Tag: Senegal

  • Neville claims Bellingham is close to the complete player

    Since Jude Bellingham ignited a World Cup triumph over Senegal, veteran England defender Gary Neville believes the midfielder is nearly a complete player.

    Another outstanding performance by the teenager helped Gareth Southgate’s team win 3-0 on Sunday to advance to the quarterfinals in Qatar.

    The midfielder Bellingham of Borussia Dortmund has emerged as a vital player for the Three Lions during this competition and appears to have cemented his spot in the starting lineup.

    Neville claimed the 19-year-old has earned his spot and added that he appears to already possess a mastery and maturity in an England jersey that few others possess.

    “It’s very rare you see a midfield player as comfortable in his own half as in the attacking half,” he told ITV. “He looks like he can do absolutely everything.

    “Is he a holding player, an attacking player? He’s everything in one. He’s fantastic, [and] so young, but it’s the composure, maturity and fearlessness I can’t get my head around.

    “I watched players play for England for many years, the weight of the shirt was enormous. He just doesn’t feel it at all, he looks like he belongs out there, like he wants it and needs it in his life.”

    Bellingham and England will face holders France in their quarter-final tie, with the pair set to meet on Saturday in the concluding match of the last eight.

  • Senegal ‘have not failed’ at World Cup – president

    It was a night of disappointment for Senegal at the World Cup in Qatar on Sunday after they lost 3-0 to England at the knockout stage.

    The Teranga Lions were without their key players which proved to be a blow to them as the England midfield dominated play.

    England will meet France in the quarter-finals on Saturday.

    In a tweet, Senegalese President Macky Sall expressed satisfaction with the team’s performance at the tournament.

    He said: “Dear Lions, You have not failed. And you played without Sadio [Mane], [Cheikhou] Kouyate and [Idrissa] Gana. You are among the top 16 teams in the world and England were a strong opponent.”

    Talisman Sadio Mane expressed similar sentiments on Twitter.

    “The people are very proud of your journey which has warmed the hearts of the supporters, defending the national flag with dignity.”

    He added: “The learning continues. We will go in search of other trophies.”

    Source: BBC.com 

  • Kane fit and ready to fire for England in Senegal clash

    Harry Kane feels “as match fit as I’m ever going to feel” as he prepares to lead England against Senegal at the World Cup on Sunday.

    After suffering an ankle injury in the opening 6-2 triumph over Iran, England captain Harry Kane has failed to score in Qatar and has had trouble getting back into top form.

    He admits he would have preferred to have established his account, but he is not very concerned and claims it is all part of a strategy to peak as the competition progresses.

    The Tottenham striker said: “At the World Cup in 2018, from a physical side of things, we started the tournament well, I scored a load of goals and as the tournament progressed, my performances dipped.

    “At the Euros I tried to do it the other way round to make sure I was in the best place for the knockouts. I’d love to be sitting here with two or three goals but, minutes-wise, it hasn’t been too tough, and hasn’t been too physical heading into the knockout stages.

    “I feel really good, I feel as match fit as I’m ever going to feel. Only time will tell but hopefully I can do well tomorrow and bring my best form into the knockout phase.”

    On his ankle, he added: “It feels fine. I had that knock in the first game but it’s been getting better day by day and I almost don’t feel it at all now.

    “Form-wise I feel like I’ve been playing well. The goals are what I will be judged on but I am calm and always try to focus on the team, do my best and I can do that in many different ways.

    “I will continue to do that and if the goals come then great. As a striker I always want to be scoring goals, it’s going to be a tough game against Senegal but hopefully I can get off the mark.”

    “I think we’re in a good place. The group stage is just about getting through, we did our job and now it’s a second competition of knockout football. We have to be prepared to face a tough side on Sunday.

    “Senegal’s greatest asset is their togetherness, that’s what’s seen them become African champions and get through the group stage here. It’ll be a tough test but you’re at the World Cup, so you expect to play against the best in the world.”

    England boss Gareth Southgate has a fully fit squad to choose from but some selection dilemmas, primarily in attacking positions with Marcus Rashford, Bukayo Saka, Jack Grealish, Phil Foden and Raheem Sterling all candidates to play wide of Kane.

