List of attacks on legislatures

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following is a list of attacks on state or national legislatures.

19th century or earlier

Attack Date Country Details
Gunpowder Plot 5 November 1605  England Failed assassination attempt against
English Catholics led by Robert Catesby
.
Five Members 5 November 1642  England Attempt to arrest members of the House of Commons by King Charles I, leading to the First English Civil War.
Battle of York 27 April 1813  Upper Canada The U.S. Army temporarily occupied the Upper Canada capital of York (modern-day Toronto) during the War of 1812, plundering and burning many government buildings including the seat of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada.
Burning of Washington 24 August 1814  United States A British Army force under the command of General Robert Ross marched into Washington D.C. after winning the Battle of Bladensburg in the Chesapeake Campaign and burnt numerous buildings—including the White House and the U.S. Capitol—in retaliation for the Battle of York and similar American raids in Upper Canada. The U.S. federal government, including President James Madison, was forced to evacuate to Montgomery County, Maryland. To date, the incident remains the only time the capital of the United States was invaded or occupied by a foreign force.
Storming of the Venezuelan National Congress 24 January 1848  Venezuela Brawl at the headquarters of the
Liberals, which had led almost two decades of continuous clashes.[1]
French demonstration of 15 May 1848 15 May 1848  France Intended to reverse the results of a Second-Republic election of deputies to the Constituent Assembly.
Burning of the Parliament Buildings in Montreal 25 April 1849 British Canada Part of week-long rioting by Montreal Tories against the passage of the Rebellion Losses Bill providing amnesties and indemnities following the Rebellions of 1837–1838
Haitian Civil War of 1867–1869 14 October 1867  Haiti During a standoff related to the Montas affair, a pro-Sylvain Salnave mob entered the chamber of deputies and expelled all its representatives. Chairs and tables were broken and portraits were damaged.[2][3]
French Chamber of Deputies bombing 9 December 1893  France
Chamber of Deputies of France and was immediately arrested after slightly injuring twenty deputies.[4] He was tried and guillotined
in February the following year.

