Eastern Africa Half Marathon Championship 2022

Eastern Africa Half Marathon Championship 2022 was conducted in the port city of Massawa in connection with the 32nd anniversary of Operation Fenkil.

In the men’s category that covered 21 km, athletes from Eritrea, Ethiopia, Sudan, South Sudan, and Tanzania took part while in the females’ category, athletes from various national teams participated.

From the 50 men category competitors, Athlete Samson Amare from the Southern Region stood first and received 3 thousand Dollars and Gold Medal, Ethiopian Athlete Belay Tilahun stood second and received 2 thousand Dollars and Silver Medal and Olympian Athlete Aron Kifle from the Southern Region stood third and received 1 thousand 500 Dollars and Bronze Medal.

From the females’ category, Olympian Athlete Nazareth Woldu stood first and received 45 thousand Nakfa and Gold Medal. Olympian Athlete Dolshi Tesfu second and received 30 thousand Nakfa and Silver Medal, and Athlete Natsinet Amanuel stood third and received 22 thousand 500 Nakfa and Bronze Medal.

The winning athletes received their awards from Mr. Tewolde Kelati, Minister of Marine Resources, Ambassador Zemede Tekle, Commissioner of Culture and Sports, and Ms. Asmeret Abraha, Governor of the Northern Red Sea Region.

The Eastern Africa Half Marathon Championship started in 2004 and received regional and international recognition in 2011.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Football Matches at Cameroon Stadium Suspended After Deadly Crush

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has suspended matches of the Africa Football Cup of Nations (AFCON) tournament at Yaounde’s Olembe Stadium after eight people were killed and scores injured in a stampede.

Confederation of African Football (CAF) President Patrice Motsepe announced the suspension of matches at the stadium at a press conference Tuesday in Cameroon’s capital.

Before the deadly stampede at the Olembe Sadium Monday night, Motsepe said many irregularities were observed with the organization of the match between Cameroon and Comoros.

He noted the stadium received thousands more fans than the CAF had authorized.

“There was an abnormal number of people including those who did not have tickets. Thousands of people more than what was expected did arrive in a manner that is not properly coordinated and governed. I went to see where the people lost their lives, and you see it is a gate and that gate was supposed to be opened, because if it was open, they [fans] would have walked through. And it was closed for inexplicable reasons. If that gate was opened as it was supposed to, we would not have had these loss of lives,” said Motsepe.

The CAF had authorized the stadium to receive a maximum of 40,000 fans in the 60,000 seat stadium for matches of Africa’s top soccer tournament, the Africa Football Cup of Nations (AFCON).

But Cameroonian police said more than 57,000 were at the stadium Monday night after fans pushed their way past security, leading to the deadly crush.

Despite the tragedy, Motsepe said the AFCON championship would continue.

All matches scheduled for the Olembe Stadium would instead be played at Yaounde’s Ahmadou Ahidjo Stadium.

Meanwhile, the CAF and Cameroonian authorities have launched investigations into what caused the deadly stampede.

Source: Voice of America

Cameroon Hosts Influx of Football Fans from Neighboring Gabon, Equatorial Guinea

YAOUNDÉ, CAMEROON — Cameroon says that within four days, at least 1,500 football supporters have entered the country from neighboring Equatorial Guinea and Gabon to support their teams that have advanced to Round 16 in the Africa Football Cup of Nations, or AFCON. Gabon battles Burkina Faso Sunday, while Equatorial Guinea plays against Mali Wednesday. Tournament organizers require all fans to have COVID-19 tests before entering stadiums.]

Cameroon’s immigration police said Saturday that buses carrying at least 900 football fans from Gabon and Equatorial Guinea have entered the central African state within 48 hours. Gabon and Equatorial Guinea are Cameroon’s southern neighbors.

The immigration police said about 600 other football fans from Gabon and Equatorial Guinea arrived in Cameroon by sea and by air this week.

Cameroon says the influx came after Gabon and Equatorial Guinea qualified for the knockout stage of the Africa Football Cup of Nations, or AFCON, in Cameroon. Gabon played a 2-2 draw Tuesday against Morocco in Yaoundé, and both teams advanced.


