2020 in East Africa
The following lists events that happened during 2020 in East Africa. The countries listed are those described in the United Nations geoscheme for East Africa:
Burundi, Comoros, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mayotte, Mozambique, Réunion, Rwanda, Seychelles, Somalia, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe.
The combined population of these 18 independent countries and two dependent territories is 445,405,606.
Countries and territories
Burundi
declared its independence from Belgium as a constitutional monarchy on July 1, 1962 and became the Republic of Burundi in 1965. Over the years the country has suffered through political instability including two civil wars and two instances of genocide. The political capital is Gitega and the economic capital is Bujumbura. — June 8, 2020- Chief of state and Head of government: President Pierre Nkurunziza
- *Second Vice President Joseph Butore
Comoros
- Chief of state and Head of government: President Azali Assoumani
Djibouti
- Chief of state: President Ismail Omar Guelleh
- Head of government: Prime Minister Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed
Eritrea
- Chief of state and Head of government: President Isaias Afwerki
Ethiopia
- Chief of state: President Sahle-Work Zewde Sahle-Work is the first female elected chief of state in Ethiopia; she is currently the only female president in Africa.
- Head of government:Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed
- *Deputy Prime Minister Demeke Mekonnen
Kenya
- Chief of state and Head of government: President Uhuru Kenyatta
- *Deputy President: William Ruto
Madagascar
- Chief of state: President Andry Rajoelina
- Head of government: Prime Minister Christian Ntsay
Malawi
- Chief of state and Head of government: President
- *Peter Mutharika
- *Lazarus Chakwera
- Vice-President Saulos Chilima
Mauritius
- Chief of state: President Prithvirajsing Roopun
- Head of government: Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth Jugnauth also became Defense Minister on 7 November 2019.
Mayotte
- Chief of state: President of France Emmanuel Macron
- Head of government: Prime Minister of France Édouard Philippe
- President of the Departmental Council Soibahadine Ibrahim Ramadani
Mozambique
- Chief of state: President Filipe Nyusi
- Head of government: Prime Minister Carlos Agostinho do Rosário
Réunion
- Chief of state: President Emmanuel Macron
- Head of government: Prime Minister of France Édouard Philippe
- President of the Regional Council Didier Robert
Rwanda
- Chief of state: President Paul Kagame
- Head of government: Prime Minister Édouard Ngirente
Seychelles
- Chief of state and Head of government: President Danny Faure
- Vice-President Vincent Meriton
Somalia
- Chief of state: President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed
- Head of government: Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khaire
South Sudan
- Chief of state and Head of government: President Salva Kiir Mayardit
- *First Vice-President Taban Deng Gai
- * Second Vice President James Wani Igga
Tanzania
- Chief of state and Head of government: President John Magufuli
- *Vice-President Samia Suluhu
- Head of government: Prime Minister: Kassim Majaliwa
Uganda
- Chief of state: President, Yoweri Museveni
- *Vice President: Edward Ssekandi
- Head of government: Prime Minister Ruhakana Rugunda
- *First Deputy Prime Minister: Moses Ali
- * Second Deputy Prime Minister Kirunda Kivenjinja
Zambia
- Chief of state and Head of government: President, Edgar Lungu
- *Vice-President Inonge Wina
Zimbabwe
- Chief of state: President Emmerson Mnangagwa
- *Vice-President Constantino Chiwenga
Monthly events
January
- 1 January – New Year's Day
- 2 January – New Year holiday, Seychelles
- 7 January – Orthodox Tewahedo Christmas in Ethiopia and Eritrea
- 8 January – The United States announces sanctions against First Vice President Taban Deng Gai of South Sudan for human rights violations.
- 12 January – Zanzibar Revolution Day, Tanzania
- 13 January
- *Two journalists are arrested in Comoros.
- *China promises to strengthen ties with Burundi.
- 15 January – John Chilembwe Day, Malawi
- 19 January
- *Timkat, celebration of Epiphany in Ethiopia and Eritrea
- *Djibouti rejects an arbitration agreement that would give United Arab Emirates company DP World complete control over Dolareh Port Terminal.