    “It’s a good position to be in,” said Southgate. “You want your players in confident mood and our forward players are. You want to make the best decision possible and in some respects I am not sure there’s a right or wrong answer.

    “They all offer different attributes and it’s just trying to get the balance right and make the best decisions.”

    Southgate is aware of the task that awaits his side and does not feel the absence of injured Bayern Munich forward Sadio Mane weakens Senegal.

    He added: “We’ve been really impressed by them. They are African champions and have a lot of belief in the team. They have some excellent individual players that can cause problems and a good structure.

    “[Senegal coach] Aliou [Cisse] has done a fantastic job. They were unlucky not to qualify from their group in 2018 and did so this time.

    “Mane is an incredible player and every team in the world would want to have him but Senegal have become stronger in his absence. They have shown great spirit but losing him doesn’t change the level of difficulty of the fixture tomorrow. We have to be at our very best to win the game.”

     

  • Senegal’s parliament brawls after MP hits woman colleague

    Senegal’s parliament turned chaotic on Thursday after opposition MP Massata Samb hit Amy Ndiaye Gniby from the ruling party.

    The brawl took place during a budget presentation.

    In videos circulating on social media, the agitated Amy Ndiaye Gniby could be seen throwing a chair at her attacker.

    Since a July legislative election where the ruling party lost its comfortable majority, there has been tension between the ruling and opposition politicians.


  • World 2022: African teams in the Round of 16

    Shocked by the zero out of five, four years ago, in Russia, where Nigeria, Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, and Senegal had gone out in the first round, Africa will have at least two, and perhaps three, representatives in the next round.

    Morocco even finished at the top of its group F, which was very tough with the Croatian vice-champions of the world and the Belgians, as it had done in 1986 in front of Portugal and England.

    The last African team to have managed to take first place in a group was Nigeria in 1998.

    It is joined by Senegal, which recovered from Sadio Mané’s injury just before the start of the competition and a frustrating opening loss to the Netherlands (2-0).

    Tunisia, who beat a reshuffled France (1-0) for the last day of Group D, came close, but Ghana, second in Group H before facing Uruguay, could also pass the first round, while the mission will be more complicated for Cameroon, facing Brazil.

    Africa has had more than two teams in the World Cup round of 16.

  • World Cup 2022: England to face Senegal in last 16

    England’s 3-0 victory over Wales on Tuesday guaranteed them a spot in the World Cup’s round of 16. They will play African champions Senegal there.

    The following information about their opponents will help you understand the path that Gareth Southgate’s team may need to take to win the World Cup for the first time since 1966.

    Who do England play next?

    After winning Group B to advance to the knockout rounds, England will take on Senegal.

    After defeating Ecuador 2-1 earlier on Tuesday, Senegal advanced from the group stage for just the second time, finishing second to Netherlands in Group A.

    When do England play next?

    That match will take place on Sunday, 4 December at the Al Bayt Stadium in Qatar.

    What time do England play on Sunday?

    England’s last-16 tie kicks off at 19:00 GMT – 22:00 local time in Doha.

    How good are the Senegal football team?

    Senegal, which is ranked 18th globally and first among African countries, won the Africa Cup of Nations for the first time in 2021 after losing in the finals in 2019 and 2002.

    In 2002, they made it to the World Cup quarterfinals, but they didn’t qualify again until 2018, when they lost in the group stage with just one victory in three games.

    However, they will be without a number of important players against England on Sunday as Bayern Munich striker Sadio Mane was forced to withdraw from the competition due to injury and Everton midfielder Idrissa Gueye is serving a one-match suspension.

    Have England and Senegal met before?

    This will be the first time the two sides have played each other.

    Where is Senegal?

    Senegal is in West Africa, next to the Atlantic Ocean.

    Who will England play if they beat Senegal?

     

    The winner of Group D, presently France, or the runner-up of Group C, currently Argentina, await England in the quarterfinals, making their path to the championship game possibly difficult.

    On Saturday, December 10, that game will be played, and a semi-final will follow on Wednesday, December 14, four days later.

    England might play Croatia, who finished second in 2018, as well as Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal.

    On December 18, the championship game will be held in Qatar at the Lusail Stadium. The Netherlands, Poland, Spain, or Brazil are possible rivals because they are all on the opposite side of the draw.

