2003 in Luxembourg
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Contents |
[edit] Incumbents
| Position | Incumbent |
|---|---|
| Grand Duke | Henri |
| Prime Minister | Jean-Claude Juncker |
| Deputy Prime Minister | Lydie Polfer |
| President of the Chamber of Deputies | Jean Spautz |
| President of the Council of State |
Marcel Sauber (until 11 March) Pierre Mores (from 29 April) |
| Mayor of Luxembourg City | Paul Helminger |
[edit] Events
[edit] January – March
- 13 February - Albert Rodesch is appointed to the Council of State, replacing John Castegnaro, who resigned in January.[1]
- 11 March - President of the Council of State Marcel Sauber resigns to take up the vacancy left in the Chamber of Deputies by the death of Willy Bourg on 21 February.[2]
[edit] April – June
- 29 April – Lydie Polfer meets with the foreign ministers of Belgium, France, and Germany, who agree a framework for the introduction of the planned Common Foreign and Security Policy.
- 29 April - Pierre Mores is appointed President of the Council of State, replacing Marcel Sauber.[1]
- 20 May – Jean-Claude Juncker delivers his ninth State of the Nation address.
- 28 May - Ady Jung is appointed to the Council of State, replacing Marcel Sauber, who resigned in March.[1]
- 31 May – CS Grevenmacher win the Luxembourg Cup, beating FC Etzella Ettelbruck 1-0 in the final.
- 1 June – Thomas Voeckler wins the 2003 Tour de Luxembourg, with Quick Step-Davitamon picking up the team title.
- 7 June – SES Americom launches its AMC-9 satellite: its first under SES ownership.
[edit] July – September
- 24 July – The eastern half of the A13 motorway (the collectrice du Sud), part of E29, is opened between Hellange and Schengen, including a 600 metre viaduct across the border to meet Germany's A8.[3]
- 9 August – The 2003-04 season of the National Division kicks off.
- 12 August – The University of Luxembourg is founded.
- 22 August – Plans to extend France's LGV Est to Luxembourg City are formally approved by Luxembourg.
- 29 August – Skype is released.
[edit] October – December
- 10 October – The Luxembourgian Film Prizes are launched. The prize for Best Film is shared between J'ai toujours voulu etre une Sainte and L'homme au cigare.
- 13 October – Lydie Polfer, Dominique de Villepin, and Joschka Fischer inaugurate the Pierre Werner Institute in Luxembourg City.
- November – Edward Steichen's The Family of Man exhibition, at Clervaux, is added to UNESCO's 'Memory of the World' register.
- 11 December – Kim Kirchen is named Luxembourg’s Sportsperson of the Year.
[edit] Deaths
- 10 January – Paul Cerf, journalist
- 12 February - Ernest Arendt, Councillor of State[1]
- 21 February – Willy Bourg, politician
- 20 March – Gordian Troeller, journalist
- 1 April – Marcel Ernzer, cyclist
- 4 July – Georges Margue, jurist and politician
- 9 November – Maurice Thoss, politician
- 23 November – Johny Lahure, politician[1]
- 5 December – Fernand Koenig, singer
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ a b c d e (French) "Membres depuis 1857". Council of State. http://www.conseil-etat.public.lu/fr/composition/anciensmembres/membresdepuis1857/index.html. Retrieved on 2009-04-05.
- ^ (German) "Marcel Sauber wird Deputierter". Christian Social People's Party. 6 March 2003. http://csv.lu/actualites/1100.html. Retrieved on 2009-04-05.
- ^ (French) "Evolution du réseau autoroutier". Administration des Ponts et Chaussées. 24 January 2008. http://www.pch.public.lu/reseau_routier/autoroutes/evolution/index.html. Retrieved on 29 December 2008.

