Tag: CAF

  • BREAKING: CAF awards three points to Nigeria, fines Libya 50, OOO USD

    BREAKING: CAF awards three points to Nigeria, fines Libya 50, OOO USD

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has awarded the Super Eagles three points and fined the Libya Football Federation 50,000 USD 

    This was contained in a statement by the football body. 

    In the statement signed by Ousmane Kane, Chairperson of CAF Disciplinary Board, the Governing body ruled on the botched Africa qualifiers between Nigeria and Libya. 

    Read Also: CAF keeps Nigeria, Libya in suspense

    It reads: “The Libya Football Federation is found to have breached Article 31 of the AfricanCup of Nations Regulations as well as Articles 82 and 151 of the CAF Disciplinary
    Code.

    “The match No.87 Libya v. Nigeria of the CAF African Cup of Nations Qualifiers 2025 (scheduled to be played on 15 October 2024 in Benghazi) is declared lost by forfeit by Libya (by a score of 3-0).”

    Details shortly…

  • CAF keeps Nigeria, Libya in suspense

    CAF keeps Nigeria, Libya in suspense

    The Confederation of African Football is keeping everyone waiting after failing to make its decision on Wednesday on the bungled AFCON qualification Group A match set for October 15 at Benina Martyrs Stadium.

    It appears that the football authority has yet to make a decision, as BeIN Sports reports that the Disciplinary Committee heard explanations from both parties via video conference on Wednesday, with Libya and Nigeria fully represented.

    CAF had previously decided to cancel the Libya-Nigeria match after the Nigerian national team left Libya in protest at the diversion of its flight to Labraq Airport, where they were locked in for 18 hours with neither food nor water.

    Read Also: NFF launches monthly Football Awards today

    Nigeria had called on CAF to intervene to rescue them from detention inside Labraq Airport, according to the Nigerian side’s allegations.

    CAF President, Patrice Motsepe, said that the incident was under investigation as the rules for receiving visiting teams are being reviewed, stressing that CAF will take strict decisions in this crisis and will not tolerate any deviation.

  • Osimhen missing as CAF lists Lookman, Ekong for top awards

    Osimhen missing as CAF lists Lookman, Ekong for top awards

    • Nwabali  too 

    Super Eagles winger, Ademola Lookman is in the race for the 2024 CAF Player of the Year along with his compatriot, William Troost Ekong and eight others with  Victor Osimhen  who  won the prestigious award in 2023 not in the picture at all,

    The winner would be crowned in December in Marrakech, Morocco but the Confederation of African Football has listed  eight other players including  Amine Gobiari (Algeria), Edmond Tapsoba (Burkina Faso), Chancel Mbemba (DR Congo).

    Others on the list are: Serhou Guirassy (Cote d’Ivoire), Achraf Hakimi (Morocco), Ronwen Williams (South Africa), Simon Adingra (Cote d’Ivoire) and Sofiane Rahimi (Morocco).

    Lookman scored a hat-trick in the Uefa Europa League final to steer Atalanta to the diadem at the expense of his compatriot, Victor Boniface who dressed for Bayer Leverkusen’

    Meanwhile, Nigeria is in the running for the National Team of the Year after the Super Eagles got to the final of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations before losing to the host, Cote d’Ivoire who are the overwhelming favourites to win it.

    Read Also: Ballon d’Or listing excites ‘Special One’ Lookman 

    Others countries  in the running are: Angola, Burkina Faso, DR Congo, Morocco, Mozambique, South Africa, Sudan and Uganda.

    Nigeria’s former coach, Jose Peseiro was not listed in the Coach of the Year category which has Emerson Fae of Cote d’Ivoire, Hugo Broos (South Africa), Kwesi Appiah (Sudan), Florent Ibenge (Al Hilal SC), Chiquinho Conde (Mozambique), and Sebastien Desabre (DR Congo).

    In the CAF Goalkeeper of the Year category, it will be a straight fight between Super Eagles Goalkeeper, Stanley Nwabali and Ronwen Williams of South Africa. Manchester United and Cameroon shot stopper, Andre Onana is with an outside chance to win the coveted accolade.

  • AFCONQ: NFF beat CAF deadline, push for Libya’s punishment

    AFCONQ: NFF beat CAF deadline, push for Libya’s punishment

    The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has met the Confederation of African Football (CAF) deadline by submitting all necessary documents after the troubling travel ordeal led to the withdrawal of the Super Eagles from their Africa Cup of Nations qualifying match against Libya, Soccernet.ng reports.

    The controversy erupted when the Nigerian team’s flight, bound for Benghazi, was unexpectedly diverted to Al Abraq Airport.

    While the NFF has met this deadline, the LFF has engaged legal representation, distancing itself from the situation by claiming that the flight diversion was a decision made by Libyan state authorities, not the football federation.

