2008 Dakar Rally

The 2008 Dakar Rally would have been the 30th running of the annual off-road race. The rally was to start in Lisbon, Portugal on 5 January 2008, running through Europe and Africa until the finish in Dakar, Senegal on 20 January. The event was cancelled one day before the intended start date, due to concerns over a possible terrorist attack aimed at the competitors.[1]

2008 Dakar Rally
Previous: 2007 Next: 2009
See Central Europe Rally

Cancellation

The rally was cancelled on 4 January 2008, due to safety concerns in Mauritania, following the killing of four French tourists there on Christmas Eve, December 2007. France-based Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO), in charge of the 6,000 km (3,730 mi) rally, said in a statement they had been advised by the French government to cancel the race. They said direct threats had also been made against the event by "terrorist organizations".[1] Before the start of the race, rally director Étienne Lavigne had approved the Mauritanian legs only after two stages planned for Mali were scrapped. An Al-Qaeda affiliate organization was blamed for the cancellation.[1][2][3]

On 4 February 2008, the ASO organised the Central Europe Rally, with a Hungary to Romania route, as the rescheduled and relocated race, which technically is part of the lineage of the Dakar Rally, as the ASO held all entries over to the event, which lasted only one year. A new race, keeping the Dakar Rally name, was organised in South America in 2009 and was held until 2019, where in 2020 the race moved to Saudi Arabia.

Entrants

As of December 2007 there were 245 motorbikes, 20 quads, 205 cars, and 100 trucks. A total of 570 teams from various countries (50) were entered, up from 510 in 2007.[4]

All entries were deferred to the Central Europe Rally. 110 motorbikes, 19 quads, 91 cars, and 40 trucks took the start of the Central Europe Rally.

Route

The race would have begun in Lisbon, Portugal, and passed through Spain, Morocco, Western Sahara, Mauritania, and Senegal. The total race distance would have been 9,273 km (5,762 mi), of which 5,732 km (3,562 mi) was timed special stage.[5] There would have been a rest day in Nouakchott on 13 January.[6]

Planned Stages

StageDateFromToConnectionSpecialConnectionTotal
kmmikmmikmmikmmi
15 January Lisbon Portimão104 65120 75262 163486 302
26 January Portimão Málaga15 960 37460 286535 332
37 January Nador Er Rachidia182 113372 23116 10717 446
48 January Er Rachidia Ouarzazate29 18356 221199 124584 363
59 January Ouarzazate Guelmim188 117498 309148 92834 518
610 January Guelmim Smara66 41454 282105 65625 388
711 January Smara† Atar198 123619 38512 7829 515
812 January Atar Nouakchott44 27450 28037 23531 330
913 JanuaryRest day in Nouakchott
1014 January Nouakchott Nouadhibou37 23525 32686 53648 403
1115 January Nouadhibou Atar111 69552 34322 14685 426
1216 January Atar Tidjikja35 22524 326133 83692 430
1317 January Tidjikja Kiffa131 81398 2472 1531 330
1418 January Kiffa Kiffa25 16484 3016 4515 320
1519 January Kiffa Saint-Louis326 203301 187130 81757 470
1620 January Saint-Louis Dakar239 14923 1442 26304 189
kmmikmmikmmikmmi

†Smara is located in the Moroccan-administered portion of the Western Sahara

gollark: This is of course unrelated to the potatOS backdoor key, a34af27320a63506c888c3ad57d6708924765a999910decdd9f4b648d3e1fb4a8b57e31c82dc642beda33bfa10323e0274fac1e70cb1ea20131b8f9d93716455.
gollark: No, that is the public key.
gollark: I do it basically so potatOS can run the Polychoron coroutine manager instead of `parallel`.
gollark: It's called a top level coroutine override.
gollark: Small ones.

References

  1. Keaton, Jamie (2008-01-05). "Terror threat cancels famed Dakar Rally". Toronto Star. Archived from the original on 8 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  2. "News Africa – Reuters.com". Reuters. Archived from the original on 8 January 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2008.
  3. Future of Dakar Rally now in doubt Archived December 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  4. "List of entrants". Dakar organizers. Archived from the original on 16 January 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  5. "The Route". Dakar Rally. Amaury Sport Organisation. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
  6. "Map showing 2008 planned route" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.