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In-Depth: Nigeria

Nigeria

April 2003

C O N T E N T S

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NIGERIA: Chronology of main political events since independence
  1960 
1 October 1960:Nigeria gains independence from Britain. Abubakar Tafawa Balewa of the Northern Peoples Congress emerges as Prime Minister. Nnamdi Azikiwe of the National Council for Nigerian Citizens becomes the first Nigerian Governor-General, and Nigeria's first president when the country becomes a republic in 1963. Obafemi Awolowo of the Action Group becomes leader of the opposition.
15 January 1966:Prime Minister Balewa is killed in a failed coup led by mostly Igbo army officers. Many other top members of the government are also killed, including the powerful premier of the Northern Region, Ahmadu Bello. The government collapses and the most senior army officer, General Thomas Aguiyi-Ironsi, takes over as head of state.
29 July 1966:Northern army officers stage a "counter-coup". Ironsi is killed and Colonel Yakubu Gowon emerges new military ruler. Colonel Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, governor of the Eastern Region, refuses to accept Gowon's authority. Igbos and other south-easterners are massacred across the north.
27 May 1967:After several months of political crisis Gowon announces the dissolution of Nigeria's four administrative regions and their replacement by a 12-state structure.
30 May 1967:Ojukwu declares the former Eastern Region the independent Republic of Biafra. From this point on Nigeria is technically at war.
  1970
12 January 1970:Biafran surrenders. More than one million people had died in 30 months of civil war. Gowon declares "no victor, no vanquished" and announces a programme of reconstruction and rehabilitation.
29 July 1975:Gowon is toppled by Maj-Gen Murtala Mohammed while attending an Organisation of African Unity summit in Kampala, Uganda. He goes into exile in Britain.
13 February 1976:Gen Mohammed is assassinated in an aborted coup. His next in command, Maj-Gen Olusegun Obasanjo, becomes head of state.
1 October 1979:Gen. Obasanjo hands over power to President Shehu Shagari, who won that year's elections on the platform of the National Party of Nigeria, bringing to an end 13 years of military rule.
  1980 
31 December 1983:President Shagari is toppled in a military coup three months after winning a second term at elections marred by violence and allegations of widespread rigging. The new military ruler is Maj-Gen Muhammadu Buhari.
27 August 1985:Buhari is overthrown by his army chief, Maj-Gen Ibrahim Babangida, who makes it clear from the outset that he prefers the title of president.
  1990
22 April 1990:Babangida survives a bloody coup attempt by mainly junior army officers. In the courts martial that follow more than 200 soldiers are sentenced to death and executed.
12 June 1993:Nigerians vote in presidential elections to end military rule. The candidates are Moshood Abiola of the Social Democratic Party and Bashir Tofa of the National Republican Convention. Early results show Abiola with a runaway lead.
15 June 1993:The electoral commission announces the suspension of publication of the results, citing a need to obey a pre-election ruling by a court, which had ordered that the election should not be held. The commission had earlier disobeyed the court ruling because a military decree had stripped the courts of their power to accept election-related lawsuits.
23 June 1993:A statement from Gen Babangida's office declares the election annulled. For the next two months massive demonstrations organised by pro-democracy activists paralyse several Nigerian cities.
27 August 1993:Babangida steps down as president under intense pressure. He hands over to an interim government headed by Ernest Shonekan, a civilian businessman he handpicked, and mandated to organise fresh elections.
17 November 1993:The interim government is toppled by the defence minister, Gen. Sani Abacha. He dissolves all civilian institutions, including the national legislature and state governments.
10 November 1995:Renowned writer and environmental campaigner, Ken Saro-Wiwa, is executed along with eight other Ogoni minority rights activists on murder charges, after a trail generally perceived to be flawed. The execution draws international outrage and the Abacha regime becomes an international pariah.
8 June 1998:Abacha dies suddenly of apparent heart failure. He is succeeded by the most senior military officer, Gen Abdulsalami Abubakar, who pledges rapid reforms to restore democracy.
15 June 1998:Abubakar frees former military ruler Gen. Obasanjo from jail where he was serving a 15-year term. He had been convicted in 1995 along with several military officers and civilians on what was believed by many Nigerians to be trumped-up charges of plotting Abacha's fall.
7 July 1998:Abiola, who had been detained by Abacha since 1994 for laying claims to the presidency on the basis of the annulled 1993 vote, dies suddenly in detention of apparent heart failure. His release was being prepared by the Abubakar regime.
23 February 1999:Nigerians vote in presidential ballot. The candidates are Gen. Obasanjo of the People's Democratic Party and Olu Falae, the joint candidate of the Alliance for Democracy and the All People's Party. Obasanjo emerges victorious, winning nearly 70 percent of the vote.
29 May 1999: Obasanjo is sworn in and a new civilian government is inaugurated ending more than 15 years of domination of power by unelected military rulers.


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