- *2020 Comorian legislative election It was a landslide victory for President Azali Assoumani's Convention for the Renewal of the Comoros.
- 25 January – Chinese New Year, Mauritius
- 29 January: The East African Community announces that it is in the process of developing a common currency by 2024.
- 31 January: Four journalists are sentenced to 30-month jail sentences in Burundi.
February
- February 1
- *Abolition of Slavery, Mauritius
- *Heroes' Day, Rwanda
- *Kenyan blood banks run dry after the United States cuts off aid.
- *The East African Community reviews its treaty.
- February 2
- *At least 40 people are killed in a stampede at a church in Moshi, Tanzania.
- *An air raid by United States Africa Command kills at least five civilians and one member of al Shabaab terrorist near Jilib, Somalia.
- February 3
- *Heroes' Day, Mozambique
- *Human Rights Watch denounces Tanzania for denying adequate health services to LBGT people.
- 4 February – Two television reporters have been suspended for covering strikes in Comoros.
- February 5
- *Unity Day, Burundi
- *Ugandan climate activist Vanessa Nakate, 23, complains about racism as she is cropped out of a photo published by the Associated Press in which she originally appeared with Greta Thunberg, Isabelle Axelsson, Luisa Neubauer and Loukina Tille at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "Africans have truly been erased from the map of climate action," Nakate tweeted. AP said they will expand their diversity training for employees.
- 9 February
- *Swarms of locusts are seen in Uganda and Tanzania.
- *Kenya and Djibuti dispute over United Nations Security Council seat.
- 10 February – There still is no agreement in South Sudan over the number and boundaries of its states. A week later talks are still stalled.
- 11 February – Kenya and the FBI sign an anti-terrorist agreement, the first of its kind outside the United States.
- 12 February
- *PowerChina International Group Limited applies for a permit to build a US$1.2 dam and power plant between Lake Kyoga and Lake Albert in Uganda.
- *A report on wildlife censuses conducted in October 2018 and November 2018 in the Selous-Mikumi ecosystem in Tanzania indicates that populations of elephants, hippopotamuses, and zebras have increased and that poaching has been brought under control.
- 13 February
- *The African Development Bank gives Uganda US $1 million to fight Ebola.
- *The atoll of Aldabra in the Seychelles is designated an Important Marine Mammal Area because of its rare dugong breeding population.
- *Rosemary DiCarlo, the UN Under-Secretary for Political Affairs and Peace-building Affairs, meets with Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok and Lt. Gen. Abdelfattah El Burhan of Somalia in Khartoum.
- *The United Nations Security Council schedules a meeting on Somalia later this month.
- *The government of South Sudan is accused of ignoring four reports linking oil pollution and birth defects in Upper Nile and Unity states.
- 14 February – U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo begins a visit to Senegal, Angola, and Ethiopia.
- 15 February – Six mass graves with 6,000 bodies are found in Karuzi Province, Burundi.
- 19 February – Locust swarms spread from Uganda to South Sudan.
- 20 February
- *The Netherlands returns a stolen crown to the government of Ethiopia.
- 21 February
- *Maha Shivaratri, Hindu festival in honour of Lord Shiva, Mauritius
- *Robert Gabriel Mugabe National Youth Day, Zimbabwe
- 24 February – The United States shifts its military mission in Africa to training as American lawmakers oppose troop reductions.
- February 29 – Egypt says it will use "all means" to defend its interests in a dispute with Ethiopia and Sudan over a dam on the Nile River.
March
- 2 March – Victory at Adwa Day, Ethiopia
- 3 March – Martyrs' Day
- 8 March – International Women's Day and Labour Day
- 12 March
- *Independence and Republic Day, Mauritus
- *Youth Day, Zambia
- *At least 18 African countries, including Ethiopia, Kenya, and Sudan report cases of the novel coronavirus. Most are in single figures, and no deaths have been reported in Sub-Saharan Africa. All major public events and air travel have been restricted in Kenya. Sudan stops issuing visas for, and flights to, eight countries, including Italy and Egypt, over fears of the coronavirus outbreak.
