Tag: Congo

  • Battle of Calabar: Eagles near Congo tie

    Battle of Calabar: Eagles near Congo tie

    The possibilty of Super Eagles of Nigeria meeting Congo Brazzaville in the first group game of the Nations Cup qualifier on September 6 is getting brighter after the Confederation of African Football (CAF) announced its decision to suspend indefinitely Rwanda striker,Taddy Etekiama.

    Last Tuesday,the Congolese Football Federation lodged a protest with CAF alleging that Rwanda fielded an ineligible player in the first leg of the second round qualifier in Point-Noire on July 20.

    The Continental football ruling body responded to Congo’s protest yesterday by slamming an indefinite suspension on AS Vita Club’s Rwandan forward Taddy Etekiama over an alleged case of dual identity.

    It was confirmed that Dady Birori is registered as Agiti Taddy Etekiama with his club  AS Vita in DR Congo.

    CAF has informed the DR Congo football federation (Fecofa) that the player in question has been banned from featuring for AS Vita and the Rwanda national team until the investigation is concluded.

    Should the continental body agree that Rwanda have fielded an ineligible player against Congo, the Wasps will be disqualified and the Red Devils reinstated in Group A of the final round of qualifiers with South Africa,Nigeria and Sudan.

  • NIGER 2015 QUALIFIER: Eaglets in Congo to win, says Amuneke

    NIGER 2015 QUALIFIER: Eaglets in Congo to win, says Amuneke

    Nigeria’s Under-17 national team, the Golden Eaglets, will be going for nothing but victory when they face the Junior Leopards of Congo Democratic Republic in an African U-17 Championship (Niger 2015) qualifier on Saturday in Kinshasa.

    This much was said by the team’s Head Coach, Emmanuel Amuneke (MON) after the Eaglets’ final training  session yesterday, ahead  of the match fixed for 3:30pm local time (3:30pm Nigerian time) at  the Tata Raphael Stadium today.

    ” We are here to win and it is as simple as that but we know  that the game will not be as simple as that,”  said Amuneke who scored match-winning goals when Nigeria won the 1994 African Cup of Nations and  Atlanta’96 Olympic Soccer Gold medal. “We have constantly told the boys that all what we had done in the past are now in the past and the moment of serious business is here for us.”

    Keen followers of the Eaglets can readily predict the team’s line up after remarkably going 21 matches undefeated in regulation time (bar the penalty shoot-out loss to Benin at the WAFU B Tournament in Togo) fuelling suspicion that the 1994 African Footballer of the Year might stick to his reliables against Congo DR.

    “The only difference between Saturday’s (today’s) match and the ones we played in the past is just the circumstance because this is one of the qualifiers for Niger,” he explained. “So it is important for us to win irrespective of what Congo will throw at us because we know Kinshasa is a difficult place to win matches.”

    Typically, Amuneke refrained from picking any particular player as the  joker for the match saying that all the 18 players on the trip are physically and psychologically ready for what is regarded within the rank of the team as ‘The Battle of Kinshasa.’

    “Joker? I don’t have any joker for the match,” he bluntly said. “What we have is a team with a winning mentality and we have brought players we believe will do the job for us.”

  • Nwakali, Osimhen sure of crushing Congo DR

    Nwakali, Osimhen sure of crushing Congo DR

    Golden Eaglets’ captain, Kelechi Nwakali and gangling striker, Victor Osimhen is confident of opening Nigeria’s 2015 African Championship account on a winning note today.

    Osimhen is undoubtedly Golden Eaglets’ in-form striker based on recent performances, especially the brace he scored in the team’s 4-2 win against Egypt in Cairo early this month. He is also one of the team’s top scorers – jointly in second position with Suleiman Abdullahi on six goals and behind Kehinde Ayinde on seven.

    “My focus now is on the match against Congo (Democratic Republic) and that has always been my style days before an important game,” said Victor. “The good thing is that we have a good attacking force in this team and my prayer is that I should be one of our goal scorers against Congo DR.”

    The Golden Eaglets have scored an average of three goals per match after amassing an impressive 63 goals in 21 matches under the spell of Coach Emmanuel Amuneke (MON).

    Yet Nwakali, who is not far away on the team’s top scorers’ list with four goals including an unforgettable ‘intercontinental ballistic missile’ in the 2-1 win against Abuja College of Football in April, is backing Osimhen to be amongst the goalscorers against the Junior Leopards.

    “If there is any player I’m sure of scoring a goal at least against Congo DR, it is Victor because he has improved tremendously,” said Nwakali. “One other thing I’m also sure about of this match is that we are going to win by the special grace of God.”

    He added that anybody fielded against Congo DR on Saturday would do more than enough to ensure the success of the team insisting that the present Golden Eaglets  are as gifted as their predecessors that won the FIFA Under-17 World Cup last year.

  • Congo DR drag Eaglets to Tata Raphael

    • CAF picks Cameroonian officials

    With work still ongoing at their main stadium, the artificial surface of Tata Raphael Stadium in Kinshasa will host the Golden Eaglets and Congo Democratic Republic’s much anticipated Niger 2015 Under-17 African Championship qualifier today.

    The match was earlier scheduled for the TP Mazembe Stadium in Lubumbashi but the Federation of Congolese Football Association (FECOFA) informed the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) of the change in venue a few days before the Golden Eaglets’ departure.

    The Tata Raphael Stadium is the same venue local side AS Vita Club humbled Kano Pillars 3-1 in an African Champions League fixture in February.

    Meanwhile, continental soccer ruling body, CAF, has picked officials from Cameroon to handle the second round first leg fixture expected to be watched by a capacity crowd.

    The centre referee will be 31-year-old Antoine Max Depadoux Effa Essouma, who became an international referee in 2013, with his compatriots, 40-year-old Thierry Bruno Tocke and 36-year-old Hamadou Sadou serving as first and second assistants respectively.

    The fourth official is 36-year-old Mandeng Bakalay Cosmas Jerome while Michel Gasingwa from Rwanda will serve as Match Commissioner.

    Dignitaries expected  to watch the match include Nigeria’s Ambassador to the Congo DR, Dr. Grant Ehiobuche, Governor of Kinshasa City, Mayor of Kalamu Community, DR Congo’s Minister of Youth Matters and Sports as well as executive members of FECOFA.

    Ambassador Ehiobuche has equivocally told the Golden Eaglets to go for victory against the home team: “I will be there with you and that means, President Goodluck Jonathan (GCFR) is also with you in spirit,” he said during the team’s lunch on Friday.

    “Please, grant us victory against Congo DR because I was so ashamed when our team, Kano Pillars were beaten here the last time.You are our future hope and I want you to prove that by beaten Congo DR,” Ehiobuche added.

  • Amuneke: Eaglets in Congo to win

    Amuneke: Eaglets in Congo to win

    Nigeria’s Under 17 national team, the Golden Eaglets, will be going for victory when they face the Junior Leopards of Congo Democratic Republic in an African U-17 Championship (Niger 2015) qualifier today in Kinshasa.

    This much was said by the team’s Head Coach, Emmanuel Amuneke (MON) after the Eaglets’ final training  session yesterday, ahead  of the match fixed for 3:30pm local time (3:30pm Nigerian time) at  the Tata Raphael Stadium today.

    “We are here to win and it is as simple as that but we know  that the game will not be that simple,” said Amuneke who scored match-winning goals when Nigeria won the 1994 African Cup of Nations and Atlanta’96 Olympic Soccer Gold medal. “We have constantly told the boys that all what we did in the past are now in the past and the moment of serious business is here for us.”

    Keen followers of the Eaglets can readily predict the team’s line up after remarkably going 21 matches undefeated in regulation time (bar the penalty shoot-out loss to Benin at the WAFU B Tournament in Togo), fuelling suspicion that the 1994 African Footballer of the Year might stick to his reliables against Congo DR.

    “The only difference between Saturday’s (today’s) match and the ones we played in the past is just the circumstance because this is one of the qualifiers for Niger,” he explained. “So it is important for us to win irrespective of what Congo will throw at us because we know Kinshasa is a difficult place to win matches.”

    Typically, Amuneke refrained from picking any particular player as the joker for the match saying that all the 18 players on the trip are physically and psychologically ready for what is regarded within the rank of the team as ‘The Battle of Kinshasa.’

    “Joker? I don’t have any joker for the match,” he bluntly said. “What we have is a team with a winning mentality and we have brought players we believe will do the job for us.

  • Congo’s  tough women  mechanics

    Congo’s tough women mechanics

    Girls in the devastated city of Goma, “the rape capital of the world,” are breaking stereotypes to find workand independenceas car mechanics and carpenters. By Nina Strochlic.

    IN a large auto body shop off a dusty alley in the Democratic Republic of Congo, two teenage girls climb behind a stripped-down truck to take a break under a shady cluster of trees. A few moments before, 16-year-old Kubuya Mushingano, clad in a blue mechanic’s uniform, and 17-year-old Dorcas Lukonge, her hair wrapped in a scarf, were, respectively, wielding a circular saw and power drill.

    Each day, these two young trainees saw, drill and weldmaking doors and windows for cars at the auto yard, a dirt enclosure littered with scrap wood and metal.

    In the eastern provincial capital of Goma, where perceptions of women are shaded by a regional nickname, “The Rape Capital of the World,” a group of girls handy with power tools are throwing a literal wrench into gender norms and stereotypes of victimhood.

    “When we came here there were a lot of people discouraging us, saying it’s work for men,” says Mushingano. “But I feel it’s good work and I like it.”

    Lukonge chimes in assertively: “When people discourage us we feel more encouraged to go on.”

    And good work it is. In much of the DRC, roads are in a woeful state of disrepair, and in Goma, the conditions are especially dire. A patchwork of building shells and cratered streets, the city tells of a cyclical war, still smoldering. It’s never been given the chance to rebuild before the next blitz hitswhether a flood of molten lava or a ferocious insurgency.

    Weaving through this are only a handful of properly paved thoroughfares. The rest are a bone-rattling maze of potholes littered with rocks spewed 12 years ago by nearby Mount Nyiragongo, one of the world’s most dangerous volcanoes.

    This state of disrepair provides good business for the city’s mechanics. Cars bumping over Goma’s streets need constant attention. A translator working with The Daily Beast said he brings his vehicle into the mechanic every two weeks to fix the suspension.

    The girls say the auto body yard, otherwise filled with more than a dozen men of all ages, is a welcoming environment. “When there is work to do we just do it, there is no discrimination, no saying, ‘You can’t do this,’” says Lukonge.

    But auto work is not the typical path for Congolese women, who make up half the labor force, but are largely relegated to traditional avenues of employment as seamstresses, cooks, farm labor, or small vendors. In the DRC, women still need their husband’s permission to start a business or open a bank account.

    As a mechanic, job prospects are more promising (Lukonge says she feared becoming just “another” tailor), but not everyone understands the draw of a career path typically filled by men, including the girls’ own families. “Some say, ‘You are just going to hunt for men,’” Lukonge says.

    Mushingano agrees, “We know that’s not the case, we just come here for work.”

     

    These girls, and others in the vocational programs, represent a more nuanced image of Congolese women than the portrait pervasive in media coverage. The DRC is ubiquitous in the top five slots of annual “The worst places in the world to a be a woman” lists; with a 2011 study finding 48 rapes occur each hour.

    There’s no question many women in the DRC are victims of horrific sexual violence and their attackers often enjoy impunity. But there is a whole lot more to these women and their lives than victimhood.

    Lukonge and Mushingano have been practicing their chosen trade at the garage for two months, after a year of training at a local organization called ETN (a mouthful of a French acronym: Equipe d’Education et d’Encadrement des Traumatisés de Nyiragongo). Since 2013, ETN, in partnership with CARE International, has trained 150 young people in its six-month programs, pulling street kids, young mothers, sexual violence survivors, and former child soldiers from Goma’s most vulnerable neighborhoods.

    These novices have their pick of seven branches of training: from mechanics to tailoring, electrical work to “kitchen arts.” At the encouragement of the trainers, both Lukonge and Mushingano signed up for the mechanics class, the only two girls to do so.

    “In class we noticed we had an advantage over boys,” Lukonge says. The trainer paid special attention to them, encouraging them to be the first to answer questions, and pushing them hard. “He knows women are likely ignored,” she says. “When we told him we were tired he said, ‘Don’t be tired.’”

    Being a mechanic doesn’t get either of the girls out of chores. They both wake up at 5:00 a.m. to do housework for their familiessweeping, mopping, fetching water, doing dishes and the laundrybefore starting work at 8:00.

    When their fellowship at the auto body yard ends, ETN will give them a mechanic’s kit to start their own business or join a current one and become self-supporting.

    A few minutes down the nearby main road and into another alley, another four young women, aged 18 to 23, tinker with engine parts on a table in a small workshop surrounded by cars. Their blue jumpsuits are stained with grease, and their hair is expertly wrapped in scarves to keep it out of their way. They’re used to people being skeptical of their mechanical abilities, but, “When they see we are able to do it they are astonished,” says the youngest, Wivine Mukongya.

    “I just had dreamed of becoming a mechanic one day,” she says. A statement ring on her left hand features a fancy car. “I want to do it because I felt like this is work that will help me in the future.” She hopes to become a mechanic or a driver for an NGO, many of which, she says, prefer to hire women over men.

    Goma’s economy relies heavily on the saturated presence of international humanitarian organizations, which have spent two decades battling the turmoil in the region. The United Nations peacekeeping force, MONUSCO, is the largest and best-funded in the world. Driving for the U.N. or one of the many aid organizations is a highly coveted position, and job fliers posted outside their compounds draw crowds daily.

    In a classroom full of boys at ETN’s training compound, 19-year-old Jeane is one of only two girls. She was a victim of sexual violence, but she seems to feel strong and independent in her new role. She wears electric blue eyeliner highlighting the bottom of her eyebrows and says, flatly, as she stands beside a tire-less SUV propped up by lava rocks, “We are accepted.” And more than that, “We are lucky because we are the minority, and [we] are focused on more than the majority.”

