
The 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) will be hosted by the East African Nation, Morocco.
This was announced by the Executive Committee board of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) on Wednesday, September 27, in Cairo, Egypt.
The committee also announced that the 2027 AFCON edition will be jointly hosted by Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania.
Morocco last hosted the AFCON in 1988 and was chosen in 2015 but asked for the tournament to be postponed because of the Ebola virus, although CAF later decided to strip the North African nation of the hosting rights.
CAF President Patrice Motsepe celebrated the news saying that the “future of African football has never been brighter.”
He also suggested that an African nation will win the World Cup in the near future.
While Morocco were hot favourites to host the 2025 edition of the premier African sport event, the shock last-minute withdrawal of Algeria from the 2027 race on Tuesday threw it wide open.
"This withdrawal can be explained by a new approach from the FAF related to its strategy for developing football in Algeria," said the national federation.
The Kenya-Uganda-Tanzania bid then got the nod from the CAF executive committee, taking the biennial tournament back to east Africa for the first time since Ethiopia staged the 1976 edition.
Morocco boast many world-class stadiums and have successfully hosted numerous African and world tournaments.
But Kenya and Tanzania have only one international-standard venue each and Uganda none, which forced their national team to play 2023 Cup of Nations qualifiers at neutral venues.
Taking the tournament to east Africa follows a statement this year by CAF president Patrice Motsepe that he did not want successive tournaments in the same region.
"We cannot assign the organisation of the CAN successively to the same region," he said at a press conference before the African Nations Championship (CHAN) in Algeria last January.
However, several months later, CAF secretary general Veron Mosengo-Omba said regional rotation may not always be possible.
"Today, only five or six countries out of the 54 CAF members are able to apply to host the African Cup. Consequently, it will not be possible to make this alternation," he said.
Ivory Coast will host the 2023 Cup of Nations, which has been put back to January and February 2024 due to the rainy season in west Africa.
"The timing is not ideal," Motsepe has said, referring to the tournament falling in the middle of the European club season.
"But we could not risk the tournament being disrupted by inclement weather," added the South African billionaire, who was appointed CAF president in 2021.