  • World Cup: Street celebrations after Senegal advance

    Street celebrations erupted in Senegalese capital, Dakar, after the men’s football national team advanced into the World Cup’s knockout stages for only the second time in the country’s history.

    Senegal defeated Ecuador 2-1 on Tuesday night to finish as runners-up in Group A behind the Dutch.

    The win saw Aliou Cissé’s side set up a last-16 meeting with Group B winners England on Sunday (19:00 GMT).

    Crowds poured to the streets of Dakar after the final whistle – many waving the country’s flag while others chanted praise for the players.

    One group of supporters went to the presidential palace where they were met by President Macky Sall.

    Source: BBC

  • 2022 World Cup: Koulibaly powers Senegal to last 16 after win over Ecuador

    2021 Africa Cup of Nations champions, Senegal, booked a place in the last 16 of the 2022 FIFA World Cup following their win over Ecuador on Tuesday, November 29.

    A first-half penalty goal from Ismaila Sarr and a Kalidou Koulibaly header ensured that the Teranga Lions overcame their first-game loss to progress to the next stage of the competition.

    Senegal started the game on a stronger foot as they needed a win to see them go past the group stage ahead of the South Americans.

    Sarr turned up to score the opening goal of the game after stepping up to score from the penalty spot after he had been fouled in the box.

    The Watford forward sent the goalkeeper the wrong to give Aliou Cisse’s side a deserved lead in the opening half.

    Moises Caicedo drew Ecuador levelled 22 minutes after the recess as he ended up on a Felix Torres cross to beat Edouard Mendy.

    But their joy was shortlived as Koulibaly scored three minutes later to restore Senegal’s lead and secure their victory.

    The win sees the West African side qualify alongside the Netherlands, who beat Qatar in the other Group A fixture.

  • World cup: Senegal beat Ecuador 2-1 to qualify for knockout stage

    Senegal have qualified for the first knockout stage of the 2022 FIFA Qatar world cup. The teranga lions beat Ecuador 2-1 in a pulsating encounter that is arguably the best showing of the African champions at the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha, Qatar.

    The important win ensured Senegal got six points, enough to sit second place in group A where Netherlands led with seven, having easily gone past hosts Qatar in a 2- 0 win,- a match played simultaenously with that of Senegal against Ecuador.

    It is the first time that Senegal have claimed back-to-back World Cup victories and.the third time the reigning Africa Cup of Nations holders have reached the knockout phase of the World Cup. Previous occasions were by Nigeria, when they reached the last 16 in 1994 and 2014.

    For hosts Qatar, it was a sad ending. Though it was well known the show was over for the team, after been eliminated Friday when they lost to Senegal 3-1, their play for pride did not produce a result they had hoped for as Netherlands proved to good to beat or salvage anything from.

    Source: Africa News

  • Senegal’s Aliou Cisse says won’t ‘overthink’ Equador game

    Coach Aliou Cisse anticipated Senegal’s Group A championship match against Ecuador on Monday.

    The AFCON champions go into Tuesday’s showdown knowing a win guarantees a spot in the round of 16, and could see them finish as group winners if the Netherlands fail to beat Qatar.

    A point seprates the top three in Group A, with Netherlands (1st) and Ecuador (2nd) on four points and Senegal (3rd) three.

    A win is likely to be the only result that will send ‘The Lions of Teranga’ into the knockout stages.

    In the unlikely event the already-eliminated hosts beat Louis van Gaal’s Oranje, a draw keeps Senegal in contention.

    “We have to win if we want to continue with this adventure”, said Cisse, “not going to the round of 16 would be a hard pill to swallow”, the 46-year-old added.

     

    Source: African News

  • Onana left out by Senegal for disciplinary reasons

    Goalkeeper Andre Onana was excluded from the Cameroon squad for Monday’s 3-3 draw against Serbia due to disciplinary issues, according to Rigobert Song, who emphasized that the decision “had to happen.”

    Despite allegations that the 26-year-playing old’s style in the first World Cup loss to Switzerland was the cause for Onana’s exclusion, Song declined to expound on the situation but was confident in his choice for the team as a whole.

    Onana made the most touches outside of the penalty area by a goalie in a World Cup match (26) since records were kept in 1966 against the Swiss.