- 13 March – Malawi's president dissolves his cabinet in an attempt to prevent a new election.
- 15 March – In a historic first, all Peace Corps volunteers worldwide are withdrawn from their host countries.
- 16 March – Oppah Muchinguri, Zimbabwe's defence minister, describes the coronavirus pandemic as God's way of punishing the United States and other Western nations for imposing sanctions on Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe has not yet recorded a case of COVID-19 but South Africa has more than 60 cases and 54 countries in Africa have reported cases.
- 20 March – Zimbabwe reports its first case of COVID-19, a 38-year-old who had traveled to Great Britain on 7 March, returning home via neighboring South Africa on 15 March. Madagascar also reports its first case. Thirty-nine countries in Africa now have cases, with a total now well above 900.
- 24 March – Ahlu Sunnah Wa-Jama insurgents destroyed houses, vandalized public spaces, and erected barricades along important roads in Mocímboa da Praia, Cabo Delgado Province, Mozambique.
- 25 March – At least 60 people believed to be migrants from Ethiopia are found dead in a cargo container in Tete, Mozambique.
- 27 March
- *Police in Kenya use tear gas at a crowd of commuters trying to reach a ferry before a 7 p.m. curfew went into place; others were beaten with batons. 38 people in Kenya are infected with COVID-19
- *Police in Rwanda deny killing two civilians for ignoring the country-wide lockdown that went into effect on 23 March; they say the men were shot because they attacked the police. A lockdown in Zimbabwe is due to go into effect on 30 March.
- 29 March – Martyrs′ Day, Madagascar
April
- 1 April – Billions of locusts have destroyed 173,000 acres in Kenya and other East African countries since December 2019.
- 6 April – Cyprien Ntaryamira Day, Burundi
- 7 April
- *Women's Day, Mozambique
- *Genocde Memorial Day
- *Abeid Karume Day, Tanzania
- 8 April – A Spanish-Eritrean group has discovered the remains of million-year-old fossil remains of large animals and plants along with tools that will help us better understand the climate and ecology of the Engel Ela-Ramud area during the Pleistocene Epoch.
- 10 April – Good Friday, Western Chrtian holiday
- 11 April – Moussa Faki, Chairperson of the African Union Commission, invites the Chinese ambassador to the AU to discuss allegations of discrimination and mistreatment of hundreds of Africans in Guangzhou, southern China.
- 13 April
- *Easter Monday, Western Christian holiday
- *14,000 cases of COVID-19 and 788 deaths have been reported across Africa. Cases by country: Comoros – 0, Djibouti – 214, Eritrea – 34, Ethiopia – 71, Kenya – 197, Madagascar – 106, Malawi – 13, Mauritius – 324, Mozambique – 21, Rwanda – 126, São Tomé and Príncipe – 4, Somalia – 25, South Sudan – 4, Tanzania – 32, Uganda – 54, Zambia – 43, Zimbabwe – 14
- 15 April – Finance ministers from the Group of 20 agree to put a hold on debt service by poor countries so they can concentrate their efforts on health service and ending the pandemic. 76 countries will be able to participate in the plan, including 40 from Sub-Saharan Africa. $8 billion in private loans and $12 billion in loans from other countries will be frozen for the remainder of 2020 and possibly beyond. Another $12 billion in multilateral loans from organizations such as the World Bank is also under consideration.
- April 17
- *Considerable fake news about the coronavirus is circulating in Africa.
- *About 300 people at the Gashora emergency transit center near Kigali, Rwanda, protest against stay-at-home orders. The refugees had been relocated from overcrowded camps in Libya and many have been cleared for migration to countries such as Norway or Canada. The new orders, issued to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, prevent international travel, and they restrict the ability of interns to play football or attend religious services.
