Arab Chess Championship
The Arab Chess Championship is an annual international chess competition organized by the Arab Chess Federation, with 18 member countries. Parallel Men's and Women's competitions have been held in various cities since 1983.
Winners
Year | City | Winner | Women's winner |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | Tunis | Saeed Abdul Razak (Iraq) | Maysae Tahtaoui (Syria) |
1984 | Dubai | Saeed-Ahmed Saeed (United Arab Emirates) | Nadia Mohammad Saleh (United Arab Emirates) |
1985 | Casablanca | Saeed Abdul Razak (Iraq) | Fermsik Waria Mohammed (Iraq) |
1986 | Tunis | Slim Bouaziz (Tunisia) | Maysae Tahtaoui (Syria) |
1987 | Manama | Bassem Afifi (Egypt) | Fermsik Waria Mohammed (Iraq) |
1988 | Kuwait | Hichem Hamdouchi (Morocco) | Sohir Basta (Egypt) |
1991 | Dubai | Slim Bouaziz (Tunisia) | Meriem Abbou (Algeria) |
1992 | Doha | Fouad El Taher (Egypt) | ?? |
1993 | Oman | - - - | Meriem Abbou (Algeria) |
1993 | Amman | Hichem Hamdouchi (Morocco) | - - - |
1994 | Jordan | Mohamad Al-Modiahki (Qatar) | Sohir Basta (Egypt) |
1995 | Beirut | Hichem Hamdouchi (Morocco) | ?? |
1996 | Sana'a | Essam Aly Ahmed (Egypt) | ?? |
1997 | Iraq | Mohamad Al-Modiahki (Qatar) | ?? |
1998 | Agadir | ?? | Eva Repkova Eid (Lebanon) |
1999 | Aden | Imad Hakki (Syria) | Knarik Mouradian (Lebanon) |
2000 | Beirut | Mohamad Al-Modiahki (Qatar) | Eva Repkova Eid (Lebanon) |
2001 | Tunis | Slim Belkhodja (Tunisia) | Eman Hassane Al Rufei (Iraq) |
2002 | Casablanca | Mohamad Al-Modiahki (Qatar) [1] | Eman Hassane Al Rufei (Iraq) |
2003 | Cairo | Essam El Gindy (Egypt) | Knarik Mouradian (Lebanon) |
2004 | Dubai | Hichem Hamdouchi (Morocco) | Knarik Mouradian (Lebanon) |
2005 | Dubai | Bassem Amin (Egypt) | Eman Hassane Al Rufei (Iraq) |
2006 | Dubai | Bassem Amin (Egypt) | Amina Mezioud (Algeria) |
2007 | Ta'izz | Basheer Al Qudaimi (Yemen) | Knarik Mouradian (Lebanon) |
2008 | Sharjah | Salem A.R. Saleh (UAE) | Mona Khaled (Egypt) |
2009 | Tunis | Essam El Gindy (Egypt) | Zhu Chen (Qatar) |
2013 | Abu Dhabi | Bassem Amin (Egypt)[2] | Zhu Chen (Qatar)[3] |
2014 | Amman | Salem A.R. Saleh (UAE) | Sabrina Latreche (Algeria), Shahenda Wafa (Egypt) |
2015[4] | Agadir | Mohamed Ezat (Egypt) | Mona Khaled (Egypt) |
2016 | Khartoum | Mahfoud Oussedik (Algeria) | Sabrina Latreche (Algeria) |
2017 | Sharjah | Mohamed Haddouche (Algeria) | Amina Mezioud (Algeria) |
2018 | Dubai | Salem A.R. Saleh (UAE) | Shahenda Wafa (Egypt) |
2019 | Mostaganem | Zaibi Amir (Tunisia) | Amina Mezioud (Algeria) |
Related pages
Notes
- Mohamad Al-Modhiahki and Hichem Hamdouchi obtained the same number of points ( 7 ) but Al-Modhiahki was declared champion to the advantage of the accumulation (33 points against 32.5)
- "Arab Chess Championship(Women)". FIDE. 2013-12-18. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
- "Arab Chess Championship(Women)". FIDE. 2013-12-18. Retrieved 2015-05-17.
- Part of the 1st Arab Chess Olympiad Championships: FIDE: The 1st Arab Chess Olympiad Championships 2015, Chessdom: First Arab Chess Olympiad Championships 2015 to be held in Agadir
References
- Winners of the 1984 edition
- Results 1999 from arabicnews.com
- Results 2001 from tunishebdo.com
- Homepage of the 2002 edition:
- Hichem Hamdouchi biography
- Lebanese chess history
- Biography of Mohammed Al-Modaihki
- Results of the 2007 edition , , ,
- Results from The Week in Chess: 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005
- Results from Chess-Results.com: 2006, 2014 Men, 2014 Women, 2015 Men, 2015 Women
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.