    Song said: “The goalkeeper position is very important but we are in a tournament and I know what I have to do and that is to ensure the team takes precedence over any individuals.

    “In a squad, you need discipline and if you can’t fit in with that, then you need to accept responsibility for that. Perhaps sometimes you need to take strong action to help people come to the realisation that certain things need to be done.

    “All the 26 players are in a position to play. I took a risk but I accept the responsibility. I am interested in the players that I have at my disposal. Andre has been left out, you need to respect the rules that apply to everyone. It was something that had to happen.”

    Devis Epassy, who should have done better with Serbia’s second goal but otherwise displayed good leadership, was brought in to replace Onana.

    Song added: “Everyone that did play was capable and those that didn’t want to be a part of that, well they can be judged. Epassy showed he is also a very competent goalkeeper.

    “I will talk about this in due course, I want to focus now on the Brazil game. We want to deal with players that want to be in the squad and that are proud to represent Cameroon.

    “We are talking about one of the best goalkeepers in Europe [in Onana]. We don’t question his ability but you do need to ensure the team takes precedence over individuals.

    “For the time being I have asked him to wait and see if he is willing to stay with us. It’s up to him to a certain extent, he will have to agree to accept the rules.”

  • Kumasi-born Muntari Mohammed nets Qatar’s first-ever World Cup goal in Senegal defeat

    Mohammed Muntari, a striker for Qatar, was born in Kumasi, the second-largest city in Ghana. Prior to moving abroad, he played for a number of Ghanaian clubs, notably Glolamp Academy, which is owned by former Ghanaian great Nii Odartey Lamptey.

    He scored Qatar’s first-ever World Cup goal against Senegal on Friday, a 3-1 loss that all but sealed their destiny. He came off the bench.

    Mohammed Muntari entered the game in the 74th minute, and four minutes later he headed the host nation’s first World Cup goal by converting a cross from the right side.

    The Middle Eastern side battled valiantly before Senegal condemned them to a second straight defeat – and subsequently became the first country knocked out of the competition after the Netherlands drew 1-1 against Ecuador.

    But African champions Senegal are up and running in Group A.
    Boulaye Dia broke the deadlock four minutes before half-time, slamming home to punish Boualem Khoukhi’s miscued clearance.

    Looking to hit back in the second period, Qatar’s hopes were dashed when former Bristol City striker Famara Diedhiou rose to flick in a glorious header just three minutes after the break.

    Watford’s Ismaila Sarr had an early chance on his 50th cap but struck into the side-netting, while Idrissa Gueye of Everton’s rasping drive went narrowly wide.
    Qatar felt they should have had a first-half penalty when Akram Afif was bundled over in the box by Sarr, but referee Antonio Lahoz pointed only for a goal-kick, much to the anger of the home supporters.

    Chelsea goalkeeper Edouard Mendy made stunning reflex saves to deny Almoez Ali and Ismail Mohamad, but he could do nothing about Mohammed Muntari’s powerful header.

    Qatar was searching for the equalizer, but Bamba Dieng stroked in to deflate the home following and leave their team bottom of the group without a point after two games played.

  • Denmark not frightened of Mbappe says coach Hjulmand

    Senegal and coach Aliou Cisse have been forced to rely on the back-up squad in Qatar since losing star attacker Sadio Mane.

    On Friday, they stepped up and delivered, with Dia’s goal ending a stretch of 31 shots without a World Cup goal.

    Senegal was more precise this time, scoring three goals on just 0.8xG. (compared to one goal from 0.9 xG for Qatar).

    Asked if he was frightened at the thought of trying to keep Mbappe quiet, Hjulmand replied: “I don’t think it’s good to be frightened. We have plans to stop him. At Parken [in September] we had a good plan, a good structure. He had two or three chances and no matter what plans you have against top players, you can’t keep them down.

    “We have carried out plenty of analysis to try to minimise his impact, we don’t want him to show the talent he has.”

    With France’s captain Simon Kjaer playing alongside Giroud at Milan, Hjulmand is hopeful that some inside information can also assist contain the French danger.

    He added: “I hope it’s an advantage. A player like Giroud is very good at what he does. It’s a pleasure seeing so many strikers in the latter stages of their careers showing how to move in the box, showing how to be dangerous in their positioning and showing how to finish in the box.

