Maghreb Athletics Championships Explained

The Maghreb Athletics Championships was an international athletics competition between athletes from countries of the Maghreb. The event was hosted eleven times during its existence from the late 1960s to 1990.

Organised by the Union des Fédérations d'Athlétisme du Maghreb Uni (UFAMU), the competition was first held in 1967. It was an annual competition until 1971, at which point it changed to a biennial format. The event schedule was disrupted after 1975, with the final four editions being held in 1981, 1983, 1986 and 1990. The competing nations were principally Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, although Libya was present for a handful of editions (1969, 1981, and 1983).[1]

After the discontinuation of the championships after 1990, the North African Athletics Championships was created in 2003, featuring all four participating nations from the Maghreb Championships. This ran for only two years.[2] The disruption of these events reflected growing political disputes between the countries within the Arab Maghreb Union, particularly over sovereignty of the Western Sahara.[3]

The UFAMU was founded in 1966 and held the inaugural Maghreb Cross Country Championships that same year. It was the first attempt to organise the sport of athletics at that regional level.[4] [5] Since the dissolution of the UFAMU, the four constituent countries continue to compete in the broader Arab Athletics Championships tournament.[6]

The Maghreb Athletics Championships was roughly contemporaneous with the Maghreb Champions Cup and Maghreb Cup Winners Cup, two annual football competitions between the top Algerian, Moroccan and Tunisian association football clubs. These were also short-lived running from 1970 to 1976.[7] Among other sporting events for the region, the Maghreb Student Cross Country Championships reached its 32nd edition in 2013,[8] and a Maghreb Judo Youth Championships had its eighth event in 2009.[9] The presidents of the Algerian and Tunisian National Olympic Committees proposed a Maghreb Olympics in 2013, representing increasing interest in sporting competition at the region level.[10]

Editions

Ed.YearCityCountryDatesNo. of
events
No. of
nations
No. of
athletes
1st1967RabatMorocco15–16 July333
2nd1968AlgiersAlgeria20–21 July333
3rd1969TripoliLibya24–25 July334
4th1970TunisTunisia~31 July333
5th1971CasablancaMorocco~27 February363
6th1973AgadirMorocco27–29 July363
7th1975TunisTunisia373
8th1981AlgiersAlgeria24–26 June393
9th1983CasablancaMorocco15–17 July394
10th1986TunisTunisia7–9 August393
11th1990AlgiersAlgeria~27 July403

Participating nations

Notes and References

  1. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/magc.htm Maghreb Championships
  2. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/nafc.htm North African Championships
  3. Aggad, Faten. "The Arab Maghreb Union: Will the Haemorrhage Lead to Demise?" African Insight. 6 April 2004.
  4. http://barmaja.free.fr/uso125/Maroc%20athletisme/Statistiques.html Statistiques
  5. https://sites.google.com/site/algeriathle/histoire Histoire
  6. http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/arc.htm Pan Arab Championships
  7. https://www.rsssf.org/tablesm/maghchamp.html Maghreb Champions Cup
  8. http://allafrica.com/stories/201302041909.html North Africa: Nation Wins Maghreb Student Cross-Country Championships
  9. http://www.tripolipost.com/articledetail.asp?c=3&i=3725 Eighth Maghreb Judo Championships Today, Tomorrow in Libya
  10. http://en.starafrica.com/sport/north-africans-aiming-to-create-maghreb-olympic-athletic-festival.html North Africans aiming to create Maghreb Olympic, athletic festival