The African Games, formally known as the All-Africa Games or the Pan African Games, are a continental multi-sport event held every four years, organized by the African Union with the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa and the Association of African Sports Confederation.

All of the competing nations are from the African continent. The first Games were held in 1965 in Brazzaville, Congo. The International Olympic Committee granted these Games official recognition as a continental multi-sport event, along with the Asian Games and Pan American Games. Since 1999, the Games have also included athletes with a disability.[1]

The Supreme Council for Sport in Africa (SCSA) was the organizing body for the Games. On 26 July 2013, the Extraordinary Assembly of the SCSA held in Abidjan, Ivory Coast on the sidelines of the 5th Session of the African Union Conference of Sports Ministers recommended the dissolution of the SCSA and transfer of all its functions, assets & liabilities to the African Union Commission.[2][3] The organization of the African Games is now managed by three parts, the AU (the owners of the game), the ANOCA (occupying the technical aspects) and the AASC (developing marketing policy, sponsorship and research resources).

After running previous 11 editions as the All-Africa Games, the games has been renamed the African Games. The decision for the name change was arrived at, during the Executive Council meeting of the African Union held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in January 2012.[4] 54 countries were participating in the most recent edition in Morocco 2019. In 2023, the 13th edition of the game was hosted in Accra, Ghana.[5][6] It was aim to use sports for national and continental development, aligning with Ghana's transformative agenda and the African Union's Agenda 2063, "Africa We Want."[7]

History

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Beginning

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Modern Olympics founder Pierre de Coubertin conceived the Pan African Games as early as 1920. The colonial powers who ruled Africa at the time were wary of the idea, suspecting the unifying aspect of sport among African people would cause them to assert their independence.

Attempts were made to host the games in Algiers, Algeria in 1925 and Alexandria, Egypt in 1928, but despite considerable preparations taken by coordinators, the efforts failed. The International Olympic Committee's (IOC) first African member, Greek-born Egyptian sprinter Angelo Bolanaki, donated funds to erect a stadium, but still the Games were set back for another three decades.

The Friendship Games

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In the early 1960s, French-speaking countries of Africa including France organized the Friendship Games. The Games were organized by Madagascar (1960) and then Ivory Coast (1961). The third games were set for Senegal in 1963. Before they were completed, African Ministers of Youth and Sport met in Paris in 1962; as a few English-speaking countries were already participating, they rechristened the Games as the Pan African Games. The Games were granted official recognition by the IOC as being on par with other continental Games such as the Asian Games and the Pan American Games.

The games

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In July 1965, the first games were held in Brazzaville, Congo, now called the All-Africa Games. From 30 countries, around 2,500 athletes competed. Egypt topped the medal count for the first Games.

In 1966, the SCSA was organized in Bamako; it manages the All-Africa Games. The second edition were awarded to Mali in 1969, but a military coup forced the cancellation of the Games. Lagos, Nigeria stepped in as host for the Games in 1971. Those Games were finally held in 1973 due to the Biafra War, which had just ended in Nigeria.

In 1977, the 3rd Games were scheduled to take place in Algeria but due to technical reasons had to be postponed for a year and were held in 1978. Continuing the pattern, the next Games were scheduled to take place in Kenya in 1983, but were pushed back to 1985 and finally took place in Nairobi in 1987.

The four-year Olympic rhythm has not missed a beat since, and the Games have been organized in Cairo, Harare, Johannesburg, and Abuja. In 2007, Algiers once again hosted, becoming the first repeat host. The 2011 edition of the All-Africa Games was held in Maputo, Mozambique in September 2011. Brazzaville hosted the 2015 edition in honor of the Games' 50th anniversary.

Participation

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All 53 members affiliated to the Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA) are eligible to take part in the Games. In history, the 53 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) have sent competitors to the Games.

South Africa was banned since the beginning of the games in the 1965 All-Africa Games till the 1995 All-Africa Games because Apartheid officially ended when it was invited for the first time to compete the games.

Morocco was banned from the games from the 1987 All-Africa Games to the 2015 African Games because of a political dispute over Western Sahara. Morocco claims the territory as its "Southern Provinces" and controls 80% of it while the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, which claims to be a sovereign state, controls the remaining 20% as the "Free Zone". In 2018, after the Moroccan government signed its treaty of return to the African Union, the country also pledged to return to the African Games. Rabat, Morocco hosted the 2019 African Games.[8][9][10]

Editions

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Games Year Host[11] Opened by Dates Nations Competitors Sports Events Top nation
Men Women Total
1 1965   Brazzaville Alphonse Massemba 18 – 28 July 30 2,500 10 54   Egypt
2 1973   Lagos Yakubu Gowon 7 – 18 January 36 12 92   Egypt
3 1978   Algiers Houari Boumediene 13 – 28 July 38 3,000 12 117   Tunisia
4 1987   Nairobi Daniel Arap Moi 1 – 12 August 41 14 164   Egypt
5 1991   Cairo Hosni Mubarak 20 September – 1 October 43 18 213   Egypt
6 1995   Harare Robert Mugabe 13 – 23 September 46 6,000 19 224   South Africa
7 1999   Johannesburg Thabo Mbeki 10 – 19 September 51 6,000 20 224   South Africa
8 2003   Abuja Olusegun Obasanjo 5 – 17 October 50 6,000 22 332   Nigeria
9 2007   Algiers Abdelaziz Bouteflika 11 – 23 July 52 4,793 27 374   Egypt
10 2011   Maputo Armando Guebuza 3 – 18 September 53 5,000 20 244   South Africa
11 2015   Brazzaville Denis Nguesso 4 – 19 September 54 15,000 22 323   Egypt
12 2019   Rabat Prince Moulay Rachid 19 – 31 August 54 4,386 26 343   Egypt
13 2023   Accra Nana Akufo-Addo 8 – 23 March 2024 52 1,490 1,154 2,644 23 335   Egypt
14 2027   Cairo President of Egypt (expected) 20 January – 7 February Future event
15 2031   Kinshasa President of DR Congo (expected) TBD Future event

