African Badminton Championships

The African Badminton Championships is a tournament organized by the Badminton Confederation of Africa (BCA) to crown the best badminton players in Africa. For the team event there is the African Badminton Cup of Nations. This is not to be confused with the All African Games, the multi sports event, held every four years where badminton is included since 2003.

This tournament started in 1979 where Kumasi, Ghana held the competition.[1] Kenya emerged as the men's team champions while Tanzania clinched the women's team title at the first edition.[2] The tournament was held biennially from 1980 to 2006. The 1986 edition of the championships, which was supposed to be held in Lusaka was postponed and later cancelled. Nigeria continued to host the tournament two years later.

Location of the African Badminton Championships

The table below gives an overview of all host cities and countries of the African Badminton Championships. The most recent games were held in Benoni in 2023. The number in parentheses following the city/country denotes how many times that city/country has hosted the championships.

Number Year Host City Events
1 1979 Kumasi, Ghana (1) 3
2 1980 Beira, Mozambique (1) 4
3 1982 Lagos, Nigeria (1) 4
4 1984 Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (1) 9
5 1988 Lagos, Nigeria (2) 9
6 1992 Port Louis, Mauritius (1) 6
7 1994 Rose Hill, Mauritius (1) 6
8 1996 Lagos, Nigeria (3) 5
9 1998 Rose Hill, Mauritius (2) 6
10 2000 Bauchi, Nigeria (1) 6
11 2002 Casablanca, Morocco (1) 6
12 2004 Rose Hill, Mauritius (3) 6
13 2006 Algiers, Algeria (1) 6
14 2007 Rose Hill, Mauritius (4) 6
15 2009 Nairobi, Kenya (1) 6
Number Year Host City Events
16 2010 Kampala, Uganda (1) 5
17 2011 Marrakesh, Morocco (1) 6
18 2012 Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (1) 5
19 2013 Rose Hill, Mauritius (5) 6
20 2014 Gaborone, Botswana (1) 6
21 2017 Benoni, South Africa (1) 6
22 2018 Algiers, Algeria (2) 5
23 2019 Port Harcourt, Nigeria (1) 6
24 2020 Cairo, Egypt (1) 5
25 2021 Kampala, Uganda (2) 6
26 2022 Kampala, Uganda (3) 5
27 2023 Benoni, South Africa (2) 6
28 2024 Cairo, Egypt (2) 5
29 2025 Douala, Cameroon (1) 6

All-time medal table

As of the 2025 edition
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 South Africa553749141
2 Nigeria4448.565157.5
3 Algeria22914.545.5
4 Mauritius1721.55896.5
5 Egypt9163560
6 Seychelles851629
7 Mozambique607.513.5
8 Tanzania3131329
9 Kenya2316
10 Zambia181322
11 Uganda131822
12 Zimbabwe1001
13 Ghana0268
14 Réunion0134
15 Namibia005.55.5
16 Morocco001.51.5
17 Botswana0011
 Madagascar0011
Totals (18 entries)169167308644

In November 2019, Badminton World Federation released a statement regarding doping test failure of Kate Foo Kune in this championships and decided to disqualify her result in 2019 African Badminton Championships.