    Read Also: NFF Annual General Assembly holds today in Asaba

    As CAF’s investigation unfolds, the fate of the match remains uncertain. Potential consequences include a rescheduled fixture and disciplinary sanctions.

    This situation prompted the Nigerian government to direct the NFF to withdraw the team from the match, citing concerns for the players’ safety in the tense atmosphere.

    Even before Nigeria officially pulled out, the NFF lodged a formal complaint with the CAF, accusing the Libyan authorities of unacceptable treatment.

    CAF responded by condemning the incident, labeling the treatment of the Nigerian delegation as “despicable.”

    The NFF and the Libya Football Federation (LFF) were instructed to submit detailed event accounts by October 20.

  • CAF’s cross

    CAF’s cross

    Not many pundits are expecting anything significant from the Confederation of Africa Football (CAF) when the Africa soccer ruling body meets to decide on the hostage-taking of the Nigerian contingent who ought to have played the return leg of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations against Libya in Benghazi on Tuesday. Not with the overwhelming evidence against the Libyans. In fact, CAF must carry its cross in this matter for approving a war-torn country to host its premium competition – the Africa Cup of Nations. This decision defies all logic. I digress!

    Pundits have hinged their reservations on previous incidents involving North African teams. Nigeria’s flag bearer to one of CAF’s inter-club competitions Rivers United FC of Port Harcourt saw hell in Libya in 2022. Yes, Libya. In fact, in Benghazi.

    According to a report by sportration.com, in a story titled: ‘Black night for African football as Rivers United FC are attacked in Libya’: ”Rivers United FC reported on arrival at the Benghazi airport for the second leg of their CAF Confederation Cup playoff round fixtures against Al Nasr in Benghazi on Wednesday 9, 2022, there were no police escorts nor were there security personnel to usher the visiting team into the city. So, Rivers United had to make do with their well-thought-out arrangement beforehand.

    ”Not even a provision for transportation was made by the hosts, Al Nasr Benghazi as the Nigerians were told in clear terms that they would have to pay for the luxury being provided by their hosts.

    ‘’The antics reached a crescendo when Rivers United’s privately arranged training session at a secret facility on Monday, October 31, was disrupted after the managers of the facility were intimidated by irate Al Nasr fans to switch off the floodlights at the facility and attacked the team with bottles and stones.”

    Rivers United held a healthy 5-0 advantage from the first leg in Port Harcourt played November 2, 2022.

    Back to the show of shame in Libya at the Al Abraq Airport, the Tunisian air officer who piloted the Value Jet aircraft from Kano described what happened whilst he was airborne as hostage-taking adding that: “The flight plan was to land in Benghazi as our destination and we got the approval from the Libyan authorities to land there, but unfortunately when we were at a close distance, we were told to divert to another airport which was about 300km away from our destination.

    ”It was far and towards the east and not a part of our coordinates. It is something that’s not good because, in aviation, we have our flight plan and calculate the amount of fuel that’ll take us through so we have to avoid issues like this because it could hamper  our safety.

    Read Also: Morocco to host CAF Women’s Champions League 2024

    ”When we were about to land in Benghazi, they told us no, citing it was an order from the highest authority in aviation, we cannot hide anything. I asked them at least eight times but they repeated the same thing, saying we cannot land there. Thank God we made it safely and we landed safely. We have all the evidence and they’re well documented,” the Tunisian aeronaut explained.

    What is clear from the scenario created by the pilot is that we had a potential air crash in our hands, God forbid, if the pilot wasn’t an experienced one. What manner of hospitality would we have had, if the truth must be told? What plausible reason would the Libyans have advanced to convince people that what they did by diverting the aircraft from its original plan to the rustic Al Abraq Airport without landing instruments was in good faith?

    The basic rule for hosts in soccer competitions starts before, during, and after the game. So, if Libyans could endanger the Nigerian contingent’s lives with their doublespeak to the pilot, is anyone surprised that these wicked souls allowed distinguished Nigerians to sleep in the mosquito-infested lounge? The Libyans didn’t want the game to hold by keeping the Nigerians hostage for 20 hours whilst subjecting them to a despicable setting and inhuman surroundings on empty stomachs with no food to eat nor water to quench their thirst.

    As if to justify their acts of wickedness, the Libyans have released videos of what happened at the Port Harcourt Airport as if their captain didn’t apologise for such a disinformation prelude to the game which they lost. It is important to remind the Libyans that arriving in Port Harcourt instead of Uyo isn’t any big deal or an infraction of the rules. Uyo isn’t an international airport. Port Harcourt is. The Libyans are cheaply holding onto a straw with this excuse. After all, we provided the security architecture that took them to Uyo from the Garden City.