20th century

Attack Date Country Details
1908 bombardment of the Majlis 23 June 1908  Qajar Iran During the Persian Constitutional Revolution, Persian Cossacks loyal to Shah Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar and commanded by Russian colonel Vladimir Liakhov bombarded the Baharestan building housing the National Consultative Assembly in Tehran to force the surrender of the leaders of the Constitutional Movement before plundering the building.[5]
1915 United States Capitol bomb attack
2 July 1915  United States German-American activist, spy and former Harvard University professor Eric Muenter hid a package containing three sticks of dynamite and a timer under a telephone switchboard in the U.S. Capitol's Senate reception room. The bomb exploded at 11:40 p.m., causing no casualties or injuries.[6] Muenter, who at that time was living under the guise of Stanford professor "Frank Holt" after killing his pregnant wife in 1906, then bombed the SS Minnehaha in New York City and shot J. P. Morgan Jr. in the span of the next 24 hours.[7][8] According to Muenter, his actions were in order to prevent United States involvement in World War I.[9]
Storming of the Belgian Parliament 29 July 1920  Belgium World War I veterans stormed the Palace of the Nation (parliament building), demanding the government hear their demands for compensation.[10]
Bombing of the Central Legislative Assembly Building 8 April 1929  British India Indian nationalists
British Indian legislature) in New Delhi in protest over the Trade Disputes and the Public Safety Bill being presented in the Assembly and the death of Lala Lajpat Rai.[11] Few sustained injuries in the explosion and there were no deaths, which Singh and Dutt claimed was intentional.[12]
Singh was initially sentenced to life imprisonment, but was executed after additional charges were brought, while Dutt was also sentenced to life but was later released.
Reichstag fire 27 February 1933  Nazi Germany Arson attack on the Reichstag building, home of the German parliament in Berlin. The day after the fire, the Reichstag Fire Decree was passed. The Nazi Party used the fire as a pretext to claim that communists were plotting against the German government, which made the fire pivotal in the establishment of Nazi Germany.
6 February 1934 crisis 6 February 1934  France Violent demonstrations outside the Palais Bourbon by members of far-right groups in opposition to the coalition government of Édouard Daladier, resulting in the deaths of 15 demonstrators at the hands of police.
The Blitz 10-11 May 1941  United Kingdom A nighttime bombing raid by the
Houses of Parliament on the Palace of Westminster hit 12 times, killing Resident Superintendent of the House of Lords, Edward Elliott, and two policemen, and causing a fire that destroyed the House of Commons chamber.[13][14]
1943 Lebanese demonstrations 22 November 1943  Lebanon Demonstrators stormed the
Free French troops.[15][failed verification
]
Levant Crisis 29 May 1945  Syria French troops stormed the
Syrian parliament and tried to arrest President Shukri al-Quwatli and Speaker Saadallah al-Jabiri but both managed to escape. The French burned and bombarded the building.[16]
1950 Haitian coup d'état 8 May 1950  Haiti During a constitutional crisis between President Dumarsais Estimé and the Senate, a pro-Estimé mob invaded the Senate, completely destroyed it, and looted its items as trophies. Faced with this situation, the Haitian army intervened with a coup.[17]
Israel reparations protests 7 January 1952  Israel Protesters critical of the
Frumin House in Jerusalem, then the seat of the Knesset, one of which smashed through a window and injured MK Hanan Rubin.[18]
1954 United States Capitol shooting 1 March 1954  United States Four
Puerto Rican nationalists wanting Puerto Rico's independence shot 30 rounds from semi-automatic pistols from the Ladies' Gallery (a balcony for visitors) of the House of Representatives chamber in the United States Capitol
.
Frumin House bombing 29 October 1957  Israel Moshe Dwek entered Frumin House and lobbed a grenade into the Knesset chamber which exploded. Among those injured were the Minister of Transportation,
Israeli Supreme Court was sentenced to 15 years in prison. The incident led to the creation of the Knesset's own security apparatus, the Knesset Guard.[19]
15 June Incident 15 June 1960  Japan Hundreds of thousands of protestors opposed to the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan marching on the National Diet building in Tokyo were attacked by right-wing counter-demonstrators with wooden staves and trucks, before leftist Zengakuren members breached the Diet building, provoking an hours-long battle with police and leading to the death of one Zengakuren activist.
Parliament of Canada failed bomb plot 18 May 1966  Canada Paul Joseph Chartier died when a bomb he was preparing exploded in a washroom of the Parliament of Canada. It is believed that he was preparing to bomb the House of Commons.
1971 United States Capitol bombing 1 March 1971  United States The Weather Underground set off a bomb in the United States Capitol causing an estimated $300,000 in damage.[20]
1974 Houses of Parliament bombing 17 June 1974  United Kingdom The
Houses of Parliament, causing extensive damage and injuring eleven people.[21][22][23]
Storming of the National Palace 22-24 August 1978  Nicaragua During the
