One of the main objectives of structural geology is to describe the different microstructures, to understand the origin and distribution of the forces that generated them on the spatio-temporary level. Building on this momentum, a structural study was carried out on geological formations of Proterozoic age in the locality of Mpumbu, Lupatapata territory, Kasai Oriental province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This area is mainly crisscrossed by sedimentary formations belonging to the Bushimay supergroup. This sedimentary sequence is unaffected by regional metamorphism while highlighting two distinct successive components: sedimentary and metamorphic. The locality of Mpumbu is full of the following formations: sandstone, dolomitic limestone and shale. Brittle and planar deformations affect the majority of rocks and attest to the compressive stresses typical of this terrain. We solved the problem using Win-tensor software. Two preferential orientations of breaks have been exposed: North-South and East-West. The stress study revealed that the main stress initiating the observed deformations is oriented N57° and is inclined by 3°. Apart from the deformation, a chronological study was revealed: the breaks oriented preferably East-West intersected or often offset by a North-South oriented detachment prove their anteriorities compared to the last. Finally, a slight tilt to the north or northwest of different Mpumbu formations indicates that the region has undergone a certain inclination to the tertiary during the kimberlite intrusion of the various kimberlites in the perimeter of Bakwanga.