Cairo - AFP
Key developments in Egypt since the 2011 revolt that led to the overthrow of president Hosni Mubarak after 30 years in power: – 2011 – - January 25: Massive protests erupt, after a revolt topples Tunisia’s ruler. About 850 people die in unrest over 18 days. - February 11: Mubarak resigns and hands power to the army which suspends the constitution and dissolves parliament. - March 19: Egyptians widely approve a new constitution. - October 8: Clashes kill 30 people, most of them Coptic Christians. - November 24: Week-long clashes between police and anti-military demonstrators leave 42 dead. - November 28: Egypt holds the first stage of its first post-revolt parliamentary election. Islamists win about two-thirds of the seats, half of which go to the Muslim Brotherhood. – 2012 – - February 1: Riots kill 74 people after a Port Said football match. - May 31: The army lifts the state of emergency which has been in force for 30 years. - June 34: Mohamed Morsi wins the presidential election with 51.7 percent of the vote, becoming Egypt’s first civilian and Islamist ruler. - August 12: Morsi scraps a constitutional document which allowed the military legislative powers. - November 22: Morsi decrees wide new powers for himself but annuls it on December 8 after massive protests and clashes. - December 15 and 22: 64 percent of voters in the two-round referendum back the new constitution, after a vote which the opposition says is tainted. – 2013 – - January 24: Violence erupts on the eve of the second anniversary of the 2011 uprising. At least 60 people die in a week. - June 2: Egypt’s highest court invalidates the Islamist-dominated Senate. – July 3: The military ousts Morsi after massive protests against his one-year rule, and freeze the Islamist-drafted constitution. Morsi speaks of a “coup”. August 14: Security forces move on pro-Morsi protest camps in Cairo, killing hundreds. A month-long state of emergency is declared. - August 22: Mubarak comes out of jail after 28 months in detention. – September 23: A court bans all Brotherhood activities. - October 6: Nearly 60 people are killed when security forces crack down on Morsi supporters marching towards Cairo’s Tahrir Square. - November 4: Morsi goes on trial for alleged involvement in the killings of opposition protesters. - November 24: Egypt adopts a law giving authorities the power to ban protests. - December 14: Officials say a referendum on a constitution reinforcing the army’s political role will be held on January 14-15. Morsi supporters say they will boycott it. - December 24: A car bomb rips through a police building in Mansoura, north of Cairo, killing 15 people. Al-Qaeda-inspired group based in the Sinai, Ansar Beit Al-Maqdis, claims responsibility. - December 25: The government declares the Brotherhood a terrorist organisation. – 2014 – - January 3: At least 17 people die in clashes as police disperse thousands of protesters demanding Morsi’s reinstatement.