Equatorial Guinea sealed their place after a 1-0 win against Sierra Leone in a group match played at Limbes Omnisport Stadium in Cameroon’s English-speaking South West region Thursday.

Thirty-year-old Prosper Ebang is among the 1,500 supporters from Gabon and Equatorial Guinea Cameroon police say have entered Cameroon. Ebang says he wants to be part of a continental soccer event in which his country’s national football team, the Panthers of Gabon, are doing well.

Ebang says no citizen who loves Gabon can be indifferent when the Panthers are making Gabon proud with the excellent football exhibited in Cameroon during AFCON. He says he is certain that Gabon will reach the AFCON final if Cameroon continues providing a conducive environment for the games.

Felix Nguele Nguele is the governor of Cameroon’s South region that borders Gabon and Equatorial Guinea. He says Gabon and Equatorial Guinea officials have informed him that hundreds of other supporters are still on their way to Cameroon.

Ngueles says he has asked police and military in Cameroon’s southern border to ensure the safety of football fans and supporters from Gabon and Equatorial Guinea. He says he knows that people with evil intentions may want to disturb the visiting supporters since tensions mounted between Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea in November.

On November 30, 2021, Cameroon said Equatorial Guinea was deporting thousands of Cameroonians who were living in the neighboring state illegally, citing national security concerns. Authorities in the capital, Malabo, said the Cameroonians fled conflict in western Cameroon, where government troops have been fighting anglophone separatists.

Videos from Cameroonians deported from Equatorial Guinea flooded social media platforms including Facebook and WhatsApp. In the video, Cameroonians claiming to have been forcibly sent out of Equatorial Guinea promised to chase football fans from the neighboring country visiting Cameroon for AFCON from January 9 to February 6.

Kisito Esua is president of the nongovernmental organization South West Youth League, headquartered in Limbe, an English-speaking southwestern town. Esua says the league is teaching youths to be hospitable to fans coming to Cameroon to support their football teams. He spoke via a messaging app from Limbe.

“The influx of fans and supporters from Gabon and Equatorial Guinea is so massive,” said Esua. “The fans have been coming in in their numbers by air, land and sea and we think that the turnout tomorrow will be something spectacular. So, we have made sure that the environment is so friendly, convivial and conducive.”

Cameroon’s Public Health ministry says the supporters who have arrived within the past 48 hours must respect COVID-19 restriction guidelines imposed by the Confederation of African Football. CAF says people must provide negative COVID-19 test results that are not more than 24 hours old as well as proof they have been vaccinated against COVID-19 to gain access to stadiums for AFCON matches.

The embassies of Gabon and Equatorial Guinea in Yaoundé say all the visiting fans have agreed to respect Cameroonian laws and COVID-19 restrictions instituted by Cameroon and CAF during their stay.

 

 

Source: Voice of America

Cameroon’s Nigerian Refugees, Displaced Cheer Super Eagles at AFCON

YAOUNDE — Nigerian football fans are cheering their team, the Super Eagles, at home and in Cameroon, which is hosting the Africa Football Cup of Nations tournament. That includes hundreds of Nigerian refugees and people displaced by Boko Haram terrorism along the border with Cameroon.

Cameroon’s state CRTV shows Nigerian football fans singing the Nigerian national anthem and cheering for its national football team, the Super Eagles, in northern Garoua city.

Garoua is hosting the Africa Football Cup of Nations, or the AFCON, group matches for teams from Egypt, Guinea-Bissau, Nigeria, and Sudan.

The Confederation of African Football says thousands of Nigerian supporters have come to Garoua, but hundreds of them didn’t have to travel far.

Nigerian Mohamed Tchiroma Fayiza, 19, has lived in Cameroon’s Minawao refugee camp, on the border with Nigeria, for six years. She fled her village in Nigeria’s northeast Borno state after Boko Haram militants attacked their school.

