important Events in the history of Nigeria
16-18th centuries -
Slave trade: Millions of Nigerians are forcibly sent to the Americas.
1809 - Single
Islamic state - Sokoto caliphate - is founded in north.
1830s-1886 - Civil
wars plague Yorubaland, in the south.
1850s - British
establish presence around Lagos.
1861-1914 - Britain
consolidates its hold over what it calls the Colony and Protectorate of
Nigeria, governs by "indirect rule" through local leaders.
1922 - Part of
former German colony Kamerun is added to Nigeria under League of Nations
mandate.
1960 -
Independence, with Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa leading a
coalition government.
1962-63 -
Controversial census fuels regional and ethnic tensions.
1966 January -
Balewa killed in coup. Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi heads up military
administration.
1966 July - Ironsi
killed in counter-coup, replaced by Lieutenant-Colonel Yakubu Gowon.
1967 - Three
eastern states secede as the Republic of Biafra, sparking bloody civil war.
1970 - Biafran
leaders surrender, former Biafran regions reintegrated into country.
1975 - Gowon
overthrown flees to Britain, replaced by Brigadier Murtala Ramat Mohammed, who
begins process of moving federal capital to Abuja.
1976 - Mohammed
assassinated in failed coup attempt. Replaced by his deputy, Lieutenant-General
Olusegun Obasanjo, who helps introduce American-style presidential
constitution.
Sani Abacha
Gen Sani Abacha was accused of
stealing some $3bn from state during his five-year rule.
1979 - Elections
bring Alhaji Shehu Shagari to power.
1983 January - The
government expels more than one million foreigners, mostly Ghanaians, saying
they had overstayed their visas and were taking jobs from Nigerians. The move
is condemned abroad but proves popular in Nigeria.
1983 August, September - Shagari re-elected amid accusations of irregularities.
1983 December -
Major-General Muhammad Buhari seizes power in bloodless coup.
1985 - Ibrahim
Babangida seizes power in bloodless coup, curtails political activity.
1993 June -
Military annuls elections when preliminary results show victory by Chief
Moshood Abiola.
1993 August - Power
transferred to Interim National Government.
Abacha years
1993 November -
General Sani Abacha seizes power, suppresses opposition.
1994 - Abiola
arrested after proclaiming himself president.
1995 - Ken
Saro-Wiwa, writer and campaigner against oil industry damage to his Ogoni
homeland, is executed following a hasty trial. In protest, European Union
imposes sanctions until 1998, Commonwealth suspends Nigeria's membership until
1998.
1998 - Abacha dies,
succeeded by Major-General Abdulsalami Abubakar. Chief Abiola dies in custody a
month later.
1999 -
Parliamentary and presidential elections. Olusegun Obasanjo sworn in as
president.
2000 - Adoption of
Islamic, or Sharia, law by several northern states in the face of opposition
from Christians. Tension over the issue results in hundreds of deaths in
clashes between Christians and Muslims.
2001 - Tribal war
in Benue state, in eastern-central Nigeria, displaces thousands of people.
In October, army soldiers sent
to quash the fighting kill more than 200 unarmed civilians, apparently in
retaliation for the abduction and murder of 19 soldiers.
2001 October -
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, South African President Mbeki and
Algerian President Bouteflika launch New Partnership for African Development,
or Nepad, which aims to foster development and open government and end wars in
return for aid, foreign investment and the lifting of trade barriers to African
exports.
Ethnic violence
2002 February -
Some 100 people were killed in Lagos in clashes between Hausas from
mainly-Islamic north and ethnic Yorubas from predominantly-Christian southwest.
2002 November -
More than 200 people die in four days of rioting stoked by Muslim fury over the
planned Miss World beauty pageant in Kaduna in December. The event is relocated
to Britain.
2003 12 April -
First legislative elections since end of military rule in 1999. Polling marked
by delays, allegations of ballot-rigging. President Obasanjo's People's
Democratic Party wins parliamentary majority.
Obasanjo re-elected
2003 19 April -
First civilian-run presidential elections since end of military rule. Olusegun
Obasanjo elected for second term with more than 60% of vote. Opposition parties
reject result. EU poll observers cite "serious irregularities".
Oil
2003 July -
Nationwide general strike called off after nine days after government agrees to
lower recently-increased fuel prices.
2003 August -
Inter-communal violence in the Niger Delta town of Warri kills about 100 people,
injures 1,000.
2003 September -
Nigeria's first satellite, NigeriaSat-1, launched by Russian rocket.
2004 January - UN
brokers talks between Nigeria and Cameroon about disputed border. Both sides
agree to joint security patrols.
2004 May - State of
emergency is declared in the central Plateau State after more than 200 Muslims
are killed in Yelwa in attacks by Christian militia; revenge attacks are
launched by Muslim youths in Kano.
Trouble in the south
2004 August-September - Deadly clashes between gangs in oil city of Port Harcourt prompts
strong crackdown by troops. Rights group Amnesty International cites death toll
of 500, authorities say about 20 died.
2005 July - Paris
Club of rich lenders agrees to write off two-thirds of Nigeria's $30bn foreign
debt.
2006 January
onwards - Militants in the Niger Delta attack pipelines and other oil
facilities and kidnap foreign oil workers. The rebels demand more control over
the region's oil wealth.
2006 February -
More than 100 people are killed when religious violence flares in mainly-Muslim
towns in the north and in the southern city of Onitsha.
2006 April - Helped
by record oil prices, Nigeria becomes the first African nation to pay off its
debt to the Paris Club of rich lenders.
2006 May - The
Senate rejects proposed changes to the constitution which would have allowed
President Obasanjo to stand for a third term in 2007.
Jos clashes
2010 January - At
least 149 people are killed during two days of violence between Christian and
Muslim gangs in the central city of Jos.