- April 18 – Independence Day, Zimbabwe
- April 22
- *Kenya plans to hunt down approximately 50 individuals who escaped from a quarantine center in Nairobi.
- *The World Health Organization warns that the number of malaria deaths in Africa may double this year as efforts to curb the disease wind down.
- April 24 – One million people in Ethiopia face hunger due to crop destruction by locust swarms. 25 million people in six states are struggling to feed themselves and a further five million could be threatened by hunger if the locust invasion was not contained. Swarms have been reported in Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, and Tanzania.
- April 26 – Union Day, the unification of Tanganyika and the People's Republic of Zanzibar in 1964, Tanzania
- April 27 – The World Food Program and the Food and Agriculture Organization said in a report that more than 4 million rural people, about a third of Zimbabwe's population, “are in need of urgent action,” to deal with food shortages.
- 28 April – Madagascar President Andry Rajoelina promotes drinking a herbal extract called ″Covid Organics″ as schools reopen despite no scientific evidence that it is effective. Madagascar has 128 recorded cases of COVID-19 but no deaths.
- April 29 – Kenya bans movement in and out of two huge refugee camps housing 400,000 people as part of containment measures aimed at preventing the spread of the coronavirus among the vulnerable communities.
- April 30 – Comoros confirms its first COVID-19 case. A healthcare worker who did not wish to give her name told AFP news agency the announcement came "rather late". "Only one positive case? The president is funny. The number is much higher," she said.
May
- May 1 – International Workers' Day
- *Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta pushes back against criticism for sending flowers to Britain's National Health Service by noting the importance of flower exportations to Kenya's economy.
- May 3 – COVID-19 pandemic: Tanzanian President John Magufuli questions coronarivus tests after samples from a goat, a pawpaw, and a sheep tested positive. Tanzania reports 480 cases of COVID-19 and 17 deaths.
- May 4 – A civilian Kenyan plane carrying medical supplies to Bay, Somalia crashes, killing six.
- May 6
- *Somalian-born U.S. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar demands that United States Africa Command explain why it has reported only four civilian deaths in the 227 declared actions the U.S. has conducted in Somalia since 2007. Other organizations report as many as 142 civilian deaths due to U.S. airstrikes.
- *Kenyan officials say at least 194 people have been killed and 100,000 have been made in flooding over the past three weeks. At least 65 people have been killed by floods and landslides in Rwanda.
- May 8
- *Bereket Simon, former Communications Minister for the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front, is convicted of corruption and sentenced to six years of prison. Tadesse Kassa, a former TIRET Corporation board member, is also convicted.
- *A hospital in Kilembe, Uganda and a small town Somalia are washed away in flooding; an unspecified number of people are killed. Hundreds of people have been killed by floodwaters in Kenya, Uganda, Somalia, Rwanda, and Ethiopia which have also displaced hundreds of thousands across the region.
- *Hundreds protest when the government destroys 7,000 homes and a market in Kariobangi, Kenya. At least six people have been killed for violating stay-at-home orders, while hundreds have been forced into quarantine.
- May 12 – Sudan pushes Ethiopia to resume discussion related to the $4.6 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on the Nile River that officials say will start filling in July.
- May 13 – Balloons floating 12 miles over Niassa and Cabo Delgado provinces in northern Mozambique are planned to provide the region with stable internet connections, according to Google's parent company, Alphabet Inc., and local mobile telecoms provider Vodacom.
- May 14
- *Hastings Banda Birthday, Malawi
- *Four members of thee World Health Organization are expelled from Burundi.
- *The U.S Embassy in Dar es Salaam says that hospitals in Tanzania are ″overwhelmed″ because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- May 15 – Three young, female opposition activists were reported missing following a protest in Harare, Zambia, over COVID-19 lockdown measures. They were later treated at a hospital after asserting they had been abducted and sexually abused by suspected state security agents.
- May 16
- *Sudan People's Liberation Army Day, South Sudan
- *Kenya closes its borders with Somalia and Tanzania.