Speaking on CRTV, she says authorities helped her and more than 20 other female team Nigeria supporters to watch the AFCON matches in Garoua.

“I have come to support Nigeria because it [Nigeria] is my country,” she said. “Anyway, I go, I can never forget my country. I can never forget Nigeria. I want Nigeria people{players} to play very well and win this match [tournament.].”

The U.N.’s refugee agency (UNHCR) says there are 68,000 Nigerian refugees in Cameroon’s Minawao camp.

They elected Isaac Luka, who has lived in the camp since 2014, as their leader.

Luka also fled Borno state in June 2014 after Boko Haram terrorists killed more than 20 people in his village, including his family.

Speaking from Garoua, he says cheering on Nigeria’s football team shows how much the refugees love their country and hope for peace so they can one day return home.

“I take [consider] football as a way [means] of resolving problems,” he said. “If you look at the match [between] Sudan and Nigeria, you know Nigeria is facing security challenges. Sudan is facing security challenges. If the two [Sudan and Nigerian] refugees can come together and watch their players on the field, it is something that can bring unity among the refugees.”

Luka says the refugees cheered the Nigerian team to a 1-0 victory over Egypt last week and a 3-1 victory over Sudan on Saturday.

Nigeria plays their third group match against Guinea-Bissau Wednesday.

The UNHCR says they helped at least a hundred Nigerian refugees in Cameroon get to stadiums to watch AFCON matches.

UNHCR in Cameroon spokesman Xavier Bourgois says they believe strongly in the power of sports.

“People [refugees] and especially young people [refugees] also have the right to enjoy like everybody else and so when we have these kinds of opportunities to bring the refugees into the stadium, of course we do it with a lot of pleasure. Most of the refugees come from very difficult places, they suffered a lot. They have a difficult history and so that was an opportunity for us to tell them to rebuild themselves,” he said.

Cameroonian authorities say besides the refugees, several hundred Nigerians displaced by Boko Haram terrorists are also in Garoua to support the Nigerian football team.

Source: Voice of America

2022 A Hopeful Season for Eritrean Athletics

Editor’s Note, “The article about the accomplishments of the Eritrean athletes in 2021 was published on the sports page of ‘Hadas Ertra’ by Tesfaldet Mebrahtu; the following are excerpts of the article.”

Last year, Eritrean athletes registered incredible results, especially in the marathon category. Despite the problems that the outbreak of the global pandemic posed, they participated in a number of competitions and garnered the attention of the athletics community for their outstanding results.

Athlete Yonas Kifle is one of the best Marathon athletes in Eritrea. The Olympian athlete finished at 2:07:54 in 2007 in Amsterdam and he had held on to the Eritrean national Marathon record until 2011. This record was broken when Athlete Samuel Tsegay finished the race which was organized again in Amsterdam at 2:07:28, but this national record was short-lived as yet another Eritrean Olympian athlete Yaried Asmerom managed to finish another marathon organized that same week at a very narrow clocking of 2:07:27. Athlete Yaried Asmerom surpassed the record which was set by athlete Samuel Tsegay by one second.

This national record has remained unbroken for years until 2019. From 2019 onwards, however, this record has been advanced three times by three athletes. That year, athlete Ogbay Tsegay broke the record which was held by athlete Yaried Asmerom for eight years when he clocked 2:06:54 in an event held in Sevilla, Spain. This was again improved by ten seconds by athlete Ouqbe Kibrom in an event held in Valencia in that same year. The Year 2021 was not an easy year for Eritrean athletes for different reasons s including the pandemic and injuries.

Eritrean athletes commenced the year 2021 with the competitions that were held in Italy in April. Five athletes took part in this competition. All of these five athletes recorded their own personal best time and three of them finished with the top ten in the competition. In this race, athlete Yohannes Habtegergish improved his personal best from 2:08 to 2:06, finishing in fourth place at the race. Athlete Samuel Tsegay improved his personal best time from 2:07:27 to 2:06:54. Athlete Nguse Amlesom and Athlete Henok Tesfai finished at 2:10:57 and 2:10:08 respectively.

