Events in the year 2024 in Nigeria.
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January
- 7 January – Five people are killed more than 30 others are rescued after a boat capsizes along the Niger River in Anambra State.[1]
- 8 January – A two-year BBC investigation accuses the Synagogue Church of All Nations founder T. B. Joshua of rape and torture.[2]
- 9 January – At least 20 people are feared dead after an accident involving two passenger boats.[3]
- 15 January:
- 17 January – Two people are killed and 77 others injured during a blast caused by explosives stored for use in illegal mining operations at a dozen buildings in Ibadan.[6]
- 24 January – At least 30 people are killed during an attack by armed men in the village of Kwahaslalek, Plateau State.[7]
April
- 18 April – A schoolgirl who was abducted during the Chibok kidnapping in 2014 is rescued by authorities along with her three children in Gwoza, Borno State.[11]
- 19 April – Six soldiers are killed and two others are injured in an ambush during anti-bandit operations in Shiroro, Niger State.[12]
- 24 April – A total of 118 inmates escape from a prison in Suleja after heavy rains destroy its perimeter fence.[13]
May
- 10 May – Nine students are abducted by gunmen from the Confluence University of Science and Technology in Osara, Kogi State.[14]
- 15 May – Eight people are killed in an attack on a mosque in Gadan, Kano State.[15]
- 20 May – At least 40 people are killed in an attack on the village of Zurak in Wase, Plateau State.[16]
- 21 May:
- 24 May – Ten people are killed while 160 others are abducted in an attack by suspected Boko Haram militants on the village of Kuchi in Niger State.[19]
- 29 May – Nigeria readopts Nigeria, We Hail Thee, which was the country's national anthem from 1960 to 1978, as its national anthem, replacing Arise, O Compatriots.[20]
- 30 May – 2024 Aba killings: Eleven people, including five soldiers, are killed in an attack on a military checkpoint by unknown gunmen in Aba, Abia State.[21]
August
- 1 August–ongoing – End Bad Governance protests: Eleven people are killed, and one journalist is arrested as nationwide protests occur amidst a cost-of-living crisis and rising costs, which Nigerians blame on President Bola Tinubu's new reforms.[32] A curfew is declared in Kano, Jigawa, Yobe and Katsina States in response to the violence.[33]
- 5 August – Seven Polish students and faculty of the University of Warsaw are arrested in Kano State on suspicion of displaying Russian flags during protests.[34] They are released on 28 August.[35]
- 6 August – Police detain tailors who made Russian flags that were used in anti-government protests in Kano State.[36]
- 7 August – A boat sinks following an engine explosion in Bayelsa State, killing at least 20 people.[37]
- 15 August – At least 20 students of the University of Maiduguri and the University of Jos are abducted by unidentified gunmen along the Otukpo road in Benue State.[38] They are subsequently freed on 23 August.[39]
- 21 August – At least 13 farmers are killed by unidentified gunmen in Niger State.[40]
- 25 August – Two police officers are killed and three others are injured in an attack in Abuja. A police spokesperson says that the proscribed Islamic Movement of Nigeria was responsible for the attack.[41]
- 26 August –
- A one-week nationwide doctors' strike begins in protest over the abduction of one of their members, Ganiyat Popoola, who remains in captivity after being kidnapped in Kaduna in December 2023.[42]
- At least 49 people are killed and more than 40,000 people are displaced by flooding caused by heavy rains in Adamawa, Jigawa, and Taraba States.[43]
- 27 August – The United States donates 10,000 doses of mpox vaccines to Nigeria, making it the first African country to receive them.[44]
- 31 August – Chidimma Adetshina, who withdrew from the Miss Universe South Africa 2024 competition due to racist abuse, is crowned as Miss Universe Nigeria 2024, defeating 24 other contestants.[45]
October
- 15 October – At least 170 people are killed and 100 others are injured after an overturned fuel truck explodes while residents were trying to collect its cargo in Majiya, Jigawa State.[57]
- 16 October – The Senate begins a probe into allegations that personnel of the Department of State Services had taken over the National Assembly Complex in a move to impeach the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio.[58]
- 23 October – President Tinubu implements a cabinet reshuffle that results in the dismissal of the ministers of education, tourism, women's affairs and youth development as well as the junior minister for housing.[59]
- 24 October – A Sikorsky S-76 helicopter chartered by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation crashes into the Gulf of Guinea off the coast of Calabar, Cross River State. Five people are killed while the remaining three passengers are reported missing.[60][61]
- 27 October – A partially-demolished building collapses in Sabon-Lugbe, Abuja, killing seven people.[62]
- 30 October – "Scores" of civilians are killed in an airstrike by the Chadian military on a group of fishermen mistaken to be Boko Haram militants in Tilma island on the Nigerian side of Lake Chad.[63]
February
- 4 February – Bukar Ibrahim, 73, politician, senator (2007–2019) and governor of Yobe State (1992–1993, 1999–2007).[67]
- 5 February – Jimi Solanke, 81, actor (Sango, Shadow Parties), poet, and playwright.[68]
- 6 February – Joseph Chike Edozien, 98, traditional ruler, king of Asaba (since 1990).[69]
- 7 February – Ethel Ekpe, 60, actress (Basi and Company).[70]
- 9 February:
- 10 February – Jones Arogbofa, 71, military officer, chief of staff to the president (2014–2015).[72]
- 14 February – Folake Onayemi, 59, literary scholar.[73]
- 28 February – Fabian Osuji, 82, politician, minister of education (2003–2005).
March
- 2 March – John Okafor, 62, actor (Issakaba) and comedian.[74]
- 3 March – Eze V. B. C. Onyema III, 97, traditional ruler of Ogwu-Ikpele (since 1976).[75]
- 10 March – Abubakar Sodangi, 70, politician, senator (1999–2011).
- 14 March – Lekan Balogun, 81, monarch.[76]
- 24 March – Amaechi Muonagor, 61, actor (Karishika, Aki na Ukwa, Aki and Pawpaw).[77]
- 26 March – Wole Oguntokun, 56, playwright.[78]
April
- 2 April – Ali Chiroma, 91, trade unionist, president of the Nigeria Labour Congress (1984–1988).
- 7 April – Aderounmu Adejumoke, 40, actress (Dazzling Mirage, Industreet, Jenifa's Diary).[79]
- 8 April – Bright Esieme, 31, footballer (Enyimba).[80]
- 9 April – Saratu Gidado, 56, actress.[81]
- 10 April – Junior Pope, 39, actor (Professor Johnbull).[82]
- 11 April – Ogbonnaya Onu, 72, politician, minister of science (2015–2022) and governor of Abia State (1992–1993).[83]
- 17 April – Rafiu Adebayo Ibrahim, 57, politician, senator (2015–2019) and member of the House of Representatives (2011–2015).
- 23 April – Zulu Adigwe, actor (Basi and Company, Issakaba, Living in Bondage: Breaking Free).[84]
- 25 April – Ayogu Eze, 65, politician, senator (2007–2015).[85]
May
- 5 May – Lizzy Evoeme, 81, actress (New Masquerade).
- 9 May – Ibrahim Babangida, 47, footballer (FC Volendam).[86]
- 17 May:
- 19 May – Bola Afonja, 81, politician, minister of labour (1993).[89]
- 24 May – Ayo Banjo, 90, academic administrator, vice-chancellor of the University of Ibadan (1984–1991).[90]
- 25 May – Ibrahim Lamorde, 61, police officer, chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (2011–2015).[91]