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The Arab Spring was launched in Sidi Bouzid, a remote Tunisian town. On Dec.

17, 2010, a
government inspector demanded a bribe from Mohammed Bouazizi, a 26-year-old street vendor
who supported a mother, uncle and five siblings by selling fruit from a cart. When Bouazizi
refused to pay, the inspector confiscated his produce and equipment. Bouazizi sought aid at
government offices. After he was rebuffed, he covered his body with paint thinner and set
himself on fire in front of the provincial governor’s office.

Bouazizi’s action sparked the first Arab protests, first in Sidi Bouzid but unrest spread quickly
across the country. Police reportedly killed 300 protesters between December and early January.
President Zine al Abidine Ben Ali’s pledges of reforms did little to quiet the discontent.

On January 14, Ben Ali fled with his family to Saudi Arabia, leaving Prime Minister Mohamed
Ghannouchi in charge. From January to October 2011, the interim government moved towards
reform, recognized new political parties and disbanded Ben Ali’s party. But protests demanding
further reform continued sporadically.

On October 23, Ennahda, a moderate Islamist party, won the national elections and formed a
coalition with two secular parties. Into 2012, the new government attempted to control protests
and violence throughout the country as thousands rallied for and against a more conservative
religious government.

Over the next year, Tunisia was deeply divided over the new order, as the elected assembly
worked on a new constitution. Ennahda took halting steps on reforms, alternately addressing
diverse segments of Tunisian political society. It pledged not to introduce Islamic law in the new
constitution, but also filed a bill to prosecute offenses against “sacred values.” In June 2012,
former Prime Minister Beji Caid Essebsi formed the secular Nidaa Tunis party to challenge
Ennahda in 2013.

In July and August 2012, Islamists and secularists argued over economic policy, blasphemy laws
and women’s rights. Tensions mounted in 2013 when two prominent secular politicians – Chokri
Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi – were assassinated, sparking large-scale protests. Although
authorities arrested militants linked to al Qaeda, protesters blamed Ennahda for the attacks.
Thousands of Ennahdas supporters staged protests in response.

To ease the political crisis, Ennahda handed over power to an interim government in October
2013, which was tasked with organizing new elections. The following year, secular parties edged
out Islamists at the polls. In the October 2014 parliamentary elections, Nidaa Tunis won 85 seats
compared to only 69 secured by Ennahda. Essebsi, the head of Nidaa Tunis, was elected
president in December.

The new government encountered challenges, including attacks by Islamist militias. In March
2015, gunmen stormed Tunisia’s National Bardo Museum and killed 24 people, including 20
foreigners. In June, a gunman killed 39 foreigners at a beach resort in Sousse. As a result, the
government announced a series of security measures and declared a state of emergency across
the country.
2010-11

Dec. 17, 2010: Street vendor Mohammed Bouazizi sets himself on fire to protest government
abuse and corruption, igniting growing protests throughout the month.

Dec. 17, 2010 – Jan 13, 2011: Protests escalate, spreading nationwide. Police kill hundreds in
confrontations.

Dec. 23: From Sidi Bouzid, Development Minister Mohamed Nouri Jouini announces a $10
million job creation program.

Dec. 28: In a televised address, President Zine al Abidine Ben Ali promises job creation but
warns that protesters will be punished. He fires the communications, trade, and handicrafts
ministers and the governors of rebellious provinces, including Sidi Bouzid.

Dec. 29: After 12 days of demonstrations, Nessma TV, a private channel, becomes the first
major Tunisian media outlet to cover the protests.

Jan. 13: President Ben Ali promises not to run for office again in 2014, to allow press freedom
and to cut the price of basic commodities. He also vows that legislative elections will take place
in six months. But he imposes a state of emergency, which prohibits groups larger than three
from congregating. In a countermove suggesting the military is abandoning Ben Ali, Gen.
Rachid Ammar orders the army not to shoot at protesters and to protect them from police.