In April 2021, in an event that held in Hamburg, Germany, led by the Kenyan world Marathon record holder Eliud Kipchoge, Eritrean athlete Goitom Kifle finished in third place. One month after this event, Eritrean athletes took part in an event that was held in Milano, Italy, to set a new chapter in Eritrean athletics history. At this event, athlete Nazriet Weldu and athlete Kokob Tesfagaber participated in the women’s category and athlete Oqbay Tsegay took part in the Men’s category.

This race was an important chapter in the Eritrean marathon history. Athlete Nazriet Weldu improved the Eritrean women’s national record for the third time when she participated in the races that were held in Beirut and Gold Coast Marathon in Australia. Athlete Kokob Tesfagaber improved her personal best time by over three minutes and was able to secure the second position as the fastest marathon athlete in Eritrea in the women’s category. Based on the time they have recorded during the previously mentioned events, they were able to participate in the 2020 Olympic Tokyo and World Athletics Championship.

Eritrea was given a quota of three athletes to participate in the 2020 Olympic Games. Therefore, the Eritrean Athletics Federation was compelled to choose only three from the eleven athletes who recorded the needed qualifying time to participate at the 2020Tokyo Olympics. Although, all of the athletes were in good condition at that time, based on the selection process by the Federation, athlete Ouqbe Kibrom, Goitom Kifle, Yohannes Habtegergish, and Ouqbay Tsegay (as a substitute) were selected to represent Eritrea. Athlete Ouqbay Tsegay finished 14th in this event. And Eritrea was represented by two female athletes for the first time that year.

A number of Eritrean athletes have participated in different races in the year 2021. In Oct 2021, Athlete Mogos Shumay finished fifth in Holland in a race that was named Eindhoven Marathon. According to the Eritrean Athletics Federation, he was able to improve his personal best time by over five minutes. The 2021 athletics season was ended with incredible results in the Amsterdam Marathon which is considered as one of the major marathon races in that same month.

In this race, the Olympian athlete Hizqiel Tewelde, who has been away from any competition for three years due to injuries, clocked 2:04:22 to set a new record time in the Marathon history of Eritrea. At the same event, athlete Afewerki Berhane finished at 2:05:22 to become the second-fastest finish after Hisqiel.

Eritrean Marathon athletes have also made an appearance at the Barcelona cross-country Championship Race which was held 0n Dec 7, 2021. In this race athlete, Filmon Ande finished fourth with 2:06:38 time. Also at the Sebastian Marathon, athlete Kibrom Gebregziabhier finished second. In another event, the Olympian athlete Goitom Kifle achieved the third-fastest time when he finished at 2:05:24.

The 2021 athletics season for Eritreans was ended with the event athlete Nguse Amlesom raced in Valencia, Spain. He finished second in this race and improved his personal best time by over three minutes.

According to the Eritrean Athletics Federation, the number of athletes who have managed to clock below 2 hours and 10 minutes in the marathon races have increased from the previous years significantly, while the athletes believe that the 2021 results are good signs for even better success in the marathon fixtures for 2022.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Organizers Say Africa Cup of Nations Will Take Place, But Workers Say Main Stadium Not Ready

The Africa Football Cup of Nations tournament is scheduled to begin January 9 at Olembe Stadium in Cameroon’s capital, Yaounde.

On Monday, Confederation of African Football President Patrice Motsepe visited the 60,000-seat stadium, which is still under construction less than three weeks before the opening match.

Motsepe says construction workers are improving on the stadium and he is optimistic Cameroon will be ready for the opener.

“There is a huge commitment and a focus to make sure that some of those issues that are being put in place in the next few days, good progress will be made,” he said. “My message is to Africa and to the world that the people of Cameroon are ready to show the world the best of African Football and also the best of African hospitality. It is going to be a successful AFCON, so come January 9, there must be a kickoff.”

Motsepe’s visit came amid persistent local media reports that Olembe Stadium would not be ready.

Bulldozers dug and arranged roads at the stadium entrance on Tuesday, a day after Motsepe’s visit. Several dozen young people transported and planted trees, flowers and grass that officials say will beautify the facility.

