TheAssociation of National Olympic Committees of Africa(acronym:ANOCA;French:Association des Comités Nationaux Olympiques d'Afrique,ACNOA,Arabic:رابطة اللجان الأولمبية الوطنية في إفريقيا) is aninternational organizationthat unites the 54National Olympic Committees(NOCs) ofAfrica.It is currently headquartered inAbuja,Nigeria.It serves as the successor toStanding Committee of African SportsorComité permanent du sport africainfounded in 1965 inBrazzaville,Republic of Congo.
Formation | 28 June 1981 |
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Type | Sports federation |
Headquarters | Abuja,Nigeria |
Membership | 54 National Olympic Committees |
Official language | English,French |
President | Mustapha Berraf |
Website | ANOCA ACNOA |
It often assembles with other continental NOCs in the form of theAssociation of National Olympic Committees(ANOC).
History
editThe Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA) was founded on June 28, 1981, inLome, Togo.In July 1965, ANOCA's predecessor, theStanding Committee of African Sports(SCAS) was founded in Brazzaville as Comité Permanent du Sport Africain (CPSA). Consequently, that title for the sports continental body changed to theSupreme Council for Sports in Africa(SCSA) on 14 December 1966 inBamako,Mali.
On 4 March 2023, ANOCA announced their support for theInternational Olympic Committee's decision to reinstate Russian and Belarusian athletes as neutrals amidst theRussian Invasion of Ukraine,as well as the countries' participation in the Olympics.[1]
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Former logo
Member countries
editIn the following table, the year in which the NOC was recognized by theInternational Olympic Committee(IOC) is also given if it is different from the year in which the NOC was created.
ANOCA Regional Zones
editANOCA Zone 1 – North Zone
editANOCA Zone 2 – West Zone A
editANOCA Zone 3 – West Zone B
editANOCA Zone 4 – Central Zone
editANOCA Zone 5 – Central-East Zone
editANOCA Zone 6 – Southern Zone A
editANOCA Zone 7 – Southern Zone B
editANOCA Presidents
editS. No. | Name | Country | Tenure |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Anani Matthia | Togo | 1981-1989 |
2. | Jean-Claude Ganga | Congo | 1989-1999 |
3. | Francis Nyangweso | Uganda | 1999-2001 |
4. | Alpha Ibrahim Diallo | Guinea | 2001-2005 |
5. | Lassana Palenfo | Ivory Coast | 2005-2018 |
6. | Mustapha Berraf | Algeria | 2018–present |
ANOCA's programme
edit- Encouraging mediation and conciliation between NOCs and governments
- Building the foundations of an ambitious sports policy
- Providing young athletes with the conditions for success
- Promoting sports initiatives
- Promoting Olympic ideals and values in Africa
- Taking part in the fight against doping, corruption, violence and pandemics
- Working to bring peoples together through sport to build a peaceful Africa
Events
edit- African Games
- African Youth Games– first held in Rabat, Morocco in 2010 (events also in Casablanca).[4]
- African Beach Games
- ANOCA U-23 Championship/Olympic Qualifying Tournament
- ANOCA Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Ассоциация национальных олимпийских комитетов Африки выступила за допуск российских спортсменов к Олимпиаде-2024 в нейтральном статусе
- ^"Ghana - National Olympic Committee (NOC)".
- ^"Nigeria - National Olympic Committee (NOC)".
- ^"Jeux africains de la jeunesse: 33 pays confirment leur participation au Maroc (" African Youth Games: 33 countries confirm their participation in Morocco ")".lematin.ma(in French). 7 July 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 29 September 2011.