2020 in Mali
Incumbents
Events
March
April
- April 6 â Bamba attack.
- April 19 â 2nd round of the 2020 Malian parliamentary election.
- April 24 â Mopti attacks.
- April 30 â The Constitutional Court overturns election results for 31 seats and gives Rally for Mali an extra ten seats in Parliament.
May
- May 10 â Three Chadian peacekeepers with MINUSMA were killed, and four wounded, in a roadside bomb attack in Aguelhok.
- May 23 â Korité, public holiday
- May 26 â Twenty people were killed and at least 11 injured when a minibus traveling between Bamako and Narena collided with a truck.
- May 30 â Opposition parties establish the Mouvement du 5 juin - Rassemblement des forces patriotiques (June 5 Movement - Rally of Patriotic Forces).
June
July
- July 5 â President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita meets with imam Mahmoud Dicko, leader of the June 5 protest movement.
- July 11 â 12 â Protesters in Bamako clash with security forces, who reportedly fired live rounds at the protesters. 11 people were reportedly killed and another 124 injured.
- July 18 â The opposition rejects a new government of national unity proposed by Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan,
- July 27 â ECOWAS calls for a unity government and warns of sanctions.
August
- August 10 â Nine new judges for the Constitutional Court were sworn in. Al Jazeera's Nicolas Haque claimed the judges were nominated by a key Keita ally.
- August 11 â Police use tear gas and water cannons to disperse crowds in Independence Square after protests are renewed.
- August 12 â The June 5 Movement announces daily protests.
- August 18 â 2020 Malian coup d'état
- Soldiers at a base in Kati, Mali mutinied, detaining several civilian and military officials, sparking protests in nearby Bamako.
- President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta and Prime Minister Boubou Cissé were arrested by mutinying soldiers, as part of a coup d'état reportedly led by Colonel Malick Diaw and General Sadio Camara.
- August 19 â President Keïta and Prime Minister Cissé are forced to resign; Parliament is dissolved. The National Committee for the Salvation of the People is established.
- August 21 â A report attributed to unidentified sources in the Malian Armed Forces claims that Colonels Malick Diaw and Sadio Camara received training in Russia just a week before the coup.
September
- September 7 â ECOWAS renews calls for a quick return to civilian rule.
- September 10 â Members of the National Committee for the Salvation of the People (CNSP) meet with civilian and political leaders in order to establish a transitional civilian government by September 15.
- September 11 â The National Committee for the Salvation of the People proposes a transitional government led by a president appointed by the military for two years.
- September 12 â The CNSP agrees to an 18-month political transition period.
- September 15 â Deadline established by ECOWAS to name a civilian government for a one-year transition to free elections.
October
- October 5 - Over 100 jihadists were released as part of negotiations to secure the release of Soumaïla Cissé and French aid worker Sophie Pétronin.
- October 8 - Sophie Pétronin and Soumaïla Cissé were released from captivity by jihadist militants. Two Italian nationals, Nicola Chiacchio and Pier Luigi Maccalli, were also reported released.
- October 9 - Swiss government confirmed that Swiss Christian missionary Béatrice Stöckli was killed in Mali by jihadists.
November
- November 13 â French forces kill jihadist leader Ba Ag Moussa near Ménaka Cercle.
December
- December 23 â United Nations investigators say both the military and rebel groups have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity since 2012.
- December 29 â Three French soldiers are killed by an improvised explosive device (IED) in Mopti Region.
Scheduled events
Deaths
See also
References