- *Félicien Kabuga, 84, Africa's most wanted fugitive for his role in the Rwandan genocide, is arrested in the outskirts of Paris.
- May 18 – Flooding in central Somalia affects nearly one million people, displacing about 400,000. At least 24 people have died.
- May 19
- *Laylat al-Qadr, Islamic “Night of Decree”
- *COVID-19 pandemic: Rwanda releases 52 young women jailed for having or aiding abortions. A total of a total of 3,596 inmates have been granted “conditional release” from prison in order to reduce the number of inmates and prevent the spread of the coronavirus.
- May 20 – 2020 Burundian general election Evariste Ndayishimiye, 52, wins with 69% of the vote and will not face a second-round of voting. President Pierre Nkurunziza will step down and be granted the title ″Supreme Guide.″
- May 21– Ascension of Jesus, Western Christian holiday
- May 24
- *Eid al-Fitr, end of Ramadan
- * Independence Day, Eritrea
- May 25 – Zimbabwe offers 100% ownership of farms for marijuana cultivation.
- May 28
- *Derg Downfall Day, Ethiopia
- *Ladislas Ntaganzwa is sentenced to life imprisonment for his role in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
- *COVID-19 pandemic: Hundreds of people in quarantine in Zimbabwe and Malawi escape; some have confirmed cases of coronavirus.
- May 29
- *Amnesty International accuses Ethiopian security forces of 39 extrajudicial executions of members of the Oromo Liberation Front.
- *Eight ″very young″ aid workers are kidnapped and killed by an armed group near Mogadishu.
- *COVID-19 pandemic: Denise Bucumi, First Lady of Burundi, is flown to Nairobi for treatment for coronavirus. Burundi officially has 42 cases and 17 deaths due to the virus, but it stopped counting on May 17 and the actual numbers may be much higher.
- *The UN extends an arms embargo and travel restrictions on South Sudan for another year.
June
- June 1
- *Madaraka Day,
- *Whit Monday, Western Christian holiday
- June 2
- *President Yoweri Museveni predicts Uganda will lose US$1.6 billion in tourism revenues due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- *People in Nairobi protests against police brutality after a homeless man is killed for violating curfew.
- *At least six elephants are killed by poachers outside Mago National Park, Ethiopia in the largest mass-killing of animals in the country's history.
- June 3
- *Uganda Martyrs, Anglican and Catholic holiday
- *Feast of Corpus Christi, Seychelles
- *A French court hands Felicien Kabuga to the United Nations for trial in Tanzania on charges of genocide.
- June 5 – Rijasoa Andriamanana, the Education Minister of Madagascar, is fired after spending $2million on candy for children to mask the "bitter" aftertaste of an untested herbal remedy for coronavirus.
- June 7 – COVID-19 pandemic: Tanzania President John Magufuli claims God has "removed" the coronavirus and the country has only four cases; the country last reported 509 cases six weeks ago.
- June 8
- *Burundi President Pierre Nkurunziza dies and seven days of mourning are declared.
- *Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed rejects the idea of forming a transitional government in anticipation of the October election.
- *Residents of one of Nairobi's poorest areas held a peaceful protest over the police brutality and killings which have plagued their neighborhood in recent years. Kenya's Independent Police Oversight Authority said that while enforcing the curfew police have killed 15 people and are accused of 31 cases of torture and injuring people.
- June 9
- *Tanzania opposition leader Freeman Mbowe is shot outside his home Dodoma City.
- *A statue of King Leopold II of Belgium is knocked over in Ekeren, Antwerp, Belgium by protesters who object to his ties to colonialism in the Congo Free State.
- June 10 – Zimbabwe's National Security Council denies rumors of a coup d'etat attempt.
- June 12
- *Four poachers are arrested for killing an endangered gorilla in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda.
- *Three young women activists who say they were abducted and sexually assaulted by government forces in Zimbabwe face up to twenty years in prison for lying and trying to destabilize the government.
