Photo

Reuters Photojournalism

Our day's top images, in-depth photo essays and offbeat slices of life. See the best of Reuters photography.  See more | Photo caption 

A view of an illegal oil refinery is seen in Ogoniland outside Port Harcourt in Nigeria's Delta region March 24, 2011. Crude oil thieves -- known locally as "bunkerers" -- have been a fact of life for years in Africa's biggest oil and gas industry, puncturing pipelines and costing Nigeria and foreign oil firms millions of dollars in lost revenues each year. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye (NIGERIA - Tags: CRIME LAW ENERGY)

Nigeria's oil thieves

Nigeria is Africa's largest crude oil exporter but its production capacity has been slashed by thieves drilling into pipelines.  Slideshow 

Photo

Life in an Amazon tribe

A look at life in the Brazilian Amazon basin with the Yawalapiti tribe.  Slideshow 

CHRONOLOGY-Bumpy road to restoring self-rule in N. Ireland

Related Topics

Mon Mar 26, 2007 9:14am EDT

(Reuters) - Northern Ireland's leading politicians agreed on Monday to start Protestant-Catholic sharing power in the province on May 8.

Following are events since the 1998 Good Friday agreement largely ended 30 years of sectarian conflict.

1998:

June - Elections to a new Protestant-Catholic power-sharing assembly. Protestant Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) leader David Trimble is elected First Minister-designate.

August - Car bomb in the market town of Omagh, west of Belfast, kills 29 people in the worst single attack of the conflict. The Real IRA splinter group claims responsibility.

1999:

December - Northern Ireland gets its own government in which Protestants and Catholics share power after 27 years of direct rule from London.

2000:

February - Britain suspends assembly amid anger by Protestants, who support ties to Britain, over the failure of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) guerrillas to disarm.

May - IRA says it will put its weapons into storage and allow inspections. Britain restores power to Belfast assembly.

2001:

June - IRA political ally Sinn Fein overtakes its more moderate rival, the Social Democratic and Labor Party (SDLP), as Northern Ireland's biggest nationalist party in British parliamentary elections.

July - Trimble resigns over IRA's failure to disarm.

October - IRA says it has put some weapons "beyond use".

2002:

October - Sinn Fein offices at the Stormont parliament are raided by police investigating an alleged IRA spy ring. Britain suspends the assembly and resumes direct rule from London.

2003:

November - Election takes place with Ian Paisley's hard-line Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which opposed the Good Friday Agreement due to Sinn Fein involvement, overtaking the UUP as the province's biggest pro-British party.

2004:

June - British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern set September deadline to end an impasse between long-time foes Sinn Fein and the DUP, but talks grind to a halt before the end of the year.

2005:

April - Sinn Fein calls on the IRA to end its armed campaign after a series of high-profile crimes linked to the group, including the killing of Belfast man Robert McCartney, spark international outrage.

July - The IRA says it has ordered its guerrillas to dump all arms and pursue their goals through purely peaceful means.

2006:

October - Northern Ireland's cease-fire watchdog, the Independent Monitoring Commission, says it believes the IRA is no longer engaged in terrorism.

-- Blair and Ahern launch talks with Northern Ireland's parties in Scotland and put forward a plan for reviving self rule by a March 26 deadline.

2007:

January - Sinn Fein's mostly Catholic membership votes overwhelmingly to back the Protestant-dominated Police Service of Northern Ireland after decades of opposition and mistrust, fulfilling a key condition for the revival of the assembly.

March - Both the DUP and Sinn Fein increase their shares of the vote in new assembly elections.

-- DUP leader Ian Paisley and Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams hold their first face-to-face meeting and agree to start sharing power on May 8.

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.