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Page last updated at 11:48 GMT, Wednesday, 11 March 2009

Timeline: Morocco

A chronology of key events:

7th century AD - Arab invasion; Idris founds the first major Muslim dynasty.

village and snow-covered Atlas mountains
High peaks and fertile valleys: Morocco's Atlas mountains

10-17th centuries - Dynasties and religious movements come and go, including the Almoravid movement which at its peak controlled Morocco and parts of present-day Algeria and Spain.

1860 - Dispute over Spain's Ceuta enclave; Spain declares war, wins a further enclave and an enlarged Ceuta in the settlement.

1884 - Spain creates a protectorate in coastal areas of Morocco.

1904 - France and Spain carve out zones of influence.

1906 - Algeciras Conference in Spain; France and Spain get the go-ahead to police Moroccan ports and collect customs fees.

French protectorate

1912 - Morocco becomes a French protectorate under the Treaty of Fez, administered by a French Resident-General. Spain continues to operate its coastal protectorate. The sultan has a largely figurehead role.

1921-6 - Tribal rebellion in Rif mountains is suppressed by French and Spanish troops.

Rabat
Rabat - once called the "pearl of Morocco"
Founded in 12th century
Population: 1.3 million

1943 - Istiqlal - Party of Independence - founded to press for independence.

1956 March - End of French protectorate after unrest and strong nationalist sentiment. Spain keeps its two coastal enclaves. Sultan Mohammed becomes king in 1957.

1961 - Death of King Mohammed; King Hassan II comes to power.

1963 - First general elections.

1965 - Social unrest: King Hassan declares a state of emergency and suspends parliament.

1971 - Failed attempt to depose king and establish republic.

Polisario movement

1973 - Polisario movement formed, aims to establish an independent state in Spanish Sahara, a territory south of Morocco controlled by Spain. The group has Algerian support.

King Hassan
King Hassan became Arab world's longest-serving ruler

1975 6 November - The Green March: King Hassan orders 350,000 civilian volunteers to cross into Spanish Sahara.

1975 December - Spain agrees to leave Spanish Sahara, soon to become Western Sahara, and to transfer it to joint Moroccan-Mauritanian control. Algeria objects and threatens military intervention. Moroccan forces enter and occupy the territory.

1976 - Moroccan and Algerian troops clash in Western Sahara. Algeria announces the formation of the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) with a government-in-exile. Morocco and Mauritania divide-up Western Sahara.

1976 onwards - Fighting between Moroccan military and Polisario forces; the war is a considerable financial drain on Morocco.

1983 - Summit between King Hassan and Algerian president prompts thaw in relations.

WESTERN SAHARA
Polisario soldiers in Western Sahara; territory was invaded by Morocco in 1975
Polisario soldiers waged a guerrilla war against Morocco

1983 - King cancels planned elections amid political unrest and economic crisis.

1984 - Morocco leaves the Organisation of African Unity in protest at the SADR's admission to the body. Polisario claims to have killed more than 5,000 Moroccan soldiers between 1982-85.

1988 - Resumption of full diplomatic relations with Algeria.

Sahara ceasefire

1991 - UN-monitored ceasefire begins in Western Sahara, but the territory's status remains undecided and ceasefire violations are reported. The following decade sees much wrangling over a proposed referendum on the future of the territory but the deadlock is not broken.

1998 - Morocco's first opposition-led government comes to power.

1999 - King Hassan II is succeeded by his son, Mohammed VI.

2001 November - King Mohammed starts a controversial tour of Western Sahara, the first by a Moroccan monarch for a decade.

2002 July - Morocco and Spain agree to US-brokered resolution over the disputed island of Perejil. Spanish troops had taken the normally-uninhabited island after Moroccan soldiers landed on it and set up tents and a flag.

Marrakesh street
Marrakesh: Former capital's markets, festivals draw tourists

2002 December - Morocco and Spain hold their first talks since their conflict over Perejil. In January 2003 they agree to return ambassadors.

2003 February - Casablanca court jails three Saudi members of al-Qaeda for 10 years after they were accused of plotting to attack US and British warships in the Straits of Gibraltar.