2010 March - More
than 120 people were killed in clashes between Muslims and Christians in the
flashpoint city of Jos.
2010 May -
President Umaru Yar'Adua dies after a long illness. Vice-president Goodluck
Jonathan, already acting in Yar'Adua's stead, succeeds him.
2010 October -
Nigeria marks 50 years of independence. Celebrations in Abuja marred by deadly
bomb blasts.
Boko Haram
The Islamist group Boko Haram is
loosely modelled on the Taliban movement in Afghanistan and has claimed
responsibility for numerous attacks
2010 November -
Nigeria intercepts arms shipment from Iran, reports find to UN Security
Council.
2010 December -
Christmas Eve bomb attacks near central city of Jos kill at least 80 people.
Attacks claimed by Islamist sect Boko Haram spark clashes between Christians
and Muslims. Some 200 killed in reprisal attacks.
2011 March -
Goodluck Jonathan wins presidential elections.
2011 July -
President Jonathan says he will ask parliament to amend the constitution so
that presidents will serve a single, longer term in office.
Government says it wants to
start negotiating with the Boko Haram Islamist group blamed for a series of
recent attacks across northern Nigeria.
2011 August -
Suicide bomb attack on UN headquarters in Abuja kills 23 people. Radical
Islamist group Boko Haram claims responsibility.
2011 November - At
least 63 people were killed in bomb and gun attacks in north-eastern town of
Damaturu. Boko Haram claims responsibility.
President Jonathan sacks the
head of Nigeria's anti-corruption agency, saying that the body has failed to
get to grips with graft during her tenure.
2011 December -
Nearly 70 people were killed in days of fighting between security forces and
Boko Haram militants in north-eastern states of Yobe and Borno.
Christmas Day bomb attacks kill
about 40 people. Boko Haram claims responsibility.
President Jonathan declares
state of emergency to contain violence by Boko Haram.
2012 January - Fuel
price strike causes major disruption. Unions suspend action when government reverses
decision to drop fuel subsidies.
More than 100 killed in single
day of co-ordinate bombings and shootings in Kano, shortly after Boko Haram
tells Christians to quit the north.
2012 April -
Chadian President Idriss Deby calls on countries neighbouring northern Nigeria
to set up a joint military force to tackle Boko Haram militants as they
continue their attacks. He warns of the danger of the Islamist group
destabilizing the whole Lake Chad basin area.
2012 June - Boko
Haram claims responsibility for attacks on two churches in Jos city and Borno
state, in which one person died and dozens of others were injured. An angry
crowd kills six Muslims in Jos in retaliation.
2012 July - Nigeria
signs a preliminary $4.5bn deal with US-based Vulcan Petroleum to build six oil
refineries. Nigeria lacks refinery capacity and has to import most of its fuel
needs, despite being a major oil producer.
2012 August - The
army kills 20 Boko Haram fighters in a shootout in the northeastern city of
Maiduguri. The government says it has started informal talks through
"backroom channels" with Boko Haram to try to end attacks. Boko Haram
ruled out peace talks shortly beforehand.
Maiduguri clashes
2012 October - Boko
Haram bomb army bases in Maiduguri. The army says it kills 24 Boko Haram
fighters in subsequent clashes.
2012 November - At
least 100 people were charged with treason after a march supporting
independence for Biafra in the region's main town, Enugu.
2012 December - At
least 20 Christians were killed in attacks by suspected Islamist militants in
the northern states of Yobe and Borno over the Christmas/New Year period.
2013 May -
Government declares state of emergency in three northern states of Yobe, Borno
and Adamawa and sends in troops to combat the Boko Haram Islamist militants.
2013 July -
Secondary schools close in Yobe state after a massacre of 22 pupils at a
boarding school, which the government attributes to Boko Haram. The Islamist
group has burned down several schools since 2010.
2013 September -
Boko Haram Islamists murder more than 150 people in roadside attacks in the
northeast. Separately, security forces fight Boko Haram armed insurgents in the
capital Abuja.
2013 November - Six
state governors defect from the governing People's Democratic Party (PDP) and
merge with main opposition All Progressives Congress, leaving the PDP with
fewer governors supporting it than the opposition.
Schoolgirls kidnapped
2014 April - Boko Haram kidnaps more than 200 girls from a boarding
school. The US and Britain sends planes to help search for them and West
African leaders agree to co-operate to fight the Islamists.
2014 July - Nigeria
and neighbours agree to form a joint military force to combat the growing
regional threat posed by Boko Haram.
2014 August - Boko
Haram proclaims a caliphate - an Islamic state - in the territory it controls
in the northeast, a declaration dismissed by the government.
2014 October -
Nigeria's military says it has agreed a ceasefire with Islamist militants Boko
Haram, and that the schoolgirls the group abducted will be released. The group
denies it has agreed a ceasefire and says the girls have been married off.
President Goodluck Jonathan says
he will seek a second term in office in elections, but these are postponed from
February 2015 because of the Boko Haram insurgency.
2014 November -
Boko Haram launches a series of attacks in northeastern Nigeria, capturing
several towns near Lake Chad and running raids into neighbouring Chad and
Cameroon in early 2015. Hundreds of people in the north-east are killed and
thousands more displaced.
2015 February-March
- Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger form military coalition against Boko Haram,
claim successes in pushing it back in all these countries.
Nigerian army captures Gwoza,
which it believes is Boko Haram's main stronghold, in late March, leaving the
armed group with only two towns under its control.
2015 March -
Muhammadu Buhari wins the presidential election, becoming the first opposition
candidate in Nigeria's history.
2015 June - Nigeria
assumes command of a regional military force to counter Boko Haram, to include
troops from Chad, Cameroon, Niger and Benin.
No comments:
Post a Comment
add