    The needless media propaganda that the Libyans embraced in social media amounted to an afterthought having read the global condemnation of their atrocious acts. Football, like other sports, unites nations not otherwise. After all, they refused the Nigerian contingent into their country when they sought to enter to make their private bookings. Come to think of it, people who didn’t want the Nigerian contingent to use the Benghazi Airport were almost insisting that the team must pass through the Benghazi Airport to exit. But  Nigeria refused to pass through that route. They returned to Nigeria through the Al Abaq Airport arrival route. It was obvious that they had sinister motives in everything they did.

    Indeed, sports lawyer and Enugu Rangers International FC’s General Manager, Barrister Amobi Ezeaku, wrote in Wednesday’s edition of Sportinglife that: ”The Regulations are in place to accord protection to the rights of visiting teams, ensuring that they can travel, enter, and compete without facing unnecessary barriers.

    ”The lack of support from the Libyan Football Federation constitutes a violation of these regulatory standards, which are meant to foster a conducive environment for international matches.

    ”The repercussions of this oversight extend beyond mere logistics; they impact the reputation of both the Super Eagles and Nigerian football (I am sure you saw all the pictures trending online. Pictures of our top stars sleeping at the airport, stranded for long hours). There is an urgent need for CAF to uphold the regulations and ensure that all member associations adhere to their commitments,” Amobi Ezeaku wrote.

    It must be stated here as captured by Ezeaku, ” More troubles could be in the coffers for the Libyan Football Federation because: ‘The host association that does not provide to the visiting team and the designated match officials all the facilities mentioned in the present regulations, shall reimburse all the expenses without prejudice to the sanctions that the Organizing Committee may impose upon it subsequently’.”

    CAF has assembled a disciplinary committee to address the incident, which includes members such as Jane Njeri Onyango of Kenya (Vice-President); South Africa’s Norman Arendse, Mohamed Mostafa El-mashta of Egypt, and other representatives from Chad, Lesotho, Niger, Uganda, and Sierra Leone.

    Interestingly, Nigeria’s own Justice Roli Daibo Harriman serves as the president of CAF’s Appeal Board, with Cape Verde’s Faustino Varela Monteiro as vice president.

    CAF issued a statement on Monday, condemning the situation and vowing to hold accountable those responsible for the mistreatment of the Nigerian team.

    “CAF views the disturbing and unacceptable experiences of the Nigerian National Football Team (Super Eagles) at an airport in Libya in a severe light,” the statement read.

  • Eagles-Libya clash postponed, CAF confirms

    Eagles-Libya clash postponed, CAF confirms

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has officially confirmed the postponement of the AFCON 2025 second-leg match between Nigeria’s Super Eagles and Libya’s Mediterranean Knights due to recent incidents in the North African country.

    This announcement was made in a statement released by CAF’s communications department on Tuesday, October 15.

    The statement reads: “The TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2025 Qualifier fixture between Libya and Nigeria will not take place as scheduled tonight. The matter will be referred to the competent CAF bodies.”

    Read Also: Libyan highest authorities forced Super Eagles flight diversion – Pilot

    The game was earlier scheduled to take place today, Tuesday, in Libya by 8 pm after the first leg took place in Godswill Akpabio Stadium, Uyo on Friday.

    Super Eagles defeated the Mediterranean Knights by a lone goal in the 86th minute.

    The statement did not specify a date for the second leg encounter, leaving football fans hopeful as they await decisions from CAF regarding the fixture.

    It’s worth noting that CAF announced on Monday that it has launched an investigation into the incident, following allegations of sabotage made by the Libya Football Federation, which has also threatened legal action against Nigeria.

  • Tinubu demands justice for Super Eagles’ mistreatment in Libya

    Tinubu demands justice for Super Eagles’ mistreatment in Libya

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has called on the Confederation of African Football (CAF) Disciplinary Board to conduct a thorough investigation and take action against those responsible for violating the organisation’s statutes and regulations. 

    In a statement on Monday by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, Tinubu condemned the inhuman treatment of the Super Eagles, at a Libyan airport, welcoming their safe return to Nigeria. 

    The team’s harrowing experience led the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) to withdraw from the scheduled match on Tuesday.

    The President also praised the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Federal Ministry of Sports Development for their swift response in addressing the incident and ensuring the players’ safe return. 

    The ministries’ proactive coordination helped alleviate the situation.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Super Eagles land in Kano after Libya ordeal, set for Abuja, Lagos

    He also commended the players for their resilience despite the ordeal and acknowledged football’s power to unite nations and people, emphasizing that the treatment of the Super Eagles was unsportsmanlike and inhumane.

    Tinubu urged unity among football lovers and administrators to prevent similar incidents in the future. 

    “President Bola Tinubu, deeply moved by the inhuman treatment endured by the Super Eagles of Nigeria at a Libyan airport, warmly welcomes their safe return to Nigeria.

