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Important political events from 2008-2013

March 11, 2013: President Asif Ali Zardari and Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmedinijad officially inaugurated construction work of a delayed $7.5 billion gas pipeline from
Iran to Pakistan. The inauguration took place despite strong opposition from the US and
warnings of economic sanctions.

February 18, 2013: The government formally awarded a multi-billion dollars contract for
construction and operation of Gwadar Port to China. The port’s development is expected to
open up new vistas of progress in Pakistan, particularly Balochistan.

January 15, 2013: The Supreme Court directed the authorities to arrest all those accused in the
rental power projects case. Raja Pervez Ashraf is among the accused. He was accused of
receiving kickbacks and commission in the case as minister for water and power. January 14,
2013: The Balochistan government was dismissed and governor’s rule was imposed in the
province. The measure was taken days after the bombings in Quetta that killed over 100
people, most of them Hazaras.

June 19, 2012: The Supreme Court declared Yousuf Raza Gilani disqualified from holding a seat
in the parliament from the date of his conviction on April 26, 2012 by a seven-member bench
for contempt of court.

Gilani was convicted for contempt over not implementing the Supreme Court’s ruling on the
National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO).

January 11, 2012: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani sacked Secretary Defence Khalid Naeem
Lodhi for "gross misconduct and illegal action which created misunderstanding" between state
institutions. The sacking came after a crisis began to develop in the wake of Gilani’s statement
which said the affidavits submitted to the Supreme Court by Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq
Parvez Kayani and ISI chief Lt Gen Ahmad Shuja Pasha on ‘memogate’ were ‘unconstitutional
and illegal’. The statement was retracted later.

November 26, 2011: Nato fighters killed 25 Pakistani military personnel in air strikes on two
Pakistani positions in the northwestern tribal region of Mohmand. The strikes were followed by
tensions between the US and Pakistan with the latter blocking supply routes to Nato in
Afghanistan. In July 2012, Pakistan decided to reopen the route after US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton said she was sorry for the loss of life in a botched air raid.

November 17, 2011: Mansoor Ijaz, a Pakistani-American businessman, named Husain Haqqani,
the then Pakistani ambassador to the US, as the source to the memo sent to the then American
military chief days after the May 2 US raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, seeking his help to
avert a possible military coup in Pakistan.

Haqqani denied the allegation and resigned from his position on Novermber 22ndsaying he was
”happy to face an inquiry” into the affair.
May 2, 2011: Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed in a firefight with US forces in
Abbottabad, ending a nearly 10-year worldwide hunt for the mastermind of the September 11
attacks.

January 4, 2011: Salman Taseer was gunned down in Islamabad by one of his security guards.
The guard, Mumtaz Qadri of the Punjab Elite Force, yelled out ‘Allah-o-Akbar’ and emptied two
magazines of an SMG on Taseer, who was the governor of Punjab, before surrendering himself.
Qadri later said he had killed Taseer because of his criticism of the blasphemy law.

April 8, 2010: The National Assembly passed the 18th Amendmentto the Constitution of
Pakistan, abolishing the president’s power to unilaterally dissolve the Parliament. The
amendment also renamed North West Frontier Province to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. It went
through the Senate on April 15, 2010 and became an act of parliament after being signed by
President Asif Ali Zardari the same month.

March 9, 2010: President Zardari signed the Protection Against Harassment of Women at
Workplace Bill, 2010, aimed at providing a safe working environment to women. He reiterated
the government's commitment to ensuring equal rights for men and women in accordance with
the Constitution.

December 30, 2009: Finance ministers of the four provinces and the federal government signed
the Seventh National Finance Commission Award. The agreement was hailed as the first step
towards the provinces’ financial autonomy and a philosophical shift in government policy to
enhance the provinces’ shares.

December 16, 2009: The Supreme Court declared the controversial NRO as never to have
existed and against the Constitution by reviving all cases and reversing acquittals of its
beneficiaries, thus putting the PPP parliamentarians and cabinet members and President
Zardari in a quandary.

It was a controversial ordinance issued by Pervez Musharraf and granted amnesty to politicians
and bureaucrats accused of corruption, money laundering and other crimes between January
1, 1986, and October 12, 1999.

November 2009: The government unveiled a conciliation packagewith an offer of dialogue with
the Baloch. The package called Aghaz-i-Huqooq-i-Balochistan promised of probes into political
murders, halting of new cantonments as well as more local control on resources.

October 7, 2009: The the army’s top commanders expressed their ‘serious concerns’ on some
of the clauses of the so-called Kerry-Lugar bill which they believed would affect ‘national
security’.

The bill was aimed at releasing 1.5 billion US dollars per year to the Pakistani government as
non-military aid from the period of 2010 to 2014.
May 2009: The military launched an operation in Swat against the Pakistani Taliban following
orders of the government. The operation followed a consensus within the country’s political
leadership. Later in June, another operation was launched, this time in the South Waziristan
tribal region agains the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

September 9, 2008: PPP Co-Chairman Asif Ali Zardari takes oath as the head of state. The oath
was administered by Chief Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar at the Aiwan-i-Sadr.

August 25, 2008: The Pakistan Muslim League-N quit the five-month-old ruling
coalition because of differences with the Pakistan Peoples Party on the issues of reinstatement
of the deposed judges and unilateral nomination of Asif Zardari as a presidential candidate.

March 24, 2008: The new National Assembly elected Yousuf Raza Gilani prime minister by more
than two-thirds majority to put a coalition of Musharraf’s opponents in power, which the new
leader used immediately to order the release of deposed judges of superior courts kept under
detention for over four and a half months.

March 17, 2008: The oath-taking by 329 newly-elected law-makers marked the beginning of a
five-year term of the 342-seat lower house.

February 21, 2008: PPP, PML-N and ANP agree to form a coalitionto govern at the centre and in
provinces.

February 18, 2008: A general election was held in the country with the PPP and PML-N heading
for a comeback.

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