2001


2001 (MMI) was a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2001st year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 1st year of the 3rd millennium and the 21st century, and the 2nd year of the 2000s decade.

2001 was dominated by the September 11 attacks against the United States by Al-Qaeda, which killed 2,977 people and instigated the global war on terror.[1][2] The United States led a multi-national coalition in an invasion of Afghanistan after the Taliban government did not extradite Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Internal conflicts, political or otherwise, caused shifts in leadership in multiple countries, which included the assassination of Laurent-Désiré Kabila in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,[3] the Second EDSA Revolution in the Philippines,[4] the massacre of the royal family by the crown prince in Nepal,[5] and civil unrest in Argentina.[6] Other notable political events were an escalation in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict,[7] the storming of the Indonesian parliament,[8] the Hainan Island incident between China and the United States,[9] an insurgency in Macedonia,[10] and a terrorist attack on the Parliament of India that began the 2001–2002 India–Pakistan standoff.[11]

Space milestones in 2001 were numerous, the most notable being the first spacecraft landing on an asteroid,[12] the deorbit of the Russian station Mir,[13] American entrepreneur Dennis Tito becoming the first space tourist,[14] the discovery of 28978 Ixion in the Kuiper belt,[15] a flyby of Io by the U.S. Galileo probe,[16] and the first discovery of an atmosphere on an exoplanet.[17] In addition, the year witnessed the first sequence of the human genome,[18] the first self-contained artificial heart,[19] and the first clone of a human embryo.[20]

The world population on January 1, 2001, was estimated to be 6.190 billion people, and it increased to 6.272 billion people by January 1, 2002.[21] An estimated 133.9 million births and 52.1 million deaths took place in 2001.[21] The average global life expectancy was 66.8 years, an increase of 0.3 years from 2000.[21] The rate of child mortality was 7.32%, a decrease of 0.26pp from 2000.[22] 28.25% of people were living in extreme poverty, a decrease of 0.88pp from 2000.[23] 2001 was designated as International Year of Volunteers by the United Nations.[24]

The number of global refugees in 2001 was approximately 12 million. 500,000 were settled over the course of the year, but the same number of people were displaced in other locations, causing the number of refugees to remain largely unchanged. The largest sources of refugees were from Afghanistan and Macedonia. The number of internally displaced persons decreased from 21.8 million to 19.8 million in 2001, with the most affected areas being Afghanistan, Colombia, and Liberia.[25]


One of the landslides caused by the January 2001 earthquake in El Salvador; About 585 of the deaths are caused by landslides in Santa Tecla and Comasagua.
Former Argentine president Fernando de la Rúa leaving the Casa Rosada after resigning on December 21
Logo of the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants
The taller Buddha of Bamiyan before (left) and after destruction (right)
Crew of Soyuz TM-32: (L-R) Dennis Tito, Talgat Musabayev, and Yuri Baturin
The crash site of American Airlines Flight 587 on November 13, one day after the crash
Map of the 2001 insurgency in Macedonia, part of the Yugoslav Wars
433 Eros as seen from the NEAR spacecraft
Two men marrying in Amsterdam on April 1, the first day in which the possibility to marry was opened to same-sex couples
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and U.S. President George W. Bush meet at the White House in September 2001.
Buffalo Bayou and White Oak Bayou at Main Street after Tropical Storm Allison hit Houston, Texas, U.S.
Photo session of the G8 leaders in Genoa, 2001: (L-R) Junichiro Koizumi, Tony Blair, George W. Bush, Jacques Chirac, Silvio Berlusconi, Vladimir Putin, Jean Chretien, Gerhard Schroeder, Guy Verhofstadt, and Romano Prodi
A Genesis collector array in the clean lab at Johnson Space Center. The hexagons consist of a variety of ultra-pure, semiconductor-grade wafers, including silicon, corundum, gold on sapphire, diamond-like carbon films,[229] and other materials.[230]
The World Trade Center and the Statue of Liberty just after the September 11 attacks in New York City
Swissair Airbus A321-100 (2001)
First generation iPod
Size comparison of HD 209458 b with Jupiter (left)
A ZPU-2 anti-aircraft gun that was mounted on the North Korean vessel sunk in the Battle of Amami-Ōshima