Posted by: kumale April 21, 2006
Timeline of Events in Nepal
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Timeline of Events in Nepal By The Associated Press © 2006 The Associated Press — Key events since King Gyanendra took power in Nepal: 2001: June 1 _ King Birendra and his family members are assassinated by his son, Crown Prince Dipendra, in a shooting spree at the royal palace. The prince goes into a coma from apparently self-inflicted gunshot wounds. June 2 _ Crown Prince Dipendra declared king while still in a coma. King Birendra's brother, Prince Gyanendra, declared regent. June 4 _ Dipendra dies, Gyanendra declared king. Anti-Gyanendra protests are held in the capital, Katmandu, where a curfew is imposed. July _ Maoist rebels step up violence, Prime Minister Girija Prasad Koirala resigns. July _ Sher Bahadur Deuba named new prime minister, announces truce with rebels. Aug. 30 _ Government, rebels begin peace talks. Rebels demand new constitution. November _ Maoists kill 24 policemen in attacks at 15 sites, ending four-month cease-fire. Nov. 26 _ King Gyanendra declares state of emergency. 2002: May _ Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba meets with President Bush to seek support for his campaign against the rebels. Bush pledges $20 million. Maoists offer truce, which is rejected by the government. May 22 _ Gyanendra dissolves Parliament, orders fresh elections. Deuba expelled by his party, the Nepali Congress, but remains interim prime minister. Aug. 28 _ Government lifts state of emergency. Oct. 4 _ Gyanendra fires Deuba, calling him "incompetent" and incapable of holding elections on schedule. Deuba had asked for the postponement of voting because of fears of rebel violence. 2003: Jan. 29 _ Rebels declare cease-fire, begin peace talks with government. May 30 _ Prime Minister Lokendra Bahadur Chand, Deuba's replacement, resigns. June 4 _ Gyanendra appoints monarchist Surya Bahadur Thapa, 75, as new prime minister. July 31 _ Maoist rebels agree to government requests for a resumption of peace talks. Aug. 27 _ Maoist rebels call off seven-month cease-fire and withdraw from peace talks. Fighting resumes. 2004: May 7 _ Thapa announces his resignation as prime minister after 11 months in office and months of protests by political parties demanding a restoration of democracy. June 2 _ Gyanendra reappoints Deuba as prime minister with the task of holding elections. August _ Nepalese rebels enforce blockade on Katmandu, cutting it off from rest of Nepal for a week, demanding the government free jailed guerrillas. 2005: Feb. 1 _ Gyanendra dismisses government and declares a state of emergency, taking control of the kingdom. April 30 _ Gyanendra lifts the state of emergency, apparently bowing to strong international pressure to restore democracy in Nepal. Sept. 4 _ Communist rebels declare a three-month unilateral cease-fire. Nov. 22 _ Communist rebels and seven main political parties reach agreement to bolster opposition to Gyanendra. 2006: Jan. 2 _ Maoist rebels announce end to a three-month unilateral cease-fire _ which they had extended by one month _ because of the government's refusal to enter peace negotiations with them. Feb. 9 _ Candidates backed by the king sweep the country's first election in seven years; opposition parties reject the results of the vote, marred by low turnout. February 17 _ Nepal's Supreme Court orders the release of 37 political detainees. April 21 _ Gyanendra vows to return multiparty democracy after weeks of bloody protests and international pressure.
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