Arab athletes win 17 medals at Paris Olympics

Morocco’s bronze medallists pose for a photograph with their medals after the men’s final football match between France and Spain during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the Parc des Princes in Paris. (File/AFP)
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Updated 12 August 2024
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Arab athletes win 17 medals at Paris Olympics

LONDON: Arab athletes representing Bahrain, Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, Jordan and Qatar secured 17 medals at the Paris 2024 Olympics, falling one short of the record 18 won at the Tokyo Games in 2020.

The world’s largest sporting event ended on Sunday.

Bahrain led with four medals — two gold, one silver and one bronze.

Algeria followed with three medals — two gold and one bronze. Egypt and Tunisia each claimed three medals, with one gold, one silver and one bronze apiece.

Morocco earned two gold and one bronze, placing fourth, while Jordan came next with one silver. Qatar finished in sixth place with one bronze medal.

The medals were won in athletics, weightlifting, wrestling, artistic gymnastics, boxing, fencing, taekwondo, modern pentathlon and football.


Sweden’s Ekstrom takes Dakar stage seven win in Saudi Arabia

Updated 11 January 2026
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Sweden’s Ekstrom takes Dakar stage seven win in Saudi Arabia

  • Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah stays top in the car category

WADI AL-DAWASI: Mattias Ekstrom won stage seven of the Dakar Rally on Sunday as the field started the second week in Saudi Arabia with late drama for Toyota’s Henk Lategan while Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah stayed top in the car category.

South African Lategan had looked like taking the stage and overall lead but let both slip through his fingers after the day’s final checkpoint.

Instead, Sweden’s Ekstrom, winner of the prologue in a Ford Raptor, became ‌the first ‌driver in the top car ‌category to take more ‌than one stage this year.

Lategan had led Ekstrom after 417 of 459km from Riyadh to Wadi Al-Dawasir, but finished eight minutes and 35 seconds behind the winner after having to stop for 10 minutes at the 428km mark.

Ekstrom moved up to second overall, four minutes and 47 seconds behind Dacia Sandriders’ five-times Dakar ‌winner Al-Attiyah with Lategan third.

Spaniard Nani ‍Roma was fourth for ‍Ford after being reinstated by stewards late on ‍Saturday’s rest day as winner of stage five and having a one minute and 10 second penalty rescinded.

In the motorcycle category, Australian Daniel Sanders extended his lead over American rival Ricky Brabec to four minutes and 25 seconds with Argentine rider Luciano Benavides a further 15 seconds adrift.

Sanders had been a mere 45 seconds clear after Friday’s sixth stage but Honda’s Brabec finished the 459km stage 10th to the Australian’s fourth.

Argentine Benavides won the stage, his second triumph of the event, in a one-two for the Red Bull KTM factory team with Spaniard Edgar Canet, while Honda’s French challenger Adrien Van Beveren was third.

Monday’s 481km stage eight is the longest of ‌the race with riders and drivers navigating canyons and dunes around Wadi Ad Dawasir.