Eden Pastora seized the National Palace in Managua while during a session of Congress, taking 2,000 hostages. Pastora demanded money, the release of Sandinista prisoners, and, "a means of publicizing the Sandinista cause."[24] After two days, the government of Anastasio Somoza Debayle agreed to pay $500,000 and to release certain prisoners, ending the siege.[25]
Assassination of Airey Neave 30 March 1979  United Kingdom Airey Neave, British Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, was assassinated by the Irish National Liberation Army with a bomb fixed under his car. The bomb detonated in the car park of the Palace of Westminster in London and mortally wounded Neave, who died shortly after being admitted to hospital.[26]
1981 Spanish coup d'état attempt
23 February 1981  Spain Lieutenant-Colonel
President of the Government. The officers held the parliamentarians and ministers hostage for 18 hours, during which time King Juan Carlos I
denounced the coup in a televised address, calling for rule of law and the democratic government to continue. Though shots were fired, the hostage-takers surrendered the next morning without killing anyone.
1983 United States Senate bombing 7 November 1983  United States Bomb explosion at the United States Senate motivated by U.S. military involvement in Lebanon and Grenada.
National Assembly of Quebec shooting 8 May 1984  Canada Denis Lortie, a former
government employees
and wounding 13 others.
1987 Fijian coups d'état 14 May 1987  Fiji Hardline
I-Taukei soldiers led by Lieutenant Colonel Sitiveni Rabuka entered the House of Representatives in Suva and ordered the eviction of Prime Minister Timoci Bavadra
and all MPs inside before announcing their takeover of the government
1987 grenade attack in the Sri Lankan Parliament 18 August 1987  Sri Lanka An assailant hurled two
J. R. Jayawardene and Prime Minister Ranasinghe Premadasa were sitting, and rolled away. A Member of Parliament and a ministry secretary were killed by the explosions. The attacks are attributed to the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, a Sinhalese
nationalist militant organization.
1989 Parliament Hill hijacking and hostage incident 7 April 1989  Canada On the Champlain Bridge near Montreal, Charles Yacoub used a gun to hijack a Greyhound Montreal to New York City intercity bus, taking the driver and passengers hostage and ordering the bus to Parliament Hill in Ottawa. A hostage standoff ensued on the lawn of the legislature for several hours. Yacoub released the remaining hostages and surrendered to police that evening. He later stated his goal was to draw attention to civilian deaths in the Lebanese Civil War.[27]
Intermovement storming 15 May 1990  Estonia Intermovement (a hardline, anti-Perestroika, pro-Soviet organisation consisting mostly of ethnic Russians) held a mass gathering in front of Toompea Castle in the capital Tallinn, breaking into the courtyard and escalating into an attempt to take over the parliament building; although they failed to reach the chambers.[28] Prime Minister of the Interim Estonian Government, Edgar Savisaar, asked people to defend the legislature in a radio call.[28] Thousands of Estonians responded, assembled by the parliament building and forced the unarmed anti-independence protesters to leave the site after some three hours with no reported significant injuries.[28] An estimated 5,000 people took part in the storming of the legislature.[28]
Jamaat al Muslimeen coup attempt 27 July-1 August 1990  Trinidad and Tobago Members of the radical Islamist group
Port-of-Spain, taking Prime Minister A. N. R. Robinson hostage along with most of his cabinet. Robinson was shot and injured by the insurgents, while MP Leo Des Vignes later died of his injuries. The takeover ended on 1 August after the rebels, who had been isolated by the army, agreed to surrender in exchange for an amnesty.[29]
1991–92 Georgian coup d'état
22 December 1991 to 6 January 1992  Georgia Paramilitary forces attacked, besieged and finally captured the Georgian Parliament building in Tbilisi, leading to the fall of President Zviad Gamsakhurdia.
1993 Russian constitutional crisis 4 October 1993  Russia
Ostankino television centre. The Russian Army, which had initially declared its neutrality, stormed the Russian White House in the early morning hours of 4 October by Yeltsin's order, and arrested the leaders of the resistance.[30][31]
1996 Parliament House riot 19 August 1996  Australia Attack on Parliament House, Canberra, when protesters broke away from the "Cavalcade to Canberra" rally organised by the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) and sought to force their way into the national Parliament, causing property damage and attacking police.
Fall of Suharto 17-22 May 1998  Indonesia Up to 2,000 students occupied the
People's Representative Council demanding an end to the 32-year dictatorship of President Suharto. After he resigned on 21 May, the students were evicted by the army without serious injury.[32]
1998 United States Capitol shooting 24 July 1998  United States Attack that led to the deaths of two
paranoid schizophrenia, remained in a mental institution.[36][37]
Armenian parliament shooting 27 October 1999  Armenia Attack on the Armenian
National Assembly in Yerevan by a group of five armed men led by Nairi Hunanyan that, among others, killed the two de facto decision-makers in the country's political leadership—Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan and Parliament Speaker Karen Demirchyan
.