Previous winners

Year Men's singles Women's singles Men's doubles Women's doubles Mixed doubles
1979 Not held
1980
1982
1984 Simon Gondwe Indira Bhikha Firoz Din
Mukesh Shah
Indira Bhikha
Eline Coelho
Sozinho Guerra
Indira Bhikha
1988 Tamuno Gibson Oby Edoga Tamuno Gibson
Fatai Tokosi
Oby Edoga
Dayo Oyewusi
Tamuno Gibson
Oby Edoga
1992 Eddy Clarisse Lina Fourie Anton Kriel
Nico Meerholz
Augusta Phillips
Tracey Thompson
Anton Kriel
Lina Fourie
1994 Lina Fourie Nico Meerholz
Alan Phillips
Lina Fourie
Tracey Thompson
Alan Phillips
Augusta Phillips
1996 Agarawu Tunde Obiageli Olorunsola Danjuma Fatauchi
Agarawu Tunde
Obiageli Olorunsola
Olamide Toyin Adebayo
Kayode Akinsanya
Obiageli Olorunsola
1998 Eddy Clarisse Lina Fourie Johan Kleingeld
Anton Kriel
Lina Fourie
Monique Ric-Hansen
Anton Kriel
Michelle Edwards
2000 Denis Constantin Amrita Sawaram Denis Constantin
Eddy Clarisse
Grace Daniel
Miriam Sude
Abimbola Odejoke
Bridget Ibenero
2002 Abimbola Odejoke Juliette Ah-Wan Denis Constantin
Stéphane Beeharry
Michelle Edwards
Chantal Botts
Chris Dedman
Antoinette Uys
2004 Dotun Akinsaya Michelle Edwards Johan Kleingeld
Chris Dednam
Greg Okuonghae
Grace Daniel
2006 Nabil Lasmari Juliette Ah-Wan Roelof Dednam
Chris Dednam
Michelle Edwards
Stacey Doubell
Georgie Cupidon
Juliette Ah-Wan
2007 Grace Daniel Michelle Edwards
Chantal Botts
2008 Cancelled
2009 Ola Fagbemi Juliette Ah-Wan Jinkan Ifraimu
Ola Fagbemi
Grace Daniel
Mary Gideon
Ola Fagbemi
Grace Daniel
2010 Jinkan Ifraimu Hadia Hosny Michelle Edwards
Annari Viljoen
Dorian Lance James
Michelle Edwards
2011 Stacey Doubell Dorian Lance James
Willem Viljoen
Willem Viljoen
Annari Viljoen
2012 Jacob Maliekal Grace Gabriel Dorian Lance James
Michelle Edwards
2013 Andries Malan
Willem Viljoen
Juliette Ah-Wan
Allisen Camille
Willem Viljoen
Michelle Butler-Emmett
2014 Kate Foo Kune Kate Foo Kune
Yeldy Louison
2017 Adel Hamek Kate Foo Kune Koceila Mammeri
Youcef Sabri Medel
Michelle Butler-Emmett
Jennifer Fry
Andries Malan
Jennifer Fry
2018 Julien Paul Mohamed Abderrahime Belarbi
Adel Hamek
Juliette Ah-Wan
Allisen Camille
Koceila Mammeri
Linda Mazri
2019 Anuoluwapo Juwon Opeyori Dorcas Ajoke Adesokan Koceila Mammeri
Youcef Sabri Medel
Dorcas Ajoke Adesokan
Deborah Ukeh
2020 Julien Paul Kate Foo Kune Doha Hany
Hadia Hosny
Adham Hatem Elgamal
Doha Hany
2021 Adham Hatem Elgamal Johanita Scholtz Amy Ackerman
Johanita Scholtz
Koceila Mammeri
Tanina Mammeri
2022 Anuoluwapo Juwon Opeyori Nour Ahmed Youssri Lorna Bodha
Kobita Dookhee
2023 Fadilah Mohamed Rafi Jarred Elliott
Robert Summers
Amy Ackerman
Deidre Laurens
2024 Kate Ludik Koceila Mammeri
Youcef Sabri Medel
2025 Nour Ahmed Youssri Amy Ackerman
Johanita Scholtz

Team event

Men's and women's team (1979–1989)

Men's team

Ed. Year Hosts Final Third place playoff or losing semi-finalists Number of teams
Champions Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1 1979 Ghana  Kenya round-robin  Tanzania  Ghana round-robin 3
2 1980 Mozambique  Nigeria round-robin  Kenya  Tanzania round-robin  Mozambique 5
3 1982 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Zambia  Ghana round-robin  Mozambique 4
4 1984 Tanzania  Tanzania round-robin  Zambia  Mozambique round-robin 3
5 1988 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Tanzania  Mauritius round-robin 3