    “Giroud is better now than he was before, he is very dangerous. Simon knows him very well and we have been talking about the small details.”

    Denmark enjoyed back-to-back wins against Didier Deschamps’ side in the Nations League earlier this year but Hjulmand knows facing them at a World Cup is a different proposition.

    “We have tested them a couple of times but this is a different tournament,” he said. “But we know that if we play our best we have a chance of getting a good result.

    “To be able to do that, we have to take a big step forward in quality from the first match.”

    Denmark and France kick off six hours after the other Group D encounter between Australia and Tunisia, and Hjulmand admitted the result of that game could affect his approach to the game.

    “I won’t watch that game, but I will obviously know the outcome as it will influence how we approach our game,” he said.

    “I am only really talking about the last 25 minutes. We are focused on winning the match but the other game will influence our approach.”

  • Qatar 1-3 Senegal: Hosts going down with a whimper

    After losing to Senegal 3-1, World Cup hosts Qatar are again facing the prospect of leaving the competition early.

    After being defeated 2-0 by Ecuador in their initial Group A match, Qatar’s late charge on Friday at Al Thumama Stadium fell short of securing a crucial victory.

    Senegal had the upper hand after goals from Boulaye Dia and Famara Diedhiou, so Qatar’s first World Cup goal from Mohammed Muntari gave them hope.

    After Senegal had a strong start, the raucous Qatar supporters seated behind Edouard Mendy’s goal were incensed in the 34th minute when Akram Afif was allegedly fouled by Ismaila Sarr. However, referee Antonio Mateu Lahoz rejected the seeming legitimate penalty appeals.

    However, just as Qatar had gotten comfortable in the game, Boualem Khoukhi’s catastrophic error was made evident when his clearance fell to Dia, who finished calmly and without error.

    Qatar’s hopes were dealt a further blow three minutes into the second half – Diedhiou turning in Ismail Jakobs’ inswinging corner.

    Senegal had Mendy to thank for two excellent stops as Qatar searched for a goal back, the Chelsea goalkeeper brilliantly denying Almoez Ali and Ismaeel Mohammad.

    Muntari’s superb header four minutes after coming on set up a grandstand finish, yet Dieng swept home to strike the decisive blow and leave Qatar on the brink.

    What does it mean? Little hope for hosts

    Qatar won the Asian Cup in 2019, and given they had three more years to build ahead of this tournament, they would have been hoping to put on a show on home turf.

    However, despite their efforts, the hosts have not yet met the standards needed.

    Qatar is on the verge of leaving after defeat. If Ecuador and the Netherlands draw in their other Group A match on Friday, or if the Oranje triumph, they will be eliminated.

    Now, the Netherlands’ only chance of moving on is if Qatar can get lucky and defeat the Netherlands in their final group game the following week. Even that might not be enough.

    Senegal find their shooting boots

    Senegal and coach Aliou Cisse have been forced to rely on the back-up squad in Qatar since losing star attacker Sadio Mane.

    On Friday, they stepped up and delivered, with Dia’s goal ending a stretch of 31 shots without a World Cup goal.

    Senegal was more precise this time, scoring three goals on just 0.8xG. (compared to one goal from 0.9 xG for Qatar).

    Blunt Qatar pay the price

    Ali’s shot, saved by Mendy, midway through the second half was Qatar’s first attempt on target of the tournament.

    They ultimately finished with three efforts on target in this match, but the lack of composure in front of goal – and the shortage of creativity to get there on many occasions – was evident.

    Key Opta stats

    – Qatar have become the first host nation to lose two matches in a single group round of a World Cup.
    – Senegal scored three goals in a World Cup match for a second time, after a 3-3 draw with Uruguay in 2002. This was also the first time they won a World Cup game by a margin of more than one goal, in what was their 10th match at the finals.
    – Qatar became only the third host nation to concede three goals in a single group-stage game, after South Africa in 2010 and Russia in 2018 (both 3-0 defeats to Uruguay).
    – Senegal became the first African side to beat the host nation at a World Cup; all of the previous four instances of an African side facing the hosts had seen them lose by an aggregate 12-2 score.
    – Aged 29 years and 345 days, Diedhiou became the oldest Senegal player ever to score at the World Cup.

