April 30 – The Constitutional Court overturns election results for 31 seats and gives Rally for Mali an extra ten seats in Parliament.
May
May 10 – Three Chadian peacekeepers with MINUSMA were killed, and four wounded, in a roadside bomb attack in Aguelhok.
May 23 – Korité, public holiday
May 26 – Twenty people were killed and at least 11 injured when a minibus traveling between Bamako and Narena collided with a truck.
May 30 – Opposition parties establish the Mouvement du 5 juin - Rassemblement des forces patriotiques(in French) (June 5 Movement - Rally of Patriotic Forces).
July 5 – President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita meets with imam Mahmoud Dicko, leader of the June 5 protest movement.
July 11 – 12 – 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 – The opposition rejects a new government of national unity proposed by Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan,
July 27 – ECOWAS calls for a unity government and warns of sanctions.
August
August 10 – 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 – Police use tear gas and water cannons to disperse crowds in Independence Square after protests are renewed.
August 12 – The June 5 Movement announces daily protests.
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 – President Keïta and Prime Minister Cissé are forced to resign; Parliament is dissolved. The National Committee for the Salvation of the People is established.
September 7 – ECOWAS renews calls for a quick return to civilian rule.
September 10 – 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 – 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 – The CNSP agrees to an 18-month political transition period.
September 15 – 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 – French forces kill jihadist leader Ba Ag Moussa near Ménaka Cercle.
December
December 23 – United Nations investigators say both the military and rebel groups have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity since 2012.