Among the workers is 35-year-old building construction engineer Luc Eloundou. Eloundou says he is not sure the entire parking lot of the stadium will be complete within a week as requested by the government of Cameroon.

“Last month we were about 1,000 people here, but now I am seeing up to 300. Workers are not coming. Why? They work without money. Some borrow money to come and work but they don’t have their salaries. The work is much, even in more than a year we will not be able to finish the work,” he said.

Jean Fradique, technical director of the stadium, says 2,000 workers have been recruited to make sure that before a joint CAF/FIFA control mission visits, the stadium is ready for the opening match.

Fradique says workers are arranging parking spaces for cars that will bring football fans, players and match officials to the stadium. He says the huge mobilization of over 2,000 workers and several hundred compactors and construction equipment within the past two months is indicative that Cameroon is bent on finalizing construction work within one week.

Stadium construction began in March 2017. The government said the facility would be ready for the 2020 AFCON. But in January 2020, the CAF postponed the tournament for a year, saying Cameroon was not ready.

The CAF moved the tournament again in January 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Local media in Cameroon say between COVID-19 and construction delays, the tournament may be postponed yet again. For now, the CAF says the tournament is on.

Source: Voice of America

Confederation of African Football: Cameroon Ready for Tournament Despite Omicron

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has dismissed speculation that the Africa Football Cup of Nations (AFCON), scheduled from January in Cameroon, could be again postponed because of the pandemic.

CAF secretary-general Veron Mosengo-Omba during a visit to Cameroon Wednesday said the spread of the omicron variant could affect the number of fans allowed in stadiums. Nonetheless, he said Cameroon was prepared to host Africa’s top football (soccer) tournament.

Omba says the Africa Football Cup of Nations (AFCON) tournament will begin in January as planned in Cameroon, despite the COVID pandemic.

Britain’s Daily Mail and Mirror newspapers this week speculated that the AFCON tournament, Africa’s top soccer contest, might be cancelled amid a fresh wave of global infections fueled by the omicron variant.

Cameroon is expected to welcome thousands of international football fans for the games, which begin January 9 and go through February 6.

Speaking Wednesday during a visit to Cameroon’s coastal city Douala, Omba said he was convinced that the host nation was ready to take appropriate measures.

He says Cameroonian authorities have assured the CAF that the spread of COVID-19 will be reduced to a minimum during the football tournament. Omba says the CAF will decide how many spectators will be allowed to attend football matches based on daily COVID-19 reports from Cameroon and the CAF’s own health teams.

The AFCON tournament, Africa’s most prominent championship, was twice postponed due to construction delays and the pandemic.

Omba said construction had advanced since initial worries that Yaounde’s Olembe stadium would not be ready, but it was now on schedule to host the opening and closing matches.

Despite health campaigns, Cameroonian authorities say vaccine hesitancy in the country is still quite high.

Cameroon’s Ministry of Public Health says less than 4% of its targeted 16 million people have been vaccinated. Cameroon has about 26 million people.

Director of Cameroon’s AFCON tournament Michel Dissake Mbarga says fans will have to present a negative COVID test not older than 24 hours to enter the stadiums, regardless of vaccination status.

“When you are vaccinated you have some sort of advantage, but each time there is a match, only those who are tested negative will have access to the stadiums. The secretary-general of CAF assured us that they are going to have [to invite] a particular laboratory from Europe which will help the players tested negative to [get] access to the stadium,” he said.

The omicron variant, first reported in South Africa in November, has since been confirmed in scores of countries around the world.

Experts say it appears to spread more easily than other COVID variants, to evade some vaccines, but also to have milder symptoms. The thousands of fans expected to gather in Cameroon’s stadiums for the AFCON tournament has also raised safety concerns.

Anglophone separatists in western Cameroon have threatened attacks on two towns with stadiums that will host some of the matches.

Cameroonian authorities, however, have assured football fans and players that AFCON will be safe despite the threats.

Source: Voice of America