| Abbreviation | UFAK | 
|---|---|
| Legal status | Federation | 
| Headquarters | Headquarters of the UFAK is situated in the country/region the elected president resides. | 
| Location | |
| Region served  | African continental countries/regions | 
| Membership   | 50 affiliated countries | 
| Official language  | English is the official language. If any question in respect to the sport or technique of karate, it will be referred to the original Japanese text. | 
| President | Mohamed Mesabahi Tahar of Algeria | 
| Website | https://www.africakarate.com/ | 
The African Karate Federation (French: Union des Fédérations Africaines de Karaté (UFAK), English: Union of African Karate Federations) is the continental governing body of the sport karate in Africa.[1] [2] The UFAK is a non-governmental continental organisation. It has legal personality and financial autonomy. It is non-political, non-profit, non-denominational and cannot accept any racial or other discrimination and performs its activities on an amateur basis in compliance with the principles set forth in the Olympic Charter, duly recognised by the World Karate Federation (WKF), Association of African Sports Confederations (AASC), Association of National Olympic Committees of Africa (ANOCA).
History
The African Karate Federation was created on June 30, 1987, in Dakar, Senegal. This continental institution is the result of the different African sport unions of karate created previously: African Union of Karate (UAK: 1978), the Confederation of African Karate Amateur (CAKA: 1980), the Union of Karate-Do Federations of Central Africa (UFKAC: 1980), the Arab Union of Karate (UAK: 1980).
The UFAK organises the African Championships, the Junior and Senior UFAK Championships in every years,[3]  and participates in WKF World Karate Championships. The current president of the African Karate Federation is Mohamed Mesabahi Tahar from Algeria.[4][5]
Members
The African Karate Federation has 50 national federation members:[1]
 Algeria Algeria
 Angola Angola
 Benin Benin
 Botswana Botswana
 Burkina Faso Burkina Faso
 Burundi Burundi
 Cameroon Cameroon
 Cape Verde Cape Verde
 Central African Republic Central African Republic
 Chad Chad
 Comoros Comoros
 Congo Congo
 Democratic Republic of the Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo
 Djibouti Djibouti
 Egypt Egypt
 Equatorial Guinea Equatorial Guinea
 Eswatini Eswatini
 Ethiopia Ethiopia
 Gabon Gabon
 Gambia Gambia
 Ghana Ghana
 Guinea Guinea
 Ivory Coast Ivory Coast
 Kenya Kenya
 Liberia Liberia
 Libya Libya
 Madagascar Madagascar
 Mali Mali
 Mauritania Mauritania
 Mauritius Mauritius
 Morocco Morocco
 Mozambique Mozambique
 Namibia Namibia
 Niger Niger
 Nigeria Nigeria
 Rwanda Rwanda
 Sao Tome and Principe Sao Tome and Principe
 Senegal Senegal
 Seychelles Seychelles
 Sierra Leone Sierra Leone
 Somalia Somalia
 South Africa South Africa
 South Sudan South Sudan
 Sudan Sudan
 Togo Togo
 Tunisia Tunisia
 Uganda Uganda
 Tanzania Tanzania
 Zambia Zambia
 Zimbabwe Zimbabwe
References
- 1 2 "Structure - African Karate Federation". World Karate Federation.
- ↑ "Moroccan hosts and Egypt make strong start in kata at African Karate Championships". Inside The Games.
- ↑ "Nearly 400 athletes converge for African Karate Federation Senior and Junior Championships". Inside The Games.
- ↑ "WKF Vice-presidents Béchir Cherif and Mohamed Tahar Mesbahi present in IOC President's visit to Tunisia and Algeria". Inside The Games.
- ↑ "Threat to future of Karate South Africa lifted after dispute settled". Inside The Games.
