East Africa: Packed Fan Zones Prove CHAN’s Biggest Winners and East Africa’s Hunger for Domestic Football

East Africa: Packed Fan Zones Prove CHAN’s Biggest Winners and East Africa’s Hunger for Domestic Football


The TotalEnergies African Nations Championship (CHAN) PAMOJA 2024 has been as much a story of fans as it has been of football. While stadiums across Nairobi, Dar es Salaam and Kampala have filled to capacity, fan zones set up across East Africa have emerged as a vibrant symbol of the region’s rekindled love for domestic and continental football.

The four-week competition has been a celebration of unity, passion and identity across East Africa.

From the roaring stadiums to the buzzing fan zones, the competition has sparked a wave of enthusiasm for domestic and continental football not seen in the region for decades.

Even as all three co-hosts — Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda — exited at the quarter-final stage, their fans continued to flock in their thousands to giant screens erected in cities, towns and coastal venues, turning public spaces into mini-stadiums that matched the electricity of the actual arenas.

Fan zones become cultural epicentres

From Nairobi’s bustling central business district to the breezy amphitheatre on the shores of Lake Victoria in Homabay, fan zones have emerged as cultural epicentres.

Thirteen such zones were set up across the Kenyan capital alone, drawing families, students and workers who gathered after hours to watch the drama unfold on giant screens.

“This is better than watching alone at home. The energy here is electric. You can feel like you are part of something big,” said one supporter at the popular Kenya National Archives fan zone.

Nicholas Musonye, chairman of the TotalEnergies CHAN 2024 Local Organising Committee, hailed the success of the initiative: “This was a brilliant idea to ensure that all Kenyans felt like a part of the action. It has been a huge success and all those who were not lucky to get tickets now feel the same passion as those in the stadium.”

The atmosphere was not confined to Kenya. In Dar es Salaam and Kampala, fan parks attracted massive crowds as supporters of the Taifa Stars and Cranes rallied behind their teams.

Music, dance and food stalls turned the gatherings into festivals, reinforcing CHAN 2024 as both a sporting and cultural event.

Hosts fall short but leave a legacy

On the pitch, the co-host nations made history by reaching the last eight together for the first time in any CAF competition. Kenya, debutants at the tournament, topped their group by defeating two-time champions Morocco and Zambia. Their fairytale run ended in heartbreak in the quarter-finals, when they lost to Madagascar on penalties after a 1-1 draw at a packed Moi International Sports Centre.

Tanzania also reached their first-ever CHAN quarter-final, buoyed by an unbeaten group stage. In Dar es Salaam, however, their dream was ended by Morocco, who won 1-0 thanks to Oussama Lamlaoui’s clinical finish. Despite the defeat, Tanzania’s defensive solidity and the raucous home support at Benjamin Mkapa Stadium gave the country new footballing pride.