Kilo Goldmines Ltd. announced significant results from six additional diamond drill holes, totalling 1,292.50 m. These results include 4.07 m grading 17.25 g/t Au commencing at a downhole depth of 126.8 m, including 1.07 m grading 63.8 g/t Au in hole SMDD0018. These additional holes, at approximately 160 m intervals now define a strike length of 700 m at the Manzako Prospect, which is on the company's Somituri Project in northeastern Democratice Republic of Congo. The Manzako structure is estimated to be 2.2km in strike length as defined by colonial-era mining, previous trenches, soil sampling results and geological mapping.

The Manzako Prospect is 5.0 km east and south from, and parallel to, the Company's 1.87 M oz Adumbi gold deposit. Gold at Manzako occurs with quartz + carbonate + pyrite +/- pyrrhotite +/- arsenopyrite +/- chalcopyrite in a northwest-southeast oriented shear zone hosting auriferous quartz vein(s) that dips about 80 degrees northeast, herein termed the Manzako Shear Zone. Preliminary interpretation concludes that the MSZ is bedding parallel to sub-parallel in chloritized, sericitized and silicified mafic volcanic rocks, including pillowed basalts.

Infill and step out drilling with a minimum of two holes per section is planned for the next drilling campaign. The Somituri Project consists of eight Exploitation Licences totalling 606 square kilometres in the Archaen Ngayu Greenstone belt, in the north eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. According to historical records, unverified by the Company, the Kitenge and Manzako mines produced about 100,000 ounces of gold to 1955, and Adumbi gold mine produced about 200,000 ounces of gold from quartz vein ore that averaged 11 g/t gold during the 1940s until its closure in 1959.