Women's team

Ed. Year Hosts Final Third place playoff or losing semi-finalists Number of teams
Champions Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1 1979 Ghana  Tanzania round-robin  Kenya  Ghana round-robin 3
2 1980 Mozambique  Zimbabwe round-robin  Nigeria  Tanzania round-robin  Kenya 5
3 1982 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Ghana  Mozambique round-robin  Zambia 4
4 1984 Tanzania  Mozambique round-robin  Tanzania  Zambia round-robin 3
5 1988 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Tanzania  Mauritius round-robin 3

Mixed team

Ed. Year Hosts Final Third place playoff or losing semi-finalists Number of teams
Champions Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1 1980 Mozambique  Nigeria round-robin  Kenya  Tanzania round-robin  Mozambique 5
2 1982 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Ghana  Mozambique round-robin 3
3 1984 Tanzania  Mozambique round-robin  Tanzania  Zambia round-robin 3
4 1988 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Tanzania  Mauritius round-robin 3
5 1992 Mauritius  South Africa w/o  Nigeria  Mauritius and  Tanzania 8
6 1994 South Africa  South Africa 3–2  Mauritius  Namibia and  Nigeria 6
7 1998 Mauritius  South Africa 3–2  Mauritius  Madagascar 3–2  Kenya 6
8 2000 Nigeria  Mauritius 3–2  Nigeria  South Africa 3–0  Seychelles 6
9 2002 Morocco  South Africa 3–0  Nigeria  Mauritius 3–0  Seychelles 8
10 2004 Mauritius  South Africa 3–1  Nigeria  Mauritius and  Seychelles 12
11 2006 Algeria  South Africa 3–0  Algeria  Mauritius and  Seychelles 13
12 2007 Mauritius  Seychelles 3–2  South Africa  Mauritius and  Zambia 8
13 2009 Kenya  South Africa 3–1  Seychelles  Egypt and  Mauritius 9
14 2011 Morocco  South Africa 3–2  Nigeria  Egypt and  Mauritius 9
15 2013 Mauritius  South Africa 3–0  Nigeria  Mauritius and  Seychelles 10
16 2014 Botswana  South Africa 3–1  Nigeria  Mauritius and  Seychelles 10
17 2017 South Africa  Egypt 3–1  South Africa  Nigeria and  Zambia 9
18 2019 Nigeria  Nigeria 3–2  Mauritius  Egypt and  Ghana 13
19 2021 Uganda  Egypt 3–1  Algeria  South Africa and  Uganda 8
20 2023 South Africa  Egypt 3–2  Mauritius  Algeria and  South Africa 13
21 2025 Cameroon  Algeria 3–1  Mauritius  Egypt and  South Africa 11

Junior mixed team (U19) (1979–1989)

Ed. Year Hosts Final Third place playoff or losing semi-finalists Number of teams
Champions Score Runners-up Third place Score Fourth place
1 1979 Ghana  Kenya round-robin  Tanzania  Ghana round-robin 3
2 1980 Mozambique  Nigeria round-robin  Zambia  Mozambique round-robin  Tanzania 4
3 1982 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Zambia  Mozambique round-robin  Ghana 4
4 1984 Tanzania  Mozambique round-robin  Tanzania  Zambia round-robin 3
5 1988 Nigeria  Nigeria round-robin  Tanzania  Mauritius round-robin 3

See also

References

  1. ^ L.C. Noi-Lartey (18 April 1979). "Sports Boss Intervenes". Daily Graphic: Issue 8,861. p. 15. Retrieved 29 April 2019. ...when the first All African Badminton Championships scheduled to take place at the Kumasi Technical Institute should start.
  2. ^ Addo-Twum, J. K. (24 April 1979). "Award for the Champs". Daily Graphic: Issue 8,866. p. 15. Retrieved 29 April 2019.