Instability in Pakistan

Key events in the latest crisis in Pakistan
March 9
The Pakistani president, General Pervez Musharraf, suspends the head of the supreme court, Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, for alleged misconduct. Gen Musharraf's popularity starts to nosedive.

April 5
Hardline religious leaders establish a Qazi court - a parallel judicial system - in the Red mosque (Lal Masjid) in Islamabad, again challenging the writ of the government.

May 12
At least 34 die and more than 130 are injured during violent clashes between supporters of Gen Musharraf and backers of Judge Chaudhry on the streets of Pakistan's commercial capital, Karachi.

May 14
Shops and markets in all major cities close after opposition parties and lawyers' bodies call for a strike in protest at the violence in Karachi.

May 18
Pro-Taliban militants at the Red mosque take four police officers hostage, accusing them of spying for the government. Maulana Abdul Aziz, who is in charge of the mosque, threatens suicide attacks across Pakistan if any operation is conducted against the mosque.

June 22
Red mosque students raid a Chinese massage centre, alleging that it is a brothel, and take five Chinese nationals - three women and two men - hostage.

July 3
Abdul Aziz is caught trying to escape from the mosque wearing a burka.

July 4
At least 1,200 students surrender as security forces surround the mosque complex, offering an amnesty to those who give up their weapons.

July 10
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the deputy chief cleric of the Red mosque and Abdul Aziz's brother, is among dozens who die as commandos storm the mosque complex after a week-long standoff. More than 50 militants and nine soldiers are killed in the 15-hour operation, according to the Pakistan military. Independent sources say the death toll runs into hundreds.

July 15
Tribal militants in north Waziristan, on the border with Afghanistan, unilaterally scrap their 10-month-old peace accord with the government and threaten to launch attacks against the security forces.

July 17
A suicide bomber kills 16 people and injures at least 63 at a lawyers' rally in Islamabad.

July 20
Pakistan's top court reinstates Judge Chaudhry as the country's chief justice, declaring Gen Musharraf's decision to suspend him illegal.

August 7
Gen Musharraf says recent suggestions by the US that it might launch unilateral strikes against al-Qaida in Pakistan are "counterproductive" to the fight against terrorism.

August 22
US and British authorities express disappointment at Pakistan's decision to release Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, a 28-year-old suspected al-Qaida expert accused of training suicide bombers and plotting to attack Heath row airport.

September 10
The former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, who has been in exile since being ousted in the 1999 coup, is arrested and deported to Saudi Arabia, four and a half hours after arriving in Islamabad from London.

September 14
The former prime minister Benazir Bhutto declares she will return to Pakistan on October 18.

September 17
A member of the ruling party says Gen Musharraf will step down as the head of the military. The supreme court begins to hear petitions seeking to block Gen Musharraf's plans for a second presidential term.

September 20
The election commission announces that a vote for the presidency will be held on October 6, when Gen Musharraf will seek re-election. In Pakistan, the president is elected by members of the parliament - the national assembly and the senate - as well as those from the four provincial assemblies.

September 20
Osama bin Laden calls on Pakistanis to rise against their "infidel" leader in retaliation for the storming of the Red mosque.

September 24
Riot police arrest dozens of opposition activists protesting against Gen Musharraf as the supreme court dismisses two challenges to his bid for re-election.

September 27
Gen Musharraf files nomination papers for a second five-year term. Judge Chaudhry orders the release of hundreds of opposition activists rounded up by police.

September 28
The supreme court throws out a major legal challenge to Gen Musharraf standing for election, to shouts of "shame" from lawyers in the courtroom.

October 2
More than 80 Pakistani opposition politicians resign in protest at Gen Musharraf's attempt to be re-elected. It is also announced that General Ashfaq Kiani will take over as the head of the army after the election.

October 6
Gen Musharraf sweeps to victory in the presidential elections, winning 252 of the 257 votes cast in parliament and prevailing in all four provinces, thanks to a boycott by opposition parties. But he still faces legal challenges in the supreme court.

October 9
Three days of fighting between Pakistani troops and pro-Taliban supporters in the lawless North Waziristan region on the Afghan border leave about 250 dead.

October 12
The supreme court rules days before Ms Bhutto's scheduled return to Pakistan that she could still face prosecution on long-standing corruption charges.

October 18
Ms Bhutto touches down at Karachi airport to a tumultuous welcome. She narrowly escapes a suicide bombing during a homecoming procession in Karachi.

October 19
Ms Bhutto alleges a military and intelligence services link to the attempt on her life, as the death toll from the attack rises to 138. But she makes clear that she is "not accusing the government".

October 22
Ms Bhutto accuses the Pakistani government of a cover-up after it refuses to agree to her request to call in British and US experts to help investigate the assassination attempt. Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, the chief of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League party, responds by alleging that Ms Bhutto's husband arranged the blasts to stir up public sympathy.

October 23
The Pakistani army sends 2,500 troops into a remote valley in the north-west of the country to combat followers of a militant cleric, Maulana Fazlullah, calling for Taliban-style rule.

October 30
A suicide bomber kills six people in the city of Rawalpindi, in what was thought to be an assassination attempt against Gen Musharraf.

November 2
The US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, says the Bush administration is opposed to emergency rule, as rumors sweep the country that Gen Musharraf is about to suspend the constitution.

November 3
Gen Musharraf imposes emergency rule, triggering condemnation from leaders around the world. He says the reaction is a response to Islamist militancy and to the 'paralysis of government by judicial interference'. Judges and lawyers are arrested and television and radio stations taken off the air. Judge Chaudhry is sacked.

November 5
More than 350 lawyers arrested in latest protests. Gen Musharraf forced to deny he is under house arrest as rumors circle of a coup.

© Guardian News & Media 2008
Published: 11/5/2007
 
Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.
Your Comments:
Your Name:
Use the form below to email this article to your friends.
Recipient Email Address:
 Separate multiple email addresses by ;
Your Name:
Your Email Address: