Tag: Cameroon

  • Cameroon zoom into finals as Nigeria face Angola in 3rd place

     

    Young lions of Cameroon Wednesday at the National Stadium in Dar es Salaam beat Angola 4-3 on penalties to qualify for the finals of this year’s U17 Nations cup.

    The match like the first clash of the day between Nigeria and Guinea ended goalless at the end of regulation with eight minutes added time before the teams went into penalty shootout.

    The Cameroonians converted four of their penalties while their Angolan counterparts only managed to convert three.

    Cameroon will thus take on Guinea in the final billed for Sunday April 28 while Nigeria will tackle Angola in the third place match scheduled for Saturday April 27th at 2pm.

    Should Cameroon emerge victorious on Sunday, it would be the second time they will be winning the title after emerging champions in 2003 in Swaziland.

    Guinea on their own part are playing their first final and dreaming of clinching their first title.

    No fewer than 59 goals have been scored in this year’s championship so far with the highest recorded in the Nigeria versus Guinea semifinal tie that produced 19 penalty goals ending 10-9 in favour of Guinea.

  • Abia oil communities flaunt cultural feast

    Over 200,000 persons, some from neighbouring countries, attended a carnival in Obehie, Ukwa West Local Government Area of Abia State conceived to tap the rich cultural endowments of the communities rather than depend on their crude oil deposits. SUNNY NNWANKWO reports

    Guests came from far and wide: Ghana, Cameroon, and Cote D’Ivoire, among other countries. Apart from the surging crowd of locals, other visitors streamed in from virtually every part of the Nigeria. In all, there were over 200,000 persons at the Ukwa carnival initiated to draw attention to the rich cultural endowments of the Ukwa people in Abia State.

    It was a delight for tourists. There were enough peculiar costumes to enthrall the onlooker, as were cultural ensembles, including dance groups.

    Ukwa area is blessed with huge crude oil and gas deposits, but the people are much aware that oil is finite, while their culture is inexhaustible. They want to celebrate the infinite above the finite, a theme that resonates with the Buhari administration which preaches diversification away from oil.

    Ukwa Land is made up of two local government areas in Abia State; Ukwa East and Ukwa West.

    The Ukwa people, according to researchers, are generally said to have migrated from the riverine parts of the Niger Delta.

    Ukwa East is said to be occupied by the Ndoki clan while Ukwa West is inhabited by the Asa Clan. History has it that the two brothers also have their kith and kin in Obigbo (Oyigbo) in Rivers State which were together with them before the Justice Mamman Nasir Boundary adjustment in 1976 carved out part of Ukwa Division and placed it in present Rivers State.

    One of the unique features of the Ukwa and Oyigbo indigenes is that they speak the same language and have the same cultural ties despite being in different states as a result the 1976 boundary adjustment.

    Ukwa people are agrarian in nature. They have oil palms in large quantity which many have opined to be the largest in the entire Southern Nigeria.

    Apart from the abundance of food, the Ukwa people who also share boundaries with some parts of Rivers and Akwa Ibom states is immensely blessed with natural resources, which the state is enjoying today. This is because the Ukwa people like their neighbouring Niger Delta communities also have crude oil deposits, which is why Abia State is as an oil-producing state.

    The large oil and gas deposits in Owaza-Asa, Ukwa West LGA, the largest centre of operation of SPDC on land in the entire OML 11 with over 158 oil wells, accounts for the presence of various oil companies in the area.

    Apart from Abia Palm at Ohambele in Ukwa East, where major cooking oil consumed within and outside the state is produced, the Industrial sand at Asa-Ugbo Bekee is also another economic generating deposit in the area. The Akwaette weaving which has surpass generations remains one of the trades bequeathed to the people by their fore-fathers that still thrive.

    There is also the Rubber Research Institute located in the Ukwa region because of the quantity of rubber deposit in the area.

    Research has also shown that Ukwa area has the potential of erasing the status of land-locked region away from the Southeast because the confluence town of Obeaku-Ndoki where Imo River joins the Blue River is only about 40 nautical miles to the Atlantic Ocean.

    The two cities recently attracted the interest of the federal government with the signing of Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the state governments for the establishment of an Economic City in the area comprising Ukwa East, Ukwa West and Ugwunagbo LGAs respectively.

    No wonder the federal government under President Muhammadu Buhari seeing the economic importance of the area approved the Enyimba Economic City when it was brought to his tables for approval.

    Just as the Buhari government is preaching diversification of the economy from dependency on crude oil, a group of like-minds from the oil-rich region of the state are already planning ahead for the two agrarian communities.

    These Ukwa West and East entrepreneurs, worried about the untapped natural and economic resources lying waste, have embraced cultural festival to tap the tourist potentials of the people.  The plan is to change the narrative from being oil-dependent communities to cultural oriented communities.

    They want to replicate and domesticate what many Nigerians including their sons and daughters travel as far as Brazil and Calabar to watch.

    They said that they intend to use the cultural fiesta to boost the economy of the state and to also showcase the rich cultural value of the people which the visitors may not have had the opportunity to come across. This is even as the event would create opportunities for the locals and others to meet and discuss with potential investors on how they can take their businesses further, and make Abia State a tourist hub.

    In an interview, the organisers who stated that the last edition of the carnival with the theme; Destination Uncommon, featured among other things: Royal Procession which was undertaken by the traditional rulers of Ukwa as well as their Niger-Delta counterparts, Community Cultural Procession, Carnival Band Procession, Display from various Cultural Groups from neighbouring states of Rivers, Akwa-Ibom, Cross River, Enugu, Anambra and Ebonyi including Reggae, Jazz, Hip-hop, R&B, Comedy, Talent shows and pageantry.

    The organizers added that the concert was used in the unveiling of ‘Eres Hermosa’ one of the biggest Spanish costumes that have never been seen in Africa.

    The carnival director, Mr. Emeka Don Alasoro said in as much they are not in any way trying to compare the Ukwa Carnival with any other one pre-existing it, they have already created an identity which they will like to sustain.

    “Ukwa Carnival is a worthwhile initiative borne out of the passion to promote our culture and tourism and at the same time, uplift the economic status of our people. It is expected that the event will create an enabling environment for prospective investors, both indigenous and international to visit Abia State and Ukwa land in particular to explore business opportunities and other investments.

    “This will help to facilitate our economic well-being and ignite speedy development of Ukwa land and Abia State in general.

    “In this connection, we are therefore optimistic that we are going to make Ukwa

    land an envy of Igbo land before a decade. Hence, our mantra remains; Connect, Celebrate, Relate and Showcase.

    “We are not in any way trying to compare Ukwa Carnival with the likes of Calabar Carnival. That’s never the motive. Our vision is different and likewise the aims. Cross River State is far older than Abia and Calabar Carnival is far older than Ukwa Carnival as well. If you have seen what we did in our maiden edition last year, you will agree with me that this year’s own will be more glamorous.

    Mr. Obum Mao Azunna, the Chairman of Grand Council of Niger Delta Youths Leaders who doubles as the Public Relations Officer of Ukwa Royal Heritage, while speaking on the choice of Obehie said it was due to the town’s equidistance to both Aba in Abia state and Port Harcourt in Rivers state, stressing that the town is also at the centre of the whole Ukwa area.

    Azunna who opined that the maiden edition last year recorded over 60, 000 participants expressed happiness that well over 200,000 persons attended the just concluded edition.

    On the opportunities and business potentials the carnival can bring to Abia State, Azunna said, “The carnival can open a huge channel for investors to see the potentials in Ukwa Land and Abia in general. The Obeaku Confluence which is just forty-nautical miles to the Atlantic Ocean is there waiting to be seen and developed, the Azumini Blue River is yearning for investors and tourists. The Asa-Ugbo Bekee which is the largest centre for industrial sand is here and need to be put into better use. Our oil palm produce and methods of production can be

    improved upon. A lot of people with several business interests will come here and they shall visit a lot of places and explanations will be made. We are hoping to shift attention away from the oil in Ukwa to other things that put youths out of the streets and gainfully keep them busy.

    “The carnival will promote what Ukwa is all about. Our land does not just produce oil and gas alone. We are not looking at that anymore. Ukwa people are agrarian people. This is why today; the robber research institute of the federal government is here and very fruitful. There in Ohambele where we have the Abia Palm Plantation.

    “Our Akwete clothes which the Igbo race has been known for back in the early days are still been produced here in Akwete. It is among the paramount things we are going to showcase.

    On insecurity, one of the organisers, Precious Ogbuji said, “Yes, it is true this is Niger Delta region, but it is the most peaceful and secure oil producing area in Nigeria. There has never been any reported case of security lapse in Ukwa Land for so many years notwithstanding that our people have been neglected over the years despite the weight of wealth in the land. We have great synergy with the military and the police. Here in Ukwa Land, Asa to be precise, we have one of Nigeria’s military bases, the 144 battalion which is just a stone’s throw from Obehie”.

    He re-emphasised that the event is nonpolitical, stating, “As you can see, the organisation that is championing this event is non-political and non-dependent on any company or organisation. The whole idea behind the Ukwa carnival was borne out of the passion to promote our cultural heritage. We made it that way because we want to sustain it and wouldn’t want a situation where one or group of individuals and even one company will see this event as theirs.

    “Major oil companies in Ukwa may have their social responsibilities to the communities, the state government may be there, but we don’t use our carnival as a prior mandate for anyone of them. The carnival has come to stay and Ukwa Royal Heritage will ensure that. We are not leaving the burden on anyone, but whoever identifies with us is welcomed”, he said.

    The Founder and Chairman of Ukwa Royal Heritage Limited, Mr. Ezinwanne O. Adiele who could not hide his joy over the attendance of the just concluded edition disclosed that they have started making plans for another edition that would be holding later this year, December to be precise.

    Adiele called on the state government, corporate organisations, agencies, manufacturers, industrialists, business people and investors to identify with this all important annual event to facilitate a speedy development of Abia State through Culture and Tourism.

    A situation he said, will ignite a laudable economic growth and balance, foster bilateral relationships and enhance local and international business connections.

    Adiele reiterated that a country like Brazil, which is today a known emerging economy in the world had leveraged immensely from her yearly Carnival to attract tourists from various parts of the world and as such boosting the economy of Brazil.

    He also named Trinidad and Tobago, Haiti, Cuba, Barbados, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Bahamas, among others, who rely on their cultural and tourist potentials as an alternative means of boosting its economy.

    The Ukwa Cultural Carnival founder while stating that Abia State could achieve lofty goals within her socio-cultural and economic index if proper attention would be given to this passionate and fascinating project said that the ‘Ukwa Carnival Expo’ has all it takes to attract both national and international attention to Abia State tourism industry.

  • Navy arrests three with 416 bags of contraband rice

    The Navy in Akwa Ibom State has arrested three suspects with 416 bags of contraband rice, said to have been smuggled into the state from neighbouring Republic of Cameroon.

    The operation was carried out by naval operatives of Forward Operating Base, Ibaka, in Mbo Local Government.

    The suspected smugglers were reportedly intercepted in a wooden boat along the Mbo river by the naval officers during a routine patrol.

    It was discovered that a medium-sized boat, which was fitted with two 40 horsepower Yamaha outboard engines, was carrying the 416 bags of 50kg rice.

    Speaking yesterday in Ibaka during the handover of the suspects, rice, boat and engines to the Nigeria Customs Service, the Commanding Officer, FOB, Captain Reginald Adoki, said the handover is a customary practice and a way of renewing the commitment of the Navy to rid the area of illegal activities on the water ways.

    “The gunboat of FOB, Ibaka while conducting routine patrol along Mbo river and other adjoining creeks, intercepted a medium sized wooden boat. After offloading, it was discovered to be carrying 416 bags of 50kg rice, and two 40 horsepower Yamaha outboard engines, which are fitted to the wooden boat. The three suspects, from preliminary investigations, confessed that they were bringing the rice from Cameroon.

    Read Also: Navy takes war to kidnappers, others

    “This handover is customary to us and a way of renewing the commitment the Navy has put in clearing this area of illegal activities. It reiterates the confidence the Navy has in the Customs to deal with the cases handed over to it for further investigation and prosecution,” he said.

    Receiving the suspects and bags of rice from the Navy, the Controller, Eastern Marine Command, Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Port Harcourt, Elton Edorhe, represented by Mr. Ibrahim Adamu, Chief Superintendent of Customs, appealed to the smugglers to desist from harming the economy through their actions.

    He said: “On behalf of the Customs Controller, Eastern Marine Command, Controller Elton Edorhe, I thank the Navy for the seizures and appeal to the smugglers to consider the economy of the nation that is being bastardised through smuggling. They should do the needful and desist from this economic sabotage. They should save themselves the pains of losing their money.”

    One of the suspects, Mr. Victor Asuquo, a barber from Mbo Local Government, said he was

    innocent of the charge against him.

    Asuquo, who said he was returning home after about six months sojourn in Cameroon, added that he was only a passenger in the seized boat and not involved in smuggling of the rice.

  • FG knocks Cameroon over deportation of 40, 000 Nigerians

    The federal government has condemned the reported deportation of 40,000 Nigerians living in Cameroon as victims of Boko Haram from Rann Local Government of Borno State.

    The government said it appealed to Cameroonian authorities not to chase out the victims of Boko Haram from Rann living in their country.

    The Commissioner, National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons (NCFRMI), Sadiya Farouq, stated this in a statement in Abuja on Tuesday.

    She explained that the federal government made a passionate appeal for the refugees not to be chased out when Cameroonian authorities threatened to expel them from their country.

    Farouq said the federal government, through the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs will take appropriate steps on the matter in due course.

    The statement reads: “It is highly regrettable and sad to note that despite the passionate appeal made by the Nigerian Authorities to the Government of Cameroon not to chase out the victims of Boko Haram attacks from Rann Local Government of Borno State, this appeal has been ignored.

    “Information reaching us is that the Cameroonian Government has thrown out the Displaced Persons from Rann who ran into Cameroun for safety in total disregard for the appeal and a clear breach of the United Nations Charter and Convention on the protection of Displaced Persons which both countries endorsed.

    “The United Nations Convention on Refugees and its 167 Protocol states that: ‘no contracting state shall expel or return a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where his or her life or freedom will be threatened on account of his or her race, religion or nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion.

    “You may recall that on January 14, 2019, persistent attacks in Rann compelled residents of the area to run into Cameroon territories for their safety, but from the onset, the Cameroon Government threatened to chase them out.

    “The Nigerian Government had to remind its Cameroonian counterpart of its obligation to the displaced Nigerians, bearing in mind the UN Convention.

    “Unfortunately, today Cameroon has made good its earlier threat by throwing the Nigerian Refugees back to the country in large number. In due course, the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs will take appropriate steps on the matter.”

    She noted that Nigeria was currently hosting many Cameroonian refugees located at Cross River, Benue, Akwa-Ibom, Taraba States with some of them in the Federal Capital Territory Abuja since October 2017.

    The commissioner said the government would continue to provide them with relief, care and maintenance items.

    Farouq noted: “This was a clear demonstration of our commitment to international Conventions on humanitarian obligations and in the spirit of good neighbourliness.”

    She stated the commission in line with its mandate would continue to provide care and maintenance to persons of concern including nationals of other countries without any form of discrimination.

    “However, we demand that Nigerian citizens in foreign land must not be subjected to any shabby treatment under any circumstance.

    “With every sense of commitment the Government of Nigeria is making every necessary arrangement to ensure a smooth return of its citizens that are in various Camps abroad in safety and dignity,” the statement added.

  • Looters stashing funds in Seychelles, South Africa, Niger, Ghana, says Magu

    The Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Ibrahim Magu on Friday said looters now stash illicit funds in African countries such as Ghana, Egypt, Cameroon, South Africa, Niger Republic, Morocco and others.

     He said the preferred destinations for looters have traditionally been the United Kingdom, United States, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Seychelles but they have started expanding down home to African countries.

    Magu made the disclosures at the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) and its Niger Republic counterpart, the High Authority Against Corruption and Relating Crimes (HALCIA) in Niamey.

    He said: “From available intelligence and our investigations, it has been revealed that looters from Nigeria now go to Ghana, Egypt, Cameroon, South Africa, Equatorial Guinea, Niger Republic, Morocco, Seychelles and so on, to stash their loots.

    “This has led to sharp increase in the number of Nigerians buying properties in African countries.

    “Nigerians “even go to the extent of changing their names and acquiring the destination countries’ international passports in collusion with corrupt public officers in their countries of residence in order to hide their identities and evade detection.”

    Read also: Ganduje promises to welcome back Kwankwaso to APC if…

    He said: “the fight of the EFCC against looters’ safe havens is total.”

    The EFCC boss further disclosed his visit to Niger Republic was part of his continuing tour at mobilizing international efforts against looters’ safe havens.

    He added: “We have already visited Ghana and Cameroun, today we are in Niger Republic and we will continue to reach out to other preferred looters destinations in Africa and beyond.

    “Interestingly, the efforts of the Nigerian Government to trace, recover and return assets stolen from Nigeria coupled with our increased advocacy to discourage safe havens have begun to yield results.

    “It is my conviction that our collaborative efforts will go a long way in eliminating safe havens.

    “In fact, this is in tandem with renewed global commitment by countries to shut their doors to stolen funds.

    “I also want to call for conscious measures to sanitize and strengthen the legal framework so as to make it difficult for looters to transfer illicit funds to Niger Republic for investment or whatever purpose.”

    He called on the global community to urgently redouble its efforts towards strengthening the mechanisms for dismantling safe havens for proceeds of corruption.

    He also called on the international community to ensure the return of stolen funds and assets to their countries of origin.

    According to a statement by Acting Head of Media and Publicity of EFCC, Mr. Tony Orilade, the MoU will strengthen the collaborative efforts between the Nigerian front row anti-corruption agency and that of its Niger Republic counterpart.

    HALCIA, which is the agency in charge of the prevention and fight against corruption and related offences in Niger Republic was established by the country’s Law No 2016-44 of December 06, 2016.

    The signing of the document followed a two-day working visit to Niger Republic by the EFCC Acting Chairman, Ibrahim Magu.
  • Don’t evict Nigerian refugees, UN tells Cameroon

    The UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has expressed grave concerns over plans by Cameroon to evict thousands of Nigerian refugees to Borno.

    UNHCR deplored the reported move that Cameroon was forcing several thousand Nigerians to return to Borno, adding, it has put the lives of the refugees “at risk”.

    Cameroon is currently home to more than 370,000 refugees, including some 100,000 from Nigeria, according to UNHCR.

    “We are gravely concerned for the safety and well-being of all these people”, said the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi.

    The UN refugee agency said on January 16, “267 Nigerian refugees, who had crossed into Cameroon in 2014, were forcibly returned.

    It regretted that at dusk on January 14, militants attacked and ransacked the border town of Rann, about 10 kilometers from the Cameroon border.

    UNHCR said that at least 14 people were reportedly killed and an estimated 9,000 fled to Cameroon.

    Grandi said: “This action was totally unexpected and puts lives of thousands of refugees at risk.

    “I am appealing to Cameroon to continue its open door and hospitable policy and practices and halt immediately any more returns and to ensure full compliance with its refugee protection obligations under its own national legislation, as well as international law”.

    North-eastern Nigeria has been particularly hard-hit by the insurgency being waged in the region since 2009, the UN said.

    Meanwhile, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, Mr. Edward Kallon, has said the deadly attack interrupted aid delivery to some 76,000 internally displaced people in Rann.

    Kallon said the attackers looted or destroyed a medical clinic, humanitarian supply warehouses and aid workers’ accommodations, and burned down the nearby market and camp shelters.

     

  • African coaches lack confidence declares Samuel Etoo

     

    African coaches lack confidence in themselves despite having the needed qualifications to excel in the round leather game.

    Cameroon international Samuel Eto’o who made the submission opined that lack of confidence has limited the chances of most African coaches to reach the zenith of their careers.

    He equally noted that the non-progressive state of African coaches may have affected the psyche of African player many who ultimately decide against going into coaching after their playing careers.

    The former Barcelona ace told Canal+: ‘some former black players don’t want to become coaches, even if maybe they’d like to.

    ‘Of course, there are many African coaches who have qualifications, but there’s simply no confidence in them, unlike other coaches,” he noted

    The 37-year-old Eto’o, who also played for Premier League clubs Chelsea and Everton, and is currently plying his trade with Qatar Sports Club in the Qatar Stars League also noted that coaches of colour are unfortunately treated as second class citizens. He however hinted that he is ready to change the narrative when he ventures into coaching after playing.

    ‘Coaches of colour have been disheartened because they’re viewed as second-class citizens.’Still, I won in Europe as a player so I have to win in Europe as a coach,” he enthused

    That is indeed true with Eto’o winning the Champions League three times as a player as well as four domestic titles in Spain and Italy. He is keen to manage at the highest level once he hangs up his boots. The four time African footballer of

    the year and two time Nations cup winner is among crème dela crème of sports legends that  hit Dakar Senegal for the Annual African footballer of the Year award.

    Eto’o was a proud winner of the award in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2010.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Nigerien troops kill 280 Boko Haram fighters

    Troops and air strikes have killed more than 280 Boko Haram militants since the Nigerien Government started an operation against the group last week, the Defense Ministry said.