- *World Day Against Child Labor: The International Labour Organization and UNICEF warn that millions of children are likely to be pushed into forced labor because of the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic.
- *A Burundi court declares that Évariste Ndayishimiye should be sworn in as soon as possible, although no date is set.
- June 17 to 20 – Egyptian hackers engage in cyberattacks against Ethiopia's security forces.
- June 18 – Constitution Day, Seychelles
- June 20 – Martyrs' Day, Eritrea
- June 23 – 2020 Malawian presidential election
- June 25 – Independence Day, Mozambique
- June 26
- *Independence Day, Madagascar
- *Independence Day, Somalia
- *Egypt, Sudan, and Ethiopia agree to delay filling the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
- *Three people are killed in Lessos, Kenya after a police officer shoots into a crowd of people protesting the use of facemasks and police shakedowns.
- *Rwanda says three of its soldiers were injured in Nyaruguru District in an attack originating in Burundi.
- June 27 – Independence Day, Djibuti
- June 28 – 166 people, including 156 civilians and eleven security forces, are killed in riots in Oromia Region and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, after the murder of Hachalu Hundessa
- June 29 – Independence Day, Seychelles
- June TBA– Burundi National Assembly and local elections
July
- July 1
- *Independence Day, Burundi
- *Independence Day, Rwanda
- *Foundation of the Somali Republic, Somalia
- July 2 – 2020 Malawian general election Opposition alliance leader Lazarus Chakwera, 65, wins with 58.57% of the vote.
- July 4
- *Liberation Day, Rwanda
- *Newly elected President Lazarus Chakwera of Malawi warns "We have a situation" as cases of COVID-19 in Africa soar to 1,400, half in the last three weeks.
- July 6
- *Independence Day, Comoros
- *Independence Day/Republic Day, Malawi Newly elected President Lazarus Chakwera is inaugurated in a televised ceremony after the ceremony was moved to the Kamuzu Barracks after reports of the worsening of the coronavirus pandemic. Malawi has 1,742 reported cases of the virus.
- *Heroes' Day, and Zambia International Trade Fair, Zambia
- *COVID-19 pandemic
- **Burundi launches mass testing for the virus.
- **12 nurses are arrested as thousands protest in Zimbabwe against poor working conditions.
- July 7
- *Unity Day, Zambia
- *Zimbabwe settles a ten-year-old land dispute with 3,200 evicted white farmers for ₤2.8 billion, half its value.
- July 9 – Independence Day, South Sudan
- July 13 – A civilian is killed during an assassination attempt on Somalia Gen. Odowa Yusuf Rage.
- July 19 – 105,000 people have been arrested for violations of regulations related to the COVID-19 pandemic, including 1,000 arrests for face mask violations in the last two days in Zimbabwe. 1,500 infections have been reported.
- July 21 – The African Development Fund approves UA100.4 million crisis budget support for Malawi, Madagascar, Mozambique and São Tomé & Príncipe.
- July 22 – Ugandan activist Bobi Wine starts a new political party, the National Unity Platform, ahead of the 2021 Ugandan presidential election.
- July 24 – South Sudanese activist Peter Biar Ajak, 36, flees to the United States after hiding in Kenya for three weeks.
Predicted and scheduled events
July to September
- 30 July
- *Muharram, Islamic New Year
- *Martyrs' Day, South Sudan
- 31 July – Eid al-Adha, Islamic “Festival of the Sacrifice”
- 1 August – Kenya plans to reopen Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi and Moi International Airport in Mombasa. Seychelles and Rwanda plan to open air flights the same day.
