raiser in Britain, is arrested for the second time in an inquiry into whether seats in the House of Lords had been made available in exchange for financial considerations.
Feb. 3, 2007
British officials confirm that H5N1 avian flu has been found on a poultry farm in eastern England.
Feb. 5, 2007
A British soldier killed by a roadside bomb while on patrol in Basra, Iraq, is the 100th to die in action since the start of the U.S.-led invasion.
March 6. 2007
After the publication in The Guardian newspaper of a report on developments in the scandal over accusations that seats in the House of Lords were sold for campaign contributions, the British High Court lifts the ban imposed on March 2 that prevented the BBC from reporting on the matter.
March 7, 2007
Voters in Northern Ireland go to the polls to elect a new legislative assembly. The Democratic Unionist Party finishes first, while Sinn Féin comes in second.
March 26, 2007
In their first-ever direct talks, Ian Paisley of the Democratic Unionist Party and Gerry Adams of Sinn Féin agree to form a power-sharing government for Northern Ireland in a move that will return self-rule to the province for the first time since 2002.
April 17, 2007
The pound sterling reaches an exchange rate of $2, its highest rate against the U.S. dollar since 1992.
April 30, 2007
After a one-year trial in London, five men are found guilty of planning to plant fertilizer bombs around London; the trial revealed links between the men and two of the perpetrators of the July 7, 2005, attacks on the city’s transit system.
May 3, 2007
In a surprise announcement, the Ulster Volunteer Force, a Protestant paramilitary group in Northern Ireland, renounces violence.
May 3, 2007
The Scottish National Party comes in first in elections to the Scottish Parliament, winning 47 of the body’s 129 seats, and Labour comes in second with 46 seats.
May 8, 2007
Ian Paisley of the Democratic Unionists and Martin McGuinness of Sinn Féin are sworn in as leader and deputy leader of Northern Ireland’s new executive government.
May 17, 2007
Alex Salmond of the Scottish National Party is sworn in as first minister of Scotland.
June 15, 2007
Information Commissioner Richard Thomas rules that the public is entitled to know general details of the expenses claimed by MPs on second homes (the so-called Additional Costs Allowance), but he does not allow the release of itemized lists.
June 17, 2007
A ceremony is held in London to mark the 25th anniversary of the end of the Falkland Islands War between Britain and Argentina.
June 25, 2007
British troops withdraw from Northern Ireland’s Bessbrook Mill, halfway between Belfast, N.Ire., and Dublin, Ire.; they had been stationed there since 1970.
June 27, 2007
Gordon Brown, Tony Blair’s chancellor of the Exchequer, takes over as prime minister.
June 29, 2007
Two Mercedes sedans that had been packed with explosives to make them into car bombs are discovered in London and defused by police.
June 30, 2007
Two men drive a burning SUV through the doors of the Glasgow airport; the men are arrested and no one at the airport is injured, but it is assumed that this incident is connected with the discovery the day before of car bombs in London.
July 11, 2007
Four men who were convicted on July 9 of plotting the failed subway and bus bombings in London on July 21, 2005, two weeks after a similar but successful attack, are sentenced to life in prison.
Aug. 4, 2007
British authorities burn the bodies of 60 cattle and impose a cordon around a farm in Guildford, Surrey, where foot-and-mouth disease was discovered two days earlier.
Oct. 2, 2007
During a visit to Baghdad, Prime Minister Gordon Brown says that he plans to withdraw 500 more troops than had previously been planned from southern Iraq by the end of the year.
Oct. 8, 2007
Prime Minister Gordon Brown announces his intention of withdrawing half the British troops in Iraq by the spring of 2008, citing progress in the training of Iraqi security forces and improvements in the situation in Basra, where British forces are based.
Nov. 11, 2007
In Northern Ireland the Ulster Defence Association, the main Protestant paramilitary organization, announces that it is laying down its arms but will not turn its weapons over to international disarmament officials.
Nov. 20, 2007
The British government reveals that in October unencrypted computer disks containing detailed personal and financial information on 25 million people, 40 percent of the country’s population, were lost; a government tax agency had sent the disks unregistered to the National Audit Office, but they never arrived.
Dec. 14, 2007
Rowan Williams, the archbishop of Canterbury, sends a long letter to members of the Anglican Communion, chastising the U.S. Episcopal Church for departing from the Communion consensus in its acceptance of homosexuality and also criticizing conservative prelates for encouraging schism in the church.
Dec. 22, 2007
Officials of the Roman Catholic Church announce that Tony Blair has converted from Anglicanism to Roman Catholicism.