1884

Eastern part of New Guinea divided between Germany in the north and Britain in the south

1899

Germany and Britain divide the Solomon Islands – Bougainville and Buka included as part of German New Guinea

1902

British New Guinea transferred to newly federated Australian control and renamed the Territory of Papua

1914

Australian forces take German New Guinea, including Bougainville

1919

League of Nations grants Australia the “mandated” territory of New Guinea; Papua remains a territory of Australia

1942–45

Australian, US and Japanese forces battle for control of Bougainville and the Pacific, ending in victory for Australian and allied forces

1945

United Nations reaffirms Australian role in administering New Guinea as a “trust" territory and four years later the joint administration of Papua and New Guinea

1966

Establishment of the Panguna copper and gold mine

1972

Production at Panguna mine starts

1975

September: Bougainville’s first Unilateral Declaration of Independence declared two weeks before PNG independence

1988

Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) headed by Francis Ona is formed

1988

November: start of the Bougainville war

1989

Panguna copper mine closed in May; PNG declares a state of emergency in June

1990

May: PNG Government cuts off goods and services to Bougainville

1990

August: the Endeavour Accords, which restore services but defer Bougainville’s political status, are signed by PNG and BRA aboard the New Zealand warship

1994

South Pacific Regional Peace Keeping Force (SPRPKF) provides security to enable peace talks in Arawa

1997

March: Sandline mercenary crisis erupts in PNG

1997

Burnham peace talks held in New Zealand in July and October; Truce Monitoring Group (TMG) deployed to Bougainville

1998

January: Lincoln Agreement between PNG Government and Bougainville leaders signed in New Zealand

1998

May: Australian-led Peace Monitoring Group (PMG) established to monitor the ceasefire

2001

Bougainville Peace Agreement (BPA) signed in Arawa – the BPA provided for a referendum on Bougainville’s independence 10–15 years after the establishment of the Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG)

2003

Withdrawal of regional PMG forces

2005

June: Joseph Kabui elected first ABG President – a referendum for independence can be held between 2015 and 2020

2005

July: BRA leader Francis Ona dies

2008

James Tanis elected second ABG President (sworn in January 2009)

2010

John Momis elected third ABG President

2015

Bougainville Mining Act 2015 enacted, giving traditional landowners a say in mining licences and mineral extraction

2019

November: Scheduled date for referendum

1900
2000
1 / 28