- 7 August – Umuganura Day, also called Thanksgiving Day or National harvest day, Rwanda
- 10 August – Zimbabwe Heroes' Day
- 11 August – Defence Forces Day
- 15 August – Assumption of Mary, Western Christian holiday
- 22 August – Ganesh Chaturthi, Hindu festival celebrating the arrival of Ganesha to earth, Mauritius
- 28 and 29 August – Ashura, in Sunni Islam, marks the day Husayn ibn Ali was martyred in the Battle of Karbala; celebrated in Somalia
- 29 August – 2020 Ethiopian general election, postponed due to COVID-19 pandemic
- 1 September – Eritrea Revolution Day
- 7 September – Victory Day, Mozambique
- 28 September – Meskel, Feast of the Cross in Ethiopia and Eritrea
- September to December TBA: 2020 Seychellois presidential election
October to December
- 4 October – Day of Peace and Reconciliation, Mozambique
- 9 October – Independence Day, Uganda
- 10 October – Moi Day, Kenya
- 13 October – Louis Rwagasore Day, Burundi
- 15 October – Mother's Day, Malawi; also World Rural Women's Day
- 18 October - National Prayer Day, Zambia
- 20 October – Mashujaa Day, Kenya
- 21 October – Ndadaye Day, Burundi
- 24 October – Independence Day, Zambia
- 30 October – Milad un Nabi, The Prophet's birthday
- October TBA – 2020 Tanzanian general election
- 1 November – All Saints' Day, Western Christian holiday
- 2 November – Arrival of Indentured Labourers Day, Mauritius
- 3 November – Milad un Nabi, The Prophet's birthday
- 14 November – Diwali, Hindu festival of lights, Mauritius
- 12 December – Jamhuri Day, Independence Day, Kenya
- 22 December – Unity Day, Zimbabwe
- 25 December
- *Christmas Day, Western Christian holiday
- *Family Day, Mozambique
- *2020 Tanzanian general election
- 28 December – Boxing Day, Commonwealth
- 31 December – New Year's Eve
- TBA
- *Mauritius local elections
- *2020 Seychellois presidential election
- *2020 Somaliland parliamentary election
Culture
The Arts
Sports
- 29 November 2019 – 1 February 1, 2020: 2019–20 CAF Champions League group stage
- 1 December 2019 – 2 February 2, 2020: 2019–20 CAF Confederation Cup group stage
- May TBA – Finals of 2020 African U-17 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament Began January 2020
- 21 June – Finals of 2020 African U-20 Women's World Cup Qualifying Tournament
- July7–12: 2020 World Athletics U20 Championships in Nairobi, Kenya
- 3–13 August: 2020 Uganda Cricket World Cup Challenge League B
- 5–12 October: 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification – CAF Second Round
Deaths
January
- 4 January – Oliver Batali Albino, 84, South Sudanese politician; heart failure
- 5 January – Charles Oguk, 55, Kenyan Olympic hockey player
- 13 January – Andrew Kashita, 87, Zambian politician, MP, Minister of Mines and Industry and Transport and Communications
- 27 January – Lovemore Matombo, 75, Zimbabwean trade unionist, president of ZCTU
- 28 January – Naomi Karungi, 41, Ugandan military officer; helicopter crash
February
- 4 February: Daniel arap Moi, 95, former president of Kenya ; undisclosed illness
- 5 February: Abadi Hadis, 22, Ethiopian Olympic long-distance runner.
- 11 February: Marcelino dos Santos, 90, Mozambican poet and politician, Vice President of FRELIMO and President of the Assembly of the Republic.
- 12 February
- *Sir Michael Berridge, 81, Zimbabwean-born British biochemist.
- *Benon Biraaro, 61, Ugandan military officer, colon cancer.
- 13 February: Iddi Simba, former Minister of for Industry and Trade in Tanzania
- 15 February
- *Simon Kagugube, 65, Ugandan lawyer and corporate executive, heart failure.
- *John Wesley Zvamunondiita Kurewa, 87, Zimbabwean academic, co-founder of Africa University.
- *Prince Kudakwashe Musarurwa, 31, Zimbabwean singer-songwriter, lung cancer.
- 16 February: Nikita Pearl Waligwa, 15, Ugandan actress ; brain tumor.
- 17 February
- *Mário da Graça Machungo, 79, Mozambican politician, Prime Minister.