    Scribbling notes in the classroom next door is Justine, a shy 17-year-old orphan who is the only female in her class. When she talks about her work, she perks up quickly. “It’s I who have an advantage over boys,” she says. “When I finish I hope I will get a job and with the competitionif there are five boys I will be selected from among the boysthat will be an advantage.”

    In Goma, a few pioneering women are stepping into blue jumpsuits, cranking the wheels and pouring the foundations for their city so it might not just withstand the next upheaval, but possibly prevent it.ac

  • Regional security: Jonathan off to Congo

    President Goodluck Jonathan on Monday left Abuja for Oyo in the Republic of Congo to consult with his Congolese counterpart, President Denis Sassou Nguesso on the current security situation in West and Central Africa.

    According to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the consultation meeting is ahead of the meeting of the African Union’s Peace and Security Council which opens in the Congolese town on Wednesday.

    Jonathan, who was accompanied by some of his principal aides and advisers, will return to Abuja on Tuesday.

  • CAF Champions League: Pillars’ in Congo with 84-man delegation

    CAF Champions League: Pillars’ in Congo with 84-man delegation

    • Emordi gets trophy mandate

    Players and officials of Kano Pillars left for Kinshasa, DR Congo yesterday night for their CAF Champions League first leg clash against AS Vita.

    The delegation was originally scheduled to leave the Aminu Kano International Airport this morning, but the club management changed the flight schedule on Friday due to unfavourable weather forecast. The trip was thus moved back by a day and the team left Thursday night.

    The club’s media officer, Idris Malikawa told SportingLife that the 84-man delegation traveled aboard a chartered Congo Airline.

    “We received important information about the weather condition in DR Congo which warranted the need to reschedule our flight arrangement from Friday to Thursday.

    “We need to be there on time to acclimatise with the weather condition there. As I am talking to you now we are already on board and ready for the trip,” Malikawa told SportingLife last night.

    18 players and 7 technical crew, all club board members, state government officials, state FA chairman and NFF representatives were part of the 84-man delegation that left for Kinshasa.

    Meanwhile, the management of Kano Pillars have set a CAF Champions League trophy as the target for its new Technical Adviser, Okey Emordi.

    Emordi was officially unveiled to the board at the club’s secretariat in Kano on Wednesday by the Pillars chairman, Abba Yola.

    Yola told SportingLife that the board charged Emordi to ensure that Pillars retain the Glo Nigeria Premier League title won back-to-back in the two previous seasons and help the club win the Federation Cup.

    “It is important that we maintain the status quo by retaining the Glo League title and, most importantly, win the CAF Champions League and Federation Cup which have been missing in our trophy cabinet,” Abba Yola told SportingLife.

    Yola also said the club will not interfere with Emordi’s job while advising him to assess the qualification of the other coaches in the team and work with anyone that has the experience that meets the standard of the League Managemnt Company (LMC), CAF and FIFA requirements.

  • EAGLETS WALLOP CONGO 7-0

    EAGLETS WALLOP CONGO 7-0

    •To play Tunisia in semi

    NIGERIA’S Golden Eaglets have qualified for the semi-final of the African Junior Championship currently taking place in Morocco after they beat Congo 7-0 in the final group game played on Saturday.

    Kelechi Iheanacho’s hat-trick and Isaac Success’ brace sealed victory for Nigeria against a less experienced Congolese side.

    The result means the Nigerian side have booked a ticket to the FIFA Under-17 World Cup in the United Arab Emirates.

    Iheanacho opened scoring for Nigeria in the early minutes of the game to set the Eaglets on the tone.

    Isaac Success made it two for Nigeria in the 27th minute, and added another within six minutes interval through a spot kick after Congo’s left back Imouele was sent off to reduce the team to ten men.

    Congo were desperate to prevent further damage, and they were further reduced to nine men after Yobi was sent off in the 40th minute.

    And the development favoured Nigeria when they scored their fourth goal through Iheanacho with one minute before the break.

    Four minutes into the second half, Nigeria scored the fifth goal through Musa Yahaya, and the Eaglets continued their ride over Congo when Ifeanyi Mathew scored the 6th goal in the 60th minute.

    With four minutes remaining, Iheanacho completed his hat-trick on the night with a powerful goal to ensure Nigeria advance to the semi-final with a 7-0 victory.

    Nigeria had several chances to increase the tally, but were unable to finish, with the Congolese now on the defensive.

     

  • AYC U17: Golden Eaglets beat Congo 7-0

    AYC U17: Golden Eaglets beat Congo 7-0

    The Golden Eaglets on Saturday at the ongoing African Under- 17  Football Championship defeated Congo 7-0  inside the Stade de Marrakech in Morocco .

    With the victory, the team is now through to the semi- finals of the competition and the U17 World Cup to hold in United Arab Emirate later in the year.

    Kelechi Iheanacho scored  a hat-trick.