2003 May - More than 40 killed when suicide bombers attack several sites in Casablanca, including a Spanish restaurant and Jewish community centre.

2004 February - Powerful earthquake hits the north; more than 500 people are killed.

2004 July - Free trade agreement with the US comes into effect. It follows Washington's designation of Morocco as a major non-Nato ally.

2005 September-October - Hundreds of African migrants try to storm Morocco's borders with the Spanish enclaves of Melilla and Ceuta. Morocco deports hundreds of the illegal migrants.

2005 December - Truth commission investigating human rights abuses during the rule of King Hassan II says 592 people were killed between 1956-99.

2006 April - Chinese President Hu Jintao visits, signs a series of trade agreements.

2006 January - Spanish Premier Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero visits the the Spanish enclaves of Melilla and Ceuta. He's the first Spanish leader in 25 years to make an official visit to the territories.

2007 January - Five men freed from US custody at Guantanamo Bay in 2004 are cleared of terrorism-related charges by a court in Morocco.

GATEWAY TO EUROPE
African migrant in Morocco
Morocco is a favoured stepping stone for African migrants heading for Europe
Many try enter via the Spanish enclaves Ceuta and Melilla
Many drown or are caught while attempting the sea crossing

2007 April - Three suspected suicide bombers blow themselves up in Casablanca, a few weeks after a suicide blast in an internet cafe weeks earlier.

Two suicide bombers blow themselves up outside US diplomatic offices in Casablanca.

Morocco unveils an autonomy blueprint for Western Sahara to the United Nations. Independence movement Polisario rejects the plan and puts forwards its own proposal.

2007 June - Morocco and the Polisario Front hold UN-sponsored talks in New York but fail to come to any agreement.

2007 September - Parliamentary elections. The conservative Istiqlal party, a member of the ruling coalition, wins the most votes.

2007 November - Spanish King Juan Carlos visits Ceuta and Melilla, angering Morocco which demands the return of the enclaves.

2008 February - Police arrest 36 people allegedly linked to Abdelkader Belliraj, a Belgian-Moroccan accused of leading the local branch of al-Qaeda.

2008 April - Spanish police arrest two Moroccans wanted over 2003 Casablanca bombings, plan extradition.

Nine prisoners convicted over 2003 Casablanca suicide bombings escape from Kenitra gaol north of Rabat.

2008 May - Security forces say they have dismantled an al-Qaeda-affiliated network planning attacks at home and in Belgium.

2008 June - Court convicts 29 men from "Tetouan cell" for holding illegal meetings and recruiting Moroccans to fight in Iraq.

2008 July - Police arrest 35 people accused of recruiting for al-Qaeda in Algeria and Iraq and planning attacks in Morocco.

2008 August - Morocco arrests 15 people who made up alleged al-Qaeda-affiliated "Fath al-Andalous" group.

Moroccan policeman
Moroccans have stepped up security in the face of bombings

2008 September - US Secretary of State Condoleeezza Rice visits as part of North African tour. Discusses anti-terrorism measures, political reform and the Western Sahara.

Fouad Ali al-Himma, a confidant of King Mohammed, forms an alliance around his new Authenticity and Modernity Party. The party has the potential to dominate parliament.

2008 October - Alleged al-Qaeda leader in Morocco, Abdelkader Belliraj, goes on trial accused of planning to kill senior officials. He was extradited in February from Belgium.

Court sentences more than 40 people to long prison sentences over Casablanca internet cafe suicude bombing that injured three.

2008 December - Two Moroccan men, Abdelilah Ahriz and Hicham Ahmidan, sentenced to 20 and ten years in jail respectively in Morocco over Madrid train bombings of 2004.

2009 February - Islamist Saad Housseini given 15-year setence over 2003 Casablanca bombings that killed 45 people. Also wanted in Spain over Madrid bombings.

2009 March - Morocco breaks off relations with Iran after Iranian politician said Bahrain used to be Iranian province.



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video and audio news
1971: Assault on royal palace - an eyewitness account


1975: King Hassan announces 'Green March' into Spanish Sahara


1975: BBC reports on the 'Green March'


1980: King Hassan welcomes Britain's Queen Elizabeth


2006: Truth commission reports on rights abuses under King Hassan





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