List of political leaders who suspended the constitution
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The following heads of government or heads of state formally suspended provisions of the country's constitution while in office.
Contents |
Suspended in full [edit]
| Name | Country | Year | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Henry George Grey, 3rd Earl Grey | [1] | ||
| Miguel Primo de Rivera | 1923 | ||
| Alexander I of Yugoslavia | 1929 | ||
| Ion Antonescu | 1940–1944 | ||
| Joseph Arthur Ankrah | 1966 | ||
| Jean-Bédel Bokassa | 1966 | ||
| Milton Obote | 1966 | ||
| Leabua Jonathan | 1970 | ||
| Park Chung Hee | 1971 | ||
| Ferdinand Marcos | 1972 | Marcos claimed of an attempted Communist takeover of the government which he was compelled to suspend the 1935 Philippine Constitution and placed the Philippines under Martial Law. | |
| Augusto Pinochet | 1973 | ||
| Sobhuza II | 1973 | ||
| Juan María Bordaberry | 1973 | ||
| Seyni Kountché | 1974 | ||
| Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq | 1977 | ||
| France-Albert René | 1977 | ||
| Mustafa Ould Salek | 1978 | ||
| Maurice Bishop | 1979–1983 | The Constitution was suspended following the bloodless ouster of former Prime Minister Gairy, yet simultaneously some rights protections were enacted under The People's Laws 1979. The declared plans for a Constitutional referendum were not carried out prior to Bishop's 1983 assassination.[2] | |
| Saye Zerbo | 1980 | ||
| Jerry Rawlings | 1981 | ||
| Hossain Mohammad Ershad | 1982 | ||
| Efraín Ríos Montt | 1982 | ||
| Lansana Conté | 1984 | ||
| Abdel Rahman Swar al-Dahab | 1985 | ||
| Sitiveni Rabuka | 1987 | ||
| Pierre Buyoya | 1987 | ||
| Saw Maung | 1988 | ||
| Henri Namphy | 1988 | ||
| Omar Hasan Ahmad al-Bashir | 1989 | ||
| Idriss Déby | 1990 | ||
| Amadou Toumani Touré | 1991 | ||
| Jorge Serrano Elías | 1993 | ||
| Yahya Jammeh | 1994 | ||
| Johnny Paul Koroma | 1997 | ||
| Denis Sassou-Nguesso | 1997–2002 | According to the United States State Department: "[T]he Sassou regime [...] announced that a constitutional convention would finalize a draft Constitution. However, the eruption in late 1998 of fighting between Sassou's government forces and a pro-Lissouba and pro-Kolelas armed opposition disrupted the transition to democracy. [...] A new Constitution was [...] approved by the people of Congo in a national referendum in January 2002." [3] | |
| Pervez Musharraf | 1999, 2007 | ||
| Frank Bainimarama | 2000 | ||
| Pedro Carmona | 2002 | See Venezuelan coup attempt of 2002. | |
| Gyanendra | 2005 | ||
| Sonthi Boonyaratglin | 2006 | ||
| Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (headed by Mohamed Hussein Tantawi) | 2011 | During the Egyptian Revolution of 2011[4] |
Suspended in part [edit]
| Name | Country | Year | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adolf Hitler | 1933–1945 | See Enabling Act of 1933. | |
| Omar Ali Saifuddin | 1962 | ||
| Idi Amin | 1971 | ||
| Sheikh Mujibur Rahman | 1975 | Declared himself president for life. | |
| Indira Gandhi | 1975–1977 | See Indian Emergency Disputed - This was done per provision(s) of the constitution, but the reasoning provided has been challenged as being dubious. | |
| Alberto Fujimori | 1992–1993 | Fujimori declared that "those parts of the Constitution that were not compatible with the reorganization of the central government" were suspended.[5] | |
| Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir | 1999 |
See also [edit]
References [edit]
- ^ Some time between 1846 and 1852 -- see Henry Grey, 3rd Earl Grey#Political career (which is from the 1911 Britannica)
- ^ http://www.thegrenadarevolutiononline.com/peopleslaws1979.html
- ^ http://www.state.gov/outofdate/bgn/c/34502.htm
- ^ Mariam Fam and Maram Mazen. "Egypt Army Dissolves Parliament, Lifts Constitution". Businessweek.
- ^ http://www.congreso.gob.pe/museo/mensajes/Mensaje-1992-1.pdf