TIMELINE: Thailand's political crisis
(Reuters) - Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat was banned from politics for five years and his party disbanded on Tuesday, plunging Thailand deeper into crisis, although anti-government protesters said they would end a blockade of Bangkok's airports.
Here is a timeline of the recent political turmoil.
September 2005 - Sondhi Limthongkul, a former business associate of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, starts the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) street campaign to oust Thaksin.
April 2, 2006 - Thaksin wins a snap election called to silence Sondhi. Opposition boycotts poll, court later nullifies result.
September 19 - Military stages a coup while Thaksin is at the United Nations in New York. He flies into exile in London.
October 1 - Former army commander-in-chief Surayud Chulanont is sworn in as interim prime minister.
March 26, 2007 - Thaksin's wife, Potjaman, her brother and secretary are charged with tax evasion.
May 30 - Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai party is dissolved for breaking election laws. He and 110 senior party members are banned from politics for five years.
August 20 - Voters endorse a new, military-drafted constitution, the 18th in 75 years of on-off democracy.
December 23 - The pro-Thaksin People Power Party (PPP) falls just short of outright majority in a general election.
January 28, 2008 - PPP leader Samak Sundaravej is elected prime minister.
February 28 - Thaksin returns to Bangkok after 18 months in exile.
May 25 - PAD resumes street protests to overthrow what it says is a "Thaksin puppet government."
July 31 - Potjaman gets a three-year jail term for tax fraud. Freed on bail, she and Thaksin fly to Beijing for Olympics opening ceremony on August 8.
August 11 - Thaksin and wife skip bail and flee to London.
August 26 - Thousands of PAD protesters storm the state broadcaster NBT and Samak's official compound in a bid to unseat his government.
September 2 - Samak declares a state of emergency in Bangkok after one person is killed and 45 hurt in clashes.
September 9 - The Constitutional Court finds Samak guilty of violating constitution by hosting TV cooking shows while in office and he has to quit.
September 17 - Somchai Wongsawat, Thaksin's brother-in-law, is elected prime minister by parliament.
October 7 - Deadly riots kill two people and injure more than 400 in Bangkok in worst street violence in 16 years.
October 21 - The Supreme Court sentences Thaksin to two years in jail in absentia for breaking a conflict-of-interest law.
November 1 - Thaksin urges Thais to bring him home in a phone address to a huge pro-government rally in Bangkok.
November 8 - Britain revokes visas for Thaksin and his wife while they are out of the country.
November 16 - Thaksin announces he and Potjaman have divorced.
November 20 - A grenade attack on PAD protesters occupying the prime minister's offices kills one person and wounds 23.
November 25 - PAD protesters storm Bangkok's main airport, the Suvarnabhumi international airport, halting all flights. Up to 250,000 foreign tourists are eventually stranded.
November 26 - Somchai returns from an Asia-Pacific summit in Peru and rejects his army chief's call to quit in the face of anti-government protests. The next day he declares a state of emergency at the two besieged airports.
November 28 - Somchai fires his national police chief for mishandling the airport occupations.
December 2 - The Constitutional Court disbands the PPP and bans Somchai from politics for five years. First deputy prime minister Chavarat Charnvirakul is to take over as interim PM.
-- The PAD protesters say after the ruling that they will end their blockade of Bangkok's two airports on December 3.
(Writing by Bangkok bureau, Gillian Murdoch and David Cutler, Singapore & London Editorial Reference Units; Editing by Alan Raybould)










