2024 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Events of the year 2024 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Incumbents

 * President: Félix Tshisekedi
 * Prime Minister: Sama Lukonde (until 12 June); Judith Suminwa (since 12 June)

January

 * 16 January – A Congolese soldier is killed and two others are arrested by the Rwandan Army in a cross-border shooting incident in Rubavu District.
 * 24 January – At least 18 people are killed after a truck plunged into a ravine in Kasangulu, Kongo Central.
 * 27 January – Fighting between FARDC and aligned Wazalendo groups against Rwandan-backed M23 fighters continue in Mweso and Karuba, North Kivu.
 * 28 January – Forty people are presumed dead after a boat capsizes in Lake Kivu.

February

 * 9 February – At least 18 people are killed during a collision between a bus and a truck on a road in Kinshasa.
 * 19 February – Rwanda rejects the United States’ calls to withdraw troops and missile systems from the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, citing threats from an alleged Congolese military build-up near the border.

April

 * 13 April – 2024 Dibaya Lubwe landslide: At least 15 people are killed and 60 more are missing during a landslide in Idiofa.

May

 * 3 May:
 * The mining town of Rubaya is seized by the March 23 Movement.
 * Thirty-five people are killed and more than 20 injured in bombings at two camps for displaced people in Lac Vert and Mugunga, in North Kivu.
 * 19 May – The government announces that it had foiled a coup attempt following an attack on the residence of Economy Minister Vital Kamerhe in Kinshasa and reports of gunfire near the presidential palace.

June

 * 5 June – At least 16 people are killed by suspected Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) militants in Beni.
 * 7 June – At least 38 people are killed by suspected ADF militants in the Beni area.
 * 10 June – At least 86 passengers are killed after a boat capsizes along the Kwah River in Mai-Ndombe Province.
 * 13 June – Suspected Islamist rebels kill over 20 people in Mayikengo village, North Kivu.
 * 22 June – At least 23 people are killed by CODECO militia groups in Ituri Province.
 * 26 June – Two South African soldiers are killed and twenty others are injured in a mortar attack on their logistics base.
 * 28 June – M23 rebels take control of Luofu and Kanyabayonga after heavy fighting with the Congolese military. Almost the entire population of Kanyabayonga, including refugees it had taken in from Rutshuru, flee the town.
 * 30 June:
 * M23 rebels take control of Kirumba, the largest town in Lubero Territory, before continuing north.
 * Two aid workers from the international NGO Tearfund are killed in an attack on their convoy in Butembo, North Kivu.

July

 * 3 July – A court-martial in Butembo sentences 25 soldiers to death for desertion during fighting with M23 rebels.
 * 4 July – CODECO claims responsibility for the killing of six Chinese gold miners and the kidnapping of two more, as well as the killing of two FARDC soldiers in Ituri Province.
 * 8 July – A United Nations report formally accuses the Uganda People's Defence Force of providing military support to the M23 rebel group in eastern DRC. Uganda denies the claims. The report also reveals that between 3,000 to 4,000 Rwandan soldiers are fighting alongside M23 rebels.
 * 13 July –
 * CODECO militiamen attack the Zaire militia-controlled trading post of Pluto in Ituri Province leading to a four-hour battle that sees the participation of the FARDC and leaves 13 Zaire, seven CODECO, and six FARDC soldiers dead.
 * The FARDC repels an attack by Mobondo militiamen on the village of Kinsele, Kwamouth. At least 72 people are reported killed, including nine FARDC soldiers.
 * 15 July – Fighting between the FARDC, pro-government militia, and M23 rebels is reported in the Bashali Chiefdom, Bahunde Chiefdom, and the surroundings of Bweremana following simultaneous attacks on the positions of the FARDC and allies by the M23. Four civilians are killed and five others are injured in a bombardment on Bweremana blamed on M23.
 * 19 July – The governor of South Kivu orders a ban on all mining activities in the province, citing "disorder" caused by mine operators.

Holidays
Source:


 * 1 January - New Year's Day
 * 4 January - Martyrs' Day
 * 16 January - Laurent-Désiré Kabila Assassination
 * 17 January - Patrice Lumumba Assassination
 * 1 May - Labour Day
 * 17 May - Liberation Day
 * 30 June - Independence Day
 * 1 August – Parents' Day
 * 17 November – Army Day
 * 25 December – Christmas Day