21st century

Attack Date Country Details
2000 Fijian coup d'état 19 May-13 July 2000  Fiji Hardline
Royal Fiji Military Forces. Although hostages were gradually released, the ensuing standoff created a political crisis that ended with Speight releasing the remaining hostages in exchange for an amnesty and the accession of Josefa Iloilo
to the presidency on 13 July.
Overthrow of Slobodan Milošević 5 October 2000  
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Protesters demanding the resignation of President
Federal Assembly in Belgrade, smashing glass, throwing documents from windows and setting several fires on the ground floor despite police firing tear gas from inside the building.[38]
Zug massacre 27 September 2001   Switzerland
Friedrich Leibacher shot dead 14 people in the cantonal parliament in Zug before killing himself.[39]
2001 Jammu and Kashmir legislative assembly car bombing
1 October 2001  India* Three militants belonging to
fidayeen suicide bombers.[40][41] 38 people and three fidayeen were killed in this attack.[42]
2001 Indian Parliament attack 13 December 2001  India Gun attack on the
2001–02 India–Pakistan standoff
. The five assailants were killed outside the parliament.
2001 Odisha Assembly attack 16 December 2001  India High-profile attack by
Vishwa Hindu Parishad and Durga Vahini on the Odisha State Legislative Assembly complex in Bhubaneswar
.
2007 Iraqi Parliament bombing 12 April 2007  Iraq The canteen of the
National Dialogue Front, was killed in the attack; 23 others were injured, including 5 MPs from the Iraqi Accord Front, 3 MPs from the United Iraq Alliance, and 3 MPs from Muqtada al-Sadr's list.[44]
Batasang Pambansa bombing
13 November 2007  Philippines Bombing that occurred in front of the
House of Representatives in Quezon City. The blast killed Congressman Wahab Akbar and Marcial Taldo, a staff member of Congresswoman Luzviminda Ilagan, and wounded Ilagan, Congressman Pryde Henry Teves, and two others.[45]
2010 Kyrgyz Revolution 7 April 2010  Kyrgyzstan Opposition leaders and demonstrators led by
Jogorku Kenesh building in Bishkek demanding the overthrow of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev.[46]
2010 Chechen Parliament attack 19 October 2010  Russia Three
federal subject of Russia.[citation needed] At least six people were killed, including two police officers, one parliament employee and all three suicide commandos.[citation needed
]
Tripoli protests 21 February 2011 Libya Libya Protesters demanding the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi set fire to the People's Hall housing the General People's Congress in Tripoli.[47]
2013 occupation of the Brazilian Congress 16 April 2013  Brazil Amid a wave of
Brasilia. A similar attempt by several hundred indigenous demonstrators to storm Congress on October 2, 2013 was halted by police using pepper spray.[48]
2013 protests in Brazil 17 June 2013  Brazil Protesters occupied the
Rio de Janeiro State's Legislative Chamber in Rio de Janeiro city, causing riot police to be called in. Three protesters were injured by gunfire, reportedly by police forces, while ten others were hospitalized.[49]
Capture of the Crimean Parliament 27 February 2014  Ukraine During the early phase of the Russian annexation of Crimea, Russian special forces in unmarked uniforms entered the building of the Verkhovna Rada of Crimea and took control of it.
Sunflower Student Movement 18 March 2014  Taiwan Opponents of the
People's Republic of China that was passed by skipping through certain procedures occupied the offices of the Legislative Yuan
until April 10, when the parliamentary leadership agreed to a more thorough review of the agreement.
2014 shootings at Parliament Hill, Ottawa 22 October 2014  Canada At the
Michael Zehaf-Bibeau. Zehaf-Bibeau then entered the nearby Centre Block parliament building, where members of the Parliament of Canada were attending caucuses. After wrestling with a constable at the entrance, Zehaf-Bibeau ran inside and had a shootout with parliament security personnel. He was shot 31 times by six officers and died on scene.[50][51][52]
2014 Burkina Faso uprising 30 October 2014  Burkina Faso A crowd of about 1,500 demonstrators protesting against plans by President Blaise Compaoré to extend his rule stormed the National Assembly building in Ouagadougou and set the structure on fire along with documents and nearby cars, while stealing computer equipment.[53]
2016 Gabonese parliament attack 31 August 2016  Gabon Protesters demonstrating against President
Ali Bongo Ondimba's reelection victory in the 2016 Gabonese presidential election entered the back of the National Assembly building in Libreville and set part of the structure on fire.[54]
2016 Brazilian Congress attack 17 November 2016  Brazil Around 60 protesters demanding a military coup to overturn the
Brasilia; they violently clashed with guards before being dispersed by police after three hours.[55]
2017 Westminster attack 22 March 2017  United Kingdom
armed police officer
, and died at the scene.
2017 Paraguayan crisis 31 March 2017  Paraguay As a response to a constitutional amendment that would permit President Horacio Cartes to run for re-election,[56] protests broke out in Asunción against the legislation. During the protests, the windows were broken and Congress was set on fire by protesters. Fencing surrounding the compound was also removed. Police used water cannons, tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the demonstrators.[57]
2017 storming of Macedonian Parliament
27 April 2017  Macedonia About 200
