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Timeline of the Algerian Civil War
The Algerian Civil War was a conflict in Algeria, starting in 1992 and continuing to a diminished extent up to the present.
1991
- November 27 - Two Islamists who had fought in Afghanistan, Aïssa Messaoudi and Abderrahmane Dahane , attack a border post at Guemmar, killing soldiers and foreshadowing the war to come.
- December 26 - First round of parliamentary elections; FIS wins 188 of the 232 (of 429) seats decided on the first ballot, putting it far ahead of any other party. FFS wins 25 seats, while the ex-ruling party, FLN, wins just 15.
1992
1993
- March 27 - Algeria cuts diplomatic relations with Sudan and Iran, accusing them of supporting terrorism in Algeria.
- May 26 - Anti-Islamist writer Tahar Djaout attacked by assassins; he died of his wounds shortly after, on June 2.
- August 22 - Ex-Prime Minister Kasdi Merbah assassinated. The government accuses the GIA, while FIS accuses the government.
- December 1 - Deadline beyond which the GIA had stated that it would consider all foreigners remaining in Algeria as targets.
1994
1995
- January 14 - Representatives of FIS, FFS, and FLN (and some smaller parties) sign the Sant'Egidio platform (text) in Rome, seeing it as a blueprint for ending the conflict. The Algerian government found its provisions unacceptable, and did not sign.
- February 21 - Serkadji prison mutiny; 4 guards and 96 prisoners killed in a day and a half, following an escape attempt and prison mutiny in a high-security prison for people charged with or convicted of terrorism.
- November 16 - Liamine Zeroual elected president.
1996
1997
1998
1999
- April 15 - Abdelaziz Bouteflika elected president, all other candidates having withdrawn alleging fraud.
- June 5 - The AIS agrees in principle to disband and starts negotiating for an amnesty for its fighters.
- November 22 - Senior FIS member Abdelkader Hachani assassinated.
2000
- January 11 - AIS concludes its negotiations with the government for an amnesty and disbands.
2001
2002
- February 8 - Antar Zouabri, GIA leader, is killed in his hometown of Boufarik . (His death had been incorrectly announced on previous occasions.)
2003
2004
- June 20 - Government announces killing of GSPC head Nabil Sahraoui . He is succeeded by Abou Mossaab Abdelouadoud .
- July - GIA leader Rachid Abou Tourab killed, according to an interior ministry statement in January 2005.
External links
Last updated: 06-08-2005 13:25:08
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