1960: Africa's year of independence
The year 1960 was to be crucial for Africa: 17 sub-Saharan countries became independent from their European colonisers, 14 of them from France.
Here is a timeline of events in Africa that year:
January
- 1: Cameroon, a former German protectorate split between Britain and France after World War I, becomes independent
- 9: Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser launches construction of the Aswan Dam on the Nile
- 9: Zambia independence leader Kenneth Kaunda is released after nine months in jail in the British colony of Northern Rhodesia
- 12: Britain lifts a state of emergency in place in Kenya since 1952, at the outbreak of the Mau Mau rebellion against colonial rule
- 24: The start of Algeria's week-long uprising by defenders of "French Algeria" in which more than 20 people are killed in clashes with authorities
February
- 3: British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan delivers his "Wind of Change" speech in South Africa, criticising apartheid and indicating Britain would not block independence in its colonies
- 13: France tests its first nuclear bomb in Algeria's Tanezrouft desert
- 29: An earthquake destroys Morocco's city of Agadir and kills 12,000-15,000 people
March
- 21: Police fire into a demonstration by black South Africans at Sharpeville outside Johannesburg, killing 69
April
- 4: Senegal becomes independent from France
- 8: South Africa bans the black opposition African National Congress (ANC) and Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) parties
- 19: Founding of the South West Africa People's Organisation (SWAPO) to push for Namibia's independence from occupying South Africa
- 27: Togo becomes independent from France
June
- 26: Madagascar gains independence from France
- 30: The Belgian Congo is proclaimed independent. The Republic of Congo is later renamed Zaire and then the Democratic Republic of Congo
July
- 1: Somalia becomes independent from British and Italian colonial rule
- 11: The Belgian Congo's mineral-rich province of Katanga secedes with Belgian and US support, unleashing a long series of wars and rebellions
August
- 1: Independence from France of Dahomey, today called Benin
- 3: Niger becomes independent from France
- 5: Upper Volta, today's Burkina Faso, is independent
- 7: Independence of Ivory Coast
- 11: Independence of Chad
- 13: Central African Republic becomes independent
- 15: Independence of the French colony of Congo. The Republic of Congo also became known as Congo-Brazzaville to distinguish it from its neighbour of the same name.
- 17: Gabon becomes independent
September
- 10: Ethiopia's Abebe Bikila becomes the first black African to win Olympic Gold, running the marathon in Rome barefoot
- 14: Congo army colonel Joseph Desire Mobutu stages a coup, but later hands power back to the president
- 22: Mali becomes independent
October
- 1: Nigeria becomes independent from Britain
- 5: South Africans vote in a whites-only referendum for the country to become a republic, ending its status as a self-governing dominion of the British
November
- 28: Mauritania becomes independent
December
- 2: The Belgian Congo's deposed prime minister, independence hero Patrice Lumumba, is arrested. He was later assassinated on January 17, 1961
- 13: Failed coup attempt against Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie
First Nobel Peace Prize
The Nobel Peace Prize goes to a black African for the first time in 1960, awarded to South African Albert Luthuli, president of the ANC, for his role in advocating non-violent resistance to apartheid