Jan. 14: President Ben Ali flees to Saudi Arabia. Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi takes
over an interim government.

Jan. 17: A caretaker government is formed until elections can be held. The next day, four
opposition members quit the interim government, and the president and prime minister quit the
long-ruling Constitutional Democratic Rally (RCD).

Jan 19 – 26: In central Tunis, hundreds of protesters, organized by the trade union movement,
call for the dismissal of ministers affiliated with Ben Ali.

Jan. 21: The RCD dissolves its leadership committee, approves an amnesty law for political
prisoners, and promises to recognize all formerly banned political parties.

Jan. 23: The interim government shuts down the oldest and most popular private television
network.

Jan. 26: The government issues an arrest warrant for the Ben Ali family, announces a $350
million public spending program, and postpones naming a new cabinet.
Jan. 27: The interim government appoints 12 new ministers and dismisses former RCD
members except for Prime Minister Ghannouchi.

Jan. 30: Rachid Ghannouchi, founder of Ennadha, the main Islamic party, returns from two
decades in exile, primarily in London.

Feb. 3: The interim government replaces every regional governor.

Feb. 7-March 9: New Interior Minister Farhat Rajhi orders the RCD to shut down its activities.
It is formally disbanded on March 9. The interim government votes to allow interim President
Fouad Mebazza to rule by decree. It also calls in the army reserves to provide more security after
widespread police desertion.

Feb. 13: Italy announces it will send its army to help stabilize Tunisia after thousands of
Tunisians flee to Italy.

Feb. 15: The Interior Ministry extends the state of emergency but ends the curfew imposed by
Ben Ali in January.

Feb. 27: Prime Minister Ghannouchi resigns and sets elections for July 15. Interim President
Fouad Mebazaa replaces him with former minister Beji Caid-Essebsi.

March 7: The interim government appoints a new cabinet and disbands the state spy agency.

March 22: After Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s visit, the U.S. promises $20 million in aid.

April 1: The Justice Ministry announces 18 legal cases against Ben Ali, which include charges
of voluntary manslaughter and drug trafficking.

April 26: Prime Minister Essebsi bans senior RCD members from contesting elections.

May – July: Every Sunday, people protest nationwide for further reforms.

May 26: Election officials recommend that elections be delayed until October 23 to allow more
preparation and voter registration.

May 27: The Group of 8 industrialized nations pledges billions in aid to Tunisia, with more
promised if democratic reforms continue.

June 20: Ben Ali and his wife Leila are convicted in absentia of theft. Both are sentenced to 35
years in jail and fined $66 million.

June 24: The interim cabinet adopts laws allowing lawyers to organize and banks to check the
records of amnesty beneficiaries. The laws also create a committee to manage frozen assets for
the state.
July 11: A voter registration campaign begins.

July 14: The World Bank approves a $50 million loan for Tunisia to support small businesses.

July 15 – 17: Protesters and police clash in Tunis and various other cities.

July 27: President Mebazza extends emergency law until Aug 1.

Aug. 23: The EU announces $160 million to aid Tunisia’s economy.

Sept. 6: Security forces are banned from joining unions, prompting hundreds of police to protest.

Sept. 14: Ennahda publishes its election platform, promising a moderate Islamist agenda.

Oct. 9: Protesters attack a TV station for showing Persepolis, which features scenes representing
God talking to a young girl. They also protest at the main university against a ban on women
wearing the full black niqab, which shows only the eyes. Dozens are arrested.

Oct. 14 – 16: In Tunis, thousands protest the Persepolis screening, and thousands respond with
calls for press freedom.

Oct. 23: In parliamentary elections, Ennahda wins 89 of 217 national assembly seats, with over
90 percent turnout in some areas. Among 49 women elected, 42 are from Ennahda. The party
forms a coalition with two non-religious parties, Ettakatol and the Congress for the Republican
Party.

Oct. 27 – 28: Protests erupt in Sidi Bouzid after elections officials cancel several seats won by
Al Aridha, a political party founded in the town. The government imposes a curfew on Sidi
Bouzid.