- *Kizito Mihigo, 38, Rwandan gospel singer, organist and peace activist, founder of the Kizito Mihigo Peace Foundation.
- 19 February – Daniel Mburu, 24, motorcycle taxi driver shot by police in Nairobi, Kenya after saving a boy's life
March
- 5 March – Solomon Berewa, 81, Sierra Leonean politician, Vice-President.
- 9 March – Suleiman Dori, 42, Kenyan politician, MP, cancer.
- 20 March – Justin Mulenga, 65, Zambian Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Mpika.
- 23 March – Zororo Makamba, 30, Zimbabwean television journalist, COVID-19.
- 24 March – Mohamed Farah, 59, Somali footballer, COVID-19.
- 25 March – General Gamal al-Din Omar, Sudan Defence Minister; heart attack
- 27 March – Thandika Mkandawire, 79, Malawian-Swedish economist.
- 31 March
- *Raphael S. Ndingi Mwana a'Nzeki, 88, Kenyan Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Nairobi .
- *Gita Ramjee, 63, Ugandan-South African HIV prevention researcher; COVID-19.
April
- 1 April – Nur Hassan Hussein, 83, Somali politician, Prime Minister, COVID-19.
- 5 April – DJ Miller, 29, Rwandan DJ and musician, stroke.
- 7 April – Xudeydi, 91, Somali oud player, COVID-19.
- 8 April – Jackie du Preez, 77, Zimbabwean cricketer.
- 12 April
- *Khalif Mumin Tohow, justice minister of Somalia's autonomous Hirshabelle State; COVID-19
- *Josephat Torner, 42, Tanzanian albino activist, traffic collision.
- 17 April – Ken Walibora, 56, Kenyan author and journalist ; traffic collision
- April 29 – Richard Ndassa, 61, Tanzanian politician, MP
- April 30 – Manuel Vieira Pinto, 96, Portuguese-born Mozambican Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop and Archbishop of Nampula
May
- May 1 – Augustine Mahiga, 74, Tanzanian diplomat and politician, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Permanent Representative to the UN
- May 4 – Chege Mbitiru, 77, Kenyan journalist ; cardiac arrest
- May 8 – Therence Sinunguruza, 60, Burundian politician, MP, Permanent Representative to the UN and Vice-President
- May 17 – Ahmed Muse Nur, Somali politician, governor of Mudug ; bombing
- May 19 – Peter Kiilu, Kenyan politician, MP
- May 25 – Jimmy Kirunda, 70, Ugandan football player and manager; heart attack.
June
- June 3 – John Luk Jok, 68, South Sudanese politician, Minister of Justice.
- June 8 – Pierre Nkurunziza, 55, president of Burundi ; heart attack
- June 13 – Abenny Jachiga, Kenyan pop star
- June 14 – *Kerbino Wol, 37–38, South Sudanese businessman and founder of the 7 October Movement; killed during military attack.
- June 16 – Omondi Long'lilo, 37, Kenyan Benga musician; cancer.
- June 18 – John Bredenkamp, 79, Zimbabwean rugby union player and businessman.
- June 28 – Hachalu Hundessa, 34, Ethiopian singer; shot
July
- July 1 – Emmanuel Rakotovahiny, 81, Malagasy politician, Prime Minister of Madagascar ; heart disease.
- July 5 – Tiloun, 53, Réunionese singer.
- July 12 – Hassan Abshir Farah, 75, Somali politician, Prime Minister and MP.
- July 16 – Cornelius Mwalwanda, Malawian economist and politician; COVID-19.
- July 18 – Charles Bukeko, 58, Kenyan actor and comedian ; COVID-19.
- July 24
- *Benjamin Mkapa, 81, Tanzanian politician, President.
- *Ben Jipcho, 77, Kenyan athlete, Olympic silver medallist.
- July 28 – Masango Matambanadzo, 56, Zimbabwean politician, MP.
- July 29 – Perence Shiri, 65, Zimbabwean military officer and politician, Minister of Agriculture and Commander of the Air Force ; COVID-19.
Footnotes