Unofficial editions

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  1. 1925 Algiers, Algeria - Not held
  2. 1928 Alexandria, Egypt - Not held
  3. 1960 African Friendship Games - Madagascar - French-speaking countries of Africa
  4. 1961 African Friendship Games - Ivory Coast - French-speaking countries of Africa
  5. 1963 African Friendship Games - Senegal - Not held

African Para Games

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Edition Year Host city[11] Host nation Opened by Date Nations Athletes Sports Events Most gold medals
1 2023 Accra   Ghana Mustapha Ussif 3–12 September 18 400 3 7   Morocco
2 2027 Cairo   Egypt

Sports

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35 sports, 2 demonstration sports and 6 Para sports were presented in African Games history until 2019 African Games (also 1991 Diving and 1999 Netball were demonstration).

Number Event 1965 1973 1978 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 2019 2023
Main Sports
1 Athletics                          
2 Cycling                          
3 Gymnastics                          
4 Shooting                          
5 Swimming                          
Boat Sports
6 Canoeing                          
7 Rowing                          
8 Sailing                          
Combat Sports
9 Arm Wrestling                          
10 Boxing                          
11 Fencing                          
12 Judo                          
13 Karate                          
14 Kickboxing                          
15 Taekwondo                          
16 Wrestling                          
Team Sports
17 Baseball                          
18 Basketball                          
18 Beach volleyball                          
19 3x3 basketball                          
20 Cricket                          
21 Field Hockey                          
22 Football                          
23 Handball                          
24 Netball             Dem            
25 Rugby sevens                          
26 Softball                          
27 Volleyball                          
Racquet Sports
28 Badminton                          
29 Squash                          
30 Table Tennis                          
31 Tennis                          
Other Sports
32 Archery                          
33 Chess                          
34 Cue Sports (Snooker)                          
35 Diving         Dem                
36 Equestrian                          
37 Petanque                          
38 Triathlon                          
39 Weightlifting                          
Demonstration Sports
40 Esports                          
40 Mixed martial arts                          
40 Nzango                          
41 Pharaoh Boxing                          
40 Pickleball                          
40 Scrabble                          
40 Speed-ball                          
40 Sambo                          
42 Teqball                          
Para Sports ( from 2019 African Para Games )
43 Para Athletics                          
44 Goalball                          
45 Para Powerlifting                          
46 Para Swimming                          
47 Para Table Tennis                          
48 Wheelchair Basketball                          

All time Medal Table

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50 nations have won at least a single medal in the African Games, from 54 National Olympic Committees participating throughout the history of the Games. 43 NOCs have won at least a single gold medal.[12]

No. Nation Games Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Egypt (EGY) 12 753 551 523 1827
2   Nigeria (NGR) 12 517 461 470 1448
3   South Africa (RSA) 7 429 393 337 1159
4   Algeria (ALG) 12 342 353 447 1142
5   Tunisia (TUN) 12 282 270 316 868
6   Kenya (KEN) 12 142 152 185 479
7   Senegal (SEN) 12 69 78 172 319
8   Ghana (GHA) 12 55 83 111 249
9   Ethiopia (ETH) 12 54 62 80 196
10   Morocco (MAR) 4 48 56 74 178

Legacy

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After hearing about the Pan-African Games whilst on a business trip to Congo, Soviet Union-Armenian diplomat Ashot Melik-Shahnazaryan got the idea to create the Pan-Armenian Games.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ 9th All African Games Underway in Algeria, International Paralympic Committee (IPC)
  2. ^ 27/10/2011 The All Africa Games shall henceforth be organized by ANOCA and the AASC Archived November 10, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Confederation of African Athletics (CAA)
  3. ^ All Africa Games: Popoola hails SCSA dissolution, www.vanguardngr.com
  4. ^ "All-Africa Games now renamed "African Games"". The Guardian. NAN. September 13, 2015.
  5. ^ Graphic, Online (2024-03-11). "13th African Games open in Accra".
  6. ^ "13th African Games". www.accra2023ag.com. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
  7. ^ "Aims and Objectives". www.accra2023ag.com. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
  8. ^ Chanda, Davies M.M (April 15, 2018). "'We ain't ready to stage 2019 AAG'". Times of Zambia.
  9. ^ All Africa Games. FEI. Retrieved on 29 January 2018.
  10. ^ "Morocco To Host African Games". Around The Rings. 25 July 2018. Archived from the original on 26 July 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
  11. ^ a b ANOCA (archived)
  12. ^ "BEST sports DB - All Africa Games". bestsports.com.br. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  13. ^ Elliott, Raffi (2019-08-07). "Pan-Armenian Games Open in Show of Unity". The Armenian Weekly. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
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