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
7 March – The Alliance of Sahel States, comprising Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, announce the creation of a joint force between the three countries to combat jihadist groups in the three countries.[7]
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]
8 June – At least 22 miners are killed after a tunnel collapses at a mine in Kalana.[12]
20–29 June – Around 46 civilians are killed in an attack on the village of Abeibara in Kidal Region. Community leaders and civil society organisations blame the attack on the Malian military and the Wagner Group.[13]
31 July – Mali announces that it carried out joint airstrikes with Burkina Faso on insurgents in and around Tinzaouaten. The CSP-PSD says that a Burkinabe drone strike killed dozens of civilians.[24]
9 August – Mali expels the Swedish ambassador in response to Stockholm's decision to cut developmental aid to Bamako over its support for the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[27]
25 August – Twenty-one civilians, including 11 children, are killed in a drone strike in Tinzaouaten.[30]
26 August – Denmark closes its embassy in Bamako, citing the effects of military coups on its "scope of action".[31]
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]
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]