    Boko Haram has attacked Niger, Chad and Cameroon from its base in northeast Nigeria, where it has been fighting for more than nine years to carve out an Islamist caliphate.

    Niger’s Defense Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that the army mounted a sweep operation against the group last Friday along the south-eastern Komadugu River, which separates Niger from Nigeria.

    More than 200 militants were “neutralised” by air strikes and 87 were killed by Nigerien troops on the ground, it said.

    Read Also: NAF Helicopter lost in combat – Official

    In June 2016, more than 30 Nigerien soldiers were killed during a Boko Haram attack on the town of Bosso, prompting Chad to send 2,000 troops to help its West African neighbour counter the militants.

    Those troops were withdrawn in October 2017, raising concern about security in the Diffa region.

  • AWCON 2018: Dennerby delighted at Falcons’ semis victory

    Thomas Dennerby, Head Coach of the Super Falcons has expressed delight at his team’s semi-final victory over the Indomitable Lionesses of Cameroon, saying that the next target was to retain the trophy.

    Nigeria beat Cameroon 4-2 on penalties to reach the final and also pick the first of three tickets to the FIFA Women’s World Cup, “France 2019”.

    Dennerby in his post match comment said on the African Football Confederation (CAF) website that the game was a grueling encounter as expected.

    “It was a game we expected to be difficult and it proved to be nothing short. I feel the fans loved every bit of it in spite of its going 120 minutes without a goal.

    “My team started the game on the back foot, especially in the first 15 minutes as Cameroon dominated. But we quickly regrouped and came back into the game. Both teams played well and sold a good game out to Africa and the rest of the world.

    “The penalty shootout was one that we have been practicing at training for some time now and today the players executed it to perfection.

    “For now we celebrate and prepare for the final match on Saturday. We are happy that we have won the game and picked one of the three tickets to the FIFA Women’s World Cup.

    “Like I said on Monday, now that we have that out of the way, the next target is retaining the trophy,” he said.

    Joseph Ndoko, Head Coach of the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon, on his part said that his side did not deserve to lose as they were the better side at the end of 120 minutes of an intense encounter.

    “It was a very difficult match and I think we deserved better in the regulation time because we had a lot of possession and created more chances than in our previous games.

    “In football, once it goes into penalties, there’s little you can do because the onus now falls on the players to reprint all that we have learnt about it and keep their composure to score.

    “Indeed, we planned for revenge like I said, but we couldn’t and once again we got beaten by Nigeria.

    “It will be very difficult to talk to the girls because they are all crying in the dressing room and I know it will continue to the hotel.

    Read Also: Falcons in Ghana for AWCON

    “Who knows, maybe I will join them too in my room because the defeat hurts,” he said.

    Ndoko, however, noted that his side still took consolation in the fact that they were still in the chase to get the only remaining ticket left for the Women’s World Cup.

    “We will shake off the result hopefully by tomorrow and pick ourselves up and prepare well for the third and fourth place match on Friday against whichever team.

    “But I must add that I am proud of my team. They played to instructions and gave it their all. We were just unfortunate at the penalty shootout yet again,” he said.

    NAN

  • Hosts Ghana crash out of Women’s nations cup

     

    Hosts Ghana Friday crashed out of the ongoing African Women Nations cup after playing out a 1-1 draw against Cameroon.

    The Black Queens who shot into the lead in the early stage of the encounter thanks to Portia Boakye   looked good to run away with the much needed victory to earn them a place in the semifinals, but that was not to be after Cameroon converted a penalty handed to opponents on a platter by Black Queens goalkeeper which was quickly delivered by Christine Manie.

    The draw was enough for Cameroon to qualify for the semifinals with seven points  but Ghana’s exit was further confirmed when Mali came from behind in the second group match to edge out Algeria 3-2 in Cape Coast.

    Super Falcons who bounced back into contention after beating Zambia 4-0 will on Saturday take on already eliminated Equatorial Guinea in the last group match while Group leaders South Africa take on Zambia.

    The championship is not only aimed at determining the reigning women’s champion in the  continent but also determine the teams that will represent the continent at the 2019 Women’s world cup in France.

    The exit means Ghana will not have the opportunity to  represent Africa at next year’s Women’s World Cup in France with the top three finishers expected to fly the continent’s flag.