"What in the World?" - Week of April 9-15, 2017

Dozens of Syrian civilians were killed in the village of Khan Sheikhoun, vicitims of a bombing that used THIS banned nerve agent:
VX
Ricin
Tabun
Sarin
With the first round of voting in the French presidential election set for Sunday, April 23, banks are beginning to estimate the political impact of the Elysée Palace's new occupant. According to most estimates, a win by THIS candidate would result in sharp losses in European stocks —up to 35 percent according to UBS; according to JP Morgan, the euro could fall to $0.98:
Marine Le Pen
Benoît Hamon
François Fillon
Emmanuel Macron
Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to the U.S. This week did not include THIS activity, viewed by his country's Communist Party as a capitalist symbol of corruption, and forbidden to its members:
Tennis
Sailing
Golf
Dining in public
The leader of THIS country ordered troops to occupy some of the Spratly Islands, located in the disputed South China Sea:
China
Philippines
Taiwan
South Korea
April 6 marked the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the United States' involvement in THIS armed conflict:
Spanish Civil War
Korean War
World War I
Russian Civil War
A truck plowed into a department store, killing four and injuring 15 in the main shopping district of THIS Scandinavian city:
Helsinki
Oslo
Stockholm
Copenhagen
Six years after it called a cease-fire, the Basque separatist group ETA surrendered WHAT to police in Bayonne, France, this week?
Classified intelligence files
Locations of its weapons caches
Names of its main operatives
Surveillance footage of French politicians
Beginning in July 2017, THIS Latin American nation will be the world's first to sell marijuana for recreational purposes:
Chile
Bolivia
Uruguay
Colombia
Tens of thousands of protestors have taken to the streets across South Africa this week, demanding the resignation of the nation's president. Who currently holds that title?
Jacob Zuma
F.W. de Klerk
Thabo Mbeki
Kgalema Motlanthe
Citing the risk of injury by slipping or falling, as well as potential damage to feet, legs, and backs, the government of THIS Canadian province passed a law banning requirements that women wear high heels at work:
Ontario
British Columbia
Quebec
Newfoundland
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