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2024 in Mali

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Events in the year 2024 in Mali.

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Incumbents

Events

January

  • 19 January – At least 73 people die after an artisanal gold mine collapses in Kangaba.[1][2]
  • 19 January – Mali, along with Niger and Burkina Faso, announce their withdrawal from ECOWAS, accusing it of abandoning "the ideals of its founding fathers and pan-Africanism" under foreign influence and imposing "inhumane" sanctions to overthrow their military regimes.[3]

February

  • 19 February – A bus collides with a truck between Kessedougou and Ouan, killing 15 people and injuring 46.[4]
  • 26 February – ECOWAS lifts its sanctions on Mali.[5]
  • 27 February – A bus falls off a bridge in Koumantou, killing 31 people and injuring ten.[6]

March

April

  • 11 April – The ruling junta issues a decree suspending all political activities until further notice, citing concerns over public order.[8] It also orders a media ban on covering such issues.[9]
  • 16 April – At least 110 people are abducted by suspected Islamist militants from three buses travelling near Bandiagara.[10]
  • 28 April – Abu Huzeifa, a leader of Islamic State in West Africa, is killed in a military operation in Indelimane, Ménaka Region.[11]

June

July

August

September

  • 17 September – A series of attacks are held across multiple locations in Bamako, killing more than 77 people and injuring 255 others. The JNIM claims responsibility.[32][33]

November

  • 8 November – Terence Holohan, the CEO of the Australian firm Resolute Mining, is arrested in Bamako along with two other company employees while visiting Mali to negotiate a business dispute.[34]
  • 13 November – Issa Kaou N’Djim, a former vice president of the National Transitional Council, is arrested on charges of insulting a foreign head of state after expressing criticism of the military regime in neighbouring Burkina Faso on television.[35] The incident also leads to the junta cutting the signal of Joliba TV News, on which the criticism occurred, on 26 November.[36]
  • 18 November – Resolute Mining agrees to pay $160 million to the Malian government to resolve a tax dispute amid the continued detention of its CEO Terence Holohan and two other employees in Bamako since 8 November.[37]
  • 20 November – The junta dismisses Choguel Kokalla Maïga as prime minister along with his cabinet following Maïga accusing the junta of postponing elections to restore civilian rule without informing him.[38]
  • 21 November –

December

  • 1 December – Eight Tuareg separatist leaders, including Fahad Ag Almahmoud, are killed in an drone strike by the Malian military in Tinzaouaten.[41]
  • 16 December – ECOWAS approves the withdrawal of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger from the bloc effective January 2025 but gives them until July 2025 to reconsider.[42]

Scheduled events

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Holidays

Source:[44]

Deaths

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See also

References

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