Nov. 15: Ennahda Secretary General Hamadi Jebali refers to the new government as the sixth
Muslim caliphate, leading the Ettakatol Party to suspend its participation in the new governing
coalition. It later returns after being promised powerful government positions.

Nov. 18: Jebali is chosen as the coalition prime minister. Moncef Marzouki of the Congress for
the Republic Party is nominated for president. And Ettakatol’s Mustafa Ben Jaafar is named
speaker of the National Assembly. They are sworn in Dec. 13.

Nov. 22: The new National Assembly holds its first meeting.

Nov 28: Interim President Mebazaa extends the state of emergency until December 2012.

Nov. 28 – Jan 24: Islamist students occupy Manouba University for four days to demand that
male and female students be separated, triggering strikes at state universities and protests outside
parliament. The Islamists, demanding that women be allowed to wear face veils at school,
continue a month-long sit-in that prevents classes and exams from taking place.
Dec. 14: President Marzouki asks for a six-month political truce and a moratorium on strikes and
protests, promising to resign if reforms are unsuccessful.

2012

Jan. 14: Thousands march to commemorate the one-year anniversary of their protest movement.

March 2 – April 25: Protesters conduct a sit-in outside Wataniya, the state television network,
protesting corruption and calling for publishers of pro-Ben Ali propaganda to be fired.

March 20: On the 56th anniversary of Tunisia’s independence from France, thousands march in
Tunis to call for a civil state.

March 24: At a conference attended by 60 political parties, Former Prime Minister Essebsi
criticizes Ennahda and calls for a viable alternative.

March 25: Thousands protest in Tunis for the creation of an Islamic state.

March 26: The Ennahda Party announces that Sharia law will not be codified in the new
constitution.

April 9: Defying a government ban on protests, thousands rally on Avenue Bourguiba in Tunis.
Police use tear gas and batons. Two days later, the government lifts the protest ban.

May 1: In the first ruling on the death of a protester, two Tunisian policemen are sentenced to 20
years in prison for killing a youth during the January 2011 protests.

May 5: The government extends the state of emergency until the end of July 2012.

May 11: The government licenses a Salafist political party for the first time in the country’s
history.

May 20: Thousands rally in Kairouan in support of Ansar al Sharia, a hardline Islamist group.

May 18 – 27: Salafists in Sidi Bouzid and other towns burn alcohol warehouses and police
stations. They threaten the owners of alcohol stores with violence if they don’t shut down.

May 29: Judges begin an indefinite strike to protest the firing of dozens of magistrates by the
state on suspicion of corruption and ties to Ben Ali’s regime.

June 12 – 15: In Tunis, Salafists riot, protesting an art exhibit that they claim is offensive. One
man is killed, 62 policemen are injured, and 160 protesters are arrested. A curfew is imposed.
June 16: Former interim Prime Minister Essebsi launches a secularist party to prepare for
elections in early 2013.

June 24: Prime Minister Jebali extradites Muammar Qaddafi’s former prime minister, causing a
political split with President Marzouki. Opposition parties later walk out of the assembly to
protest the extradition.

June 27: President Marzouki fires the Central Bank governor because his monetary policies
conflict with the government’s economic program.

July 16: Ennahda reelects Rachid Ghannouchi, a moderate, as its leader.

July 27: Finance Minister Hussein Dimassi resigns over differences with Ennahda.

Aug. 1: Ennahda files a bill to criminalize offences against "sacred values."

Aug. 9: In Sidi Bouzid, 800 people protest, calling for Ennahda’s resignation.

Aug. 13: In Tunis, thousands protest against a constitutional article that would lower women’s
status.

Aug. 14: The head of the constitutional drafting committee postpones the final phase of the
constitution—originally expected in October—until February 2013.

Aug. 22: Hundreds of suspected Salafist militants launch an overnight attack in Sidi Bouzid,
triggering clashes with local residents.