Macedonian Parliament in Skopje in reaction to the election of Talat Xhaferi, an ethnic Albanian, as Speaker.[58]
2017 Tehran attacks 7 June 2017  Iran Two simultaneous terrorist attacks carried out by five members of the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) against the Iranian Parliament building and the Mausoleum of Ruhollah Khomeini, both in Tehran, leaving 17 civilians dead and 43 wounded.[59][60][61]
2017 Venezuelan National Assembly attack 5 July 2017  Venezuela Colectivos and supporters of President Nicolás Maduro stormed the Palacio Federal Legislativo in Caracas on the Independence Day of Venezuela, assaulting many members of the opposition-led National Assembly.[62] At least 12 opposition legislators and their staff were injured as a result of the attack.[63]
APEC Papua New Guinea 2018 20 November 2018  Papua New Guinea Police and soldiers protesting unpaid allowances from the
APEC summit held a few days prior stormed the National Parliament House in Port Moresby, damaging property and assaulting parliamentary staff before they were dispersing following promises by government ministers to release their payments.[64]
Storming of the Legislative Council Complex 1 July 2019  Hong Kong Siege, break-in, and subsequent occupation of the
2019–20 Hong Kong protests.[65] Nine days later, on 9 July, the Chief Executive, Carrie Lam, announced that the extradition bill was "dead".[66]
2019 Papua protests 19 August 2019  Indonesia Demonstrators protesting against the arrest of
separatist student activists set fire to the West Papua provincial parliament in Manokwari.[67]
2019 South Korean Capitol attack 16 December 2019  South Korea Supporters of the Liberty Korea Party and impeached former president Park Geun-hye assaulted police and lawmakers at the Korea National Assembly Proceeding Hall in Seoul.
2020 Azerbaijan protests 14 July 2020  Azerbaijan Protesters demonstrating against the death of military personnel during clashes with Armenia broke into the National Assembly building in Baku and caused minor damage.[68]
2020 Kyrgyz Revolution 6 October 2020  Kyrgyzstan Protesters demonstrating against electoral fraud during parliamentary elections held on 4 October and demanding the resignation of President Sooronbay Jeenbekov stormed the Jogorku Kenesh building in Bishkek, scattering papers and setting parts of the building on fire.[69]
2020 storming of the Armenian Parliament 10 November 2020  Armenia Protesters demonstrating against Armenia's defeat in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War and demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stormed the National Assembly, making speeches in the main hall and destroying equipment in some offices before being escorted out by police.[70]
2020 Guatemalan protests 21 November 2020  Guatemala Hundreds of anti-government protesters vandalized and set fire to parts of the empty Congress building, before being dispersed by riot police after about ten minutes. The attack came amid protests against a budget bill presented by President Alejandro Giammattei that was approved by the legislature.[71]
2021 United States Capitol attack
6 January 2021  United States Violent
Elmer Stewart Rhodes and Enrique Tarrio, were convicted of seditious conspiracy.[73][75]
April 2021 United States Capitol car attack
2 April 2021  United States A delusional man rammed a car into a barricade outside of the United States Capitol.[76] The perpetrator and a police officer were killed, and another officer was injured.[77]
2022 Parliament of South Africa fire 6 January 2022  South Africa At 5:00 am, a 49 year-old man started a fire on the third floor of the National Council of Provinces building which spread to several other parts of the parliamentary complex, causing significant damage before being extinguished. The suspect later claimed he wanted to prevent President Cyril Ramaphosa from delivering his annual State of the Nation address, and to demand his resignation.[78]
2022 Wellington protests
6 February - 2 March 2022  New Zealand Anti vaccine and anti mandate protesters combined with
far right extremists occupied the grounds of the New Zealand Parliament for 24 days.[79] Tents were set up, Parliament grounds were dug up in what culminated on 2 March into a confrontation between police and protesters that turned violent. Tents and the parliamentary playground was set alight. 40 police officers were injured when paving bricks among other objects were used against police who were conducting a tactical operation to end the occupation.[80][81]
2022 Iraq parliament attack 27 July 2022  Iraq Supporters of Iraqi cleric
prime minister of Iraq. The protestors left the parliament after al-Sadr called upon the protestors to "pray and go home".[82]
2023 Brazilian Congress attack 8 January 2023  Brazil Supporters of former president Jair Bolsonaro stormed the National Congress, along with other top-level government buildings on the Praça dos Três Poderes, demanding the resignation or removal of recently-inaugurated president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.[83]
Storming of the Nuevo Leon State Congress 29 November 2023  Mexico Protesters demonstrating against the appointment of a replacement for outgoing
Nuevo Leon state governor Samuel García entered the state congress in Monterrey and set off a smoke bomb inside the chamber.[84]
Lok Sabha protest 13 December 2023  India Two antigovernment protestors jumped from the visitors’ gallery of the
Delhi police .[85]

See also

References

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