    “The harrowing experience of the national football team at the hands of their hosts and the Libyan authorities prompted the Nigerian Football Federation to withdraw the Super Eagles from the scheduled match on Tuesday. 

    “President Tinubu expects the Disciplinary Board of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to conduct a thorough investigation and recommend appropriate action against those who wilfully violated the organisation’s Statutes and Regulations.

    “The President commends the proactive coordination between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Federal Ministry of Sports Development in addressing the unfortunate episode and ensuring the safe return of our players.

    “President Tinubu applauds the players for keeping their spirit alive despite the excruciating ordeal in Libya.

    “The Nigerian leader recognises football’s unifying power in bringing nations and people together and views the treatment of our citizens as unsportsmanlike and inhumane, a stark contrast to the spirit of the game he deeply appreciates.

    “He fervently calls on all lovers of the round-leather game and administrators to unite and work collaboratively to prevent and overcome such incidents in the future,” the statement reads.

  • BREAKING: CAF probes Libya Airport detention of Super Eagles

    BREAKING: CAF probes Libya Airport detention of Super Eagles

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has launched an investigation into the disturbing scenes at Al Abraq International Airport in Libya, where the Nigerian Super Eagles were detained.

    In an official statement released on Monday, October 14, by CAF’s communications department, the organization vowed to take appropriate action against those responsible through its disciplinary board.

    The statement reads: “The Confederation Africaine de Football (CAF) has been in contact with the Libyan and Nigerian authorities after it had been informed that the Nigerian National Football Team (‘’Super Eagles’’) and their technical team were stranded in disturbing conditions for several hours at an airport that they were allegedly instructed to land by the Libyan authorities.”

    Read Also: Diversion of Super Eagles’ flight, not intentional, Libyan Federation fires backs at Nigeria

    The matter has been referred to the CAF Disciplinary Board for investigation and appropriate action will be taken against those who violated the CAF Statutes and Regulations.

    Recall that the Super Eagles contingents have now been granted passage to exit Libya after being held for over 14 hours at the Al Abraq International Airport.

  • CAF to conduct CHAN 2024 Draw Oct. 9

    CAF to conduct CHAN 2024 Draw Oct. 9

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF)  will on Wednesday, October 9,  conduct  the qualifiers  draw  for the  African Nations Championship  at its Cairo  Headquarters.

    Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania will host the tournament between  February 1 and 28, 2025.

    Ahead of the finals, two rounds of qualifiers will take place on a home and away basis.

    The first round of qualifiers will be played on the weekend of 25 – 27 October and 01 – 03 November 2024, with the second round confirmed for 20 – 22 December and 27 – 29 December 2024.

    Since its 2009 inception, the CHAN tournament has been an exceptional platform of showcasing the world-class talent and quality of African football as well as its ever-evolving landscape.

    Algeria played host to the last edition of the tournament which drew thousands of supporters, millions of global audiences and digital engagement as a result of the rising popularity and quality of the tournament.

    Read Also: Mbappe to miss Madrid first away fixture in UCL title Defence

    In line with CAF’s key objective of increasing the commercial strength of its competitions, the  CAF CHAN competition has also seen an increased rise in commercial value. This has also been supported by CAF’s 60% increase in the tournament’s prize money that sees the winners walking away with $2 Million.

    Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania’s hosting of the competition also serves as an opportunity for the three nations to fine-tune their preparations for the hosting of the TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations 2027.

    CHAN  Previous Winners:

    ·      2009 – DR Congo

    ·      2011 – Tunisia

    ·      2014 – Libya

    ·      2016 – DR Congo

    ·      2018 – Morocco

    ·      2020 – Morocco

    ·      2022 – Senegal

  • CAF confirm Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania to host CHAN 2025

    CAF confirm Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania to host CHAN 2025

    Confédération of African Football (CAF) has confirmed that Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania as co-host Nations of the Africa Nations Championship (CHAN). 

    It will run from February 1 to 28 next year.

    However, the host stadiums and training venues are yet to be confirmed. The qualifying series will begin on the weekend of 25-27 October 2024 and continue on November 1 to 13.

    The Second Round of the Qualifiers will be played on 20-22 December and 27-27 December 2024.

    Read Also: Ejuke elated over  match-winning goal for Sevilla

    The qualification slots for the tournament have been allocated as follows:

    Zones WAFU A, WAFU B, UNAF, UNIFFAC, and COSAFA will each have three qualifying teams.

    The CECAFA zone, which includes the three host countries, will receive an additional slot due to their automatic qualification as hosts. As a result, the total number of teams qualifying for the final tournament will be increased to 19 teams.

    Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania will participate in the qualifiers and in addition to their automatic qualification as hosts, the team achieving the best result in the CECAFA qualifiers will also advance to the final tournament. Senegal won the last edition held in Algeria last year.