Sept. 7: Thousands of supporters of the Ekbes political movement, which means “get a move
on,” march in Tunis. They call for purging the media and political sphere of former regime
remnants and “counter-revolutionaries.”

Sept. 12-14: Tunisians protest an anti-Islam film in front of the U.S. Embassy in Tunis. On Sept.
14, Salafis storm the compound, burn the American flag and start fires before Tunisian security
forces disperse the crowd.

Sept. 21 and 27: Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi vows to crackdown on Salafis. The
following week President Marzouki pledges to do the same.

Nov. 29: Hundreds of people protest in Siliana, demanding better economic opportunities.
President Marzouki responds by calling for a new cabinet.

2013
Feb. 7-20: Protests erupt after leftist opposition leader Chokri Belaid is assassinated. Prime
Minister Hamadi Jebali promises to restructure the Islamist-dominated government. But he later
resigns, blaming Islamists for the political crisis.

Feb. 25: Thousands protest the appointment of Ali Larayedh, an Ennahda hardliner, as the new
prime minister.

March 11: Larayedh forms a new cabinet, handing over key posts to political independents in an
effort to reduce tensions.

March 28: The leader of Ansar al Sharia – an Islamist extremist group – threatens to overthrow
Tunisia’s government.

April 18: Secular politicians submit a motion of no-confidence against President Marzouki after
he criticizes “secular extremists.”

July 25-26: Secular politician Mohamed Brahmi is assassinated, sparking large-scale protests.

Oct. 5: Ennahda agrees to hand over power to a caretaker government led by independents.
Mehdi Jomaa is later named prime minister of the interim government.

2014

Jan. 27: Parliament passes a new constitution, the first since Ben Ali was ousted in 2011.

March 6: President Marzouki lifts the state of emergency that had been in effect since the 2011
uprising.

June 13: Tunisian police clash with Ansar al Sharia near the Algerian border.

July 4: Ennahda rejects Abu Bakr al Baghdadi’s announcement of an Islamic caliphate in Syria
and Iraq.

July 17: Al Qaeda-linked militants attack a military checkpoint near Chaambi Mountain, killing
and injuring dozens of Tunisian soldiers.

July 20-Aug. 22: The government closes mosques and radio stations affiliated with hardline
Islamists, in response to the July 17 attack.

Oct. 15: Tunisian security forces arrest Islamist militants planning to attack Tunis shortly before
the parliamentary elections.
Oct. 26: Tunisia holds parliamentary elections. The secular Nidaa Tunis party wins 85 seats,
enough to name a prime minister and lead a coalition government. Ennahda wins 69 seats.
Nov. 23: Tunisia holds presidential elections. Beji Caid Essebsi of Nidaa Tunis wins 39 percent
of the vote, and Marzouki wins 33 percent. A run-off is scheduled for December.

Dec. 21: Essebsi wins the presidential elections in a run-off, securing 55.7 percent of the vote.

2015

Jan. 27: Habib Essid, a former official under Ben Ali, is appointed Prime Minister.

Feb.6: Parliament approves Essid’s cabinet, which includes members of Nidaa Tunis, Ennahda
and other smaller parties.

March 18: Militants attack the Bardo Museum in Tunis, killing 19 people.

March 24: Essid dismisses six police commanders, including the capital’s police chief, after the
National Bardo Museum shooting.

March 30: Security forces reportedly kill Khaled Chayeb - the commander of the group
responsible for the Bardo attacks.

May 21: President Barack Obama meets President Beji Caid Essebsi and designates Tunisia a
major non-NATO ally.

June 26: A gunman kills 39 tourists at the Tunisian beach resort of Sousse.

July 6: President Essebsi declares a state of emergency in response to the Sousse attack.

Aug.19: President Beji Caid Essebsi signs a new anti-terrorism bill into law.

Cyana Chilton, Oula Alrifai, Avideh Mayville, Garrett Nada, Cameron Glenn, and Andrea Tanco
contributed to these chronologies.

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