     

  • 2022 World Cup: Senegal beat Qatar to become first African team to win a game

    After defeating Qatar on Friday, November 25, Senegal became the first African nation to win at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

    Boulaye Dia, Famara Diedhiou, and Bamba Dieng scored all of Aliou Cisse’s team’s goals as they bounced back from their defeat to the Netherlands in their opening match.

    Mohammed Muntari scored a consolation goal for the home team after coming off the bench, but it wasn’t enough to earn them a point.

    Despite this, Qatar is again in danger of being eliminated after losing their first match to Ecuador last Sunday.

    Dia broke the scoreless stalemate four minutes before halftime to make up for Boualem Khoukhi’s poor clearing.

    Three minutes after halftime, former Bristol City striker Famara Diedhiou rose to flick in a superb header, ending Qatar’s hopes of regaining the lead.

    On his 50th game, Ismaila Sarr of Watford wasted an early chance to score, and Idrissa Gueye of Everton’s rasping drive just missed the target.

    During the first half, Akram Afif was tripped by Sarr, and Qatar believed a penalty should have been given. To the chagrin of the home supporters, Antonio Lahoz merely gave out a goal-kick.

    Edouard Mendy of Chelsea made amazing reaction saves to deny Almoez Ali and Ismail Mohamad goals, but he was helpless to stop Mohammed

    Qatar was looking for an equalizer after two games, but Bamba Dieng’s goal demoralized the home audience and sent their

     

  • Senegal with chance to keep world cup dream alive in clash with Qatar this Friday

    A new day beckons for Senegal at the World Cup. Beaten by the Netherlands in their first match in Qatar, the Lions of Teranga must react this Friday against the host nation.

    Like Edouard Mendy, the African champions were unusually feeble in defensive last Monday. For this second game, they will have to do without their key player Cheikou Kouyate.

    This should be the only initial change in the starting line-up of the Lions of Teranga.

    Senegal’s power just as with Ecuador is physically no match for Qatar who were totally outclassed in their opening match.

    Akram Afif and Almoez Ali, the stars of Al Annabi did not prove to be any threat even if their coach, the Spaniard, Felix Sanchez, preferred to field them on account of pressure.

    A defeat against Senegal would mean elimination and humiliation for the Qataris.

    Senegal will also have an eye on the clash between the two leaders of the group, the Netherlands and Ecuador, where they hope to get and secure qualification from their group against the South Americans next week.

     

    Source: African News

  • Depay looking for ‘more rhythm’ after ‘little bit of a part’ in opening win

    Memphis Depay was frustrated to be restricted to the role of a substitute in the Netherlands’ World Cup opener, but he is confident of having a greater impact in coming matches.

    Depay had been ruled out of Monday’s match against Senegal in Louis van Gaal’s pre-match news conference.

    But the Barcelona forward appeared on the bench and was introduced in the final half an hour with the game still goalless.

    Although Depay did not get on the scoresheet, he was involved in the build-up to both Oranje goals in a 2-0 win, with Cody Gakpo scoring the first before Davy Klaassen tucked away the rebound from the Netherlands number 10’s shot.

    Speaking afterwards, Depay said: “I feel good, I feel good, I feel fit. Obviously a player like me always wants to start from the kick-off, but this was the plan and now we focus on the next game.

    “I’m sure that I’ll feel better, and I’ll work hard to find more rhythm. I’m happy that I could do a little bit of a part in 30 minutes today.”

    On Gakpo, who benefited from Depay’s absence and was preferred to Klaassen, he said: “I’m very happy for him. He’s a hard worker, he’s very dedicated in his career. He’s a young baller.

    “I’m very happy. He’s a great guy, a young guy, lots to learn, so I’m sure you’ll see more moments like this.”

    Despite missing out on the XI, the stoppage-time clincher was also a big moment for Klaassen.

    “It’s a dream, of course,” he said. “It’s my first World Cup game, so to score your first World Cup goal and to win… you can’t ask much more.”

    Klaassen was also asked about the OneLove captain’s armband, which Virgil van Dijk had been due to wear until FIFA threatened sanctions.

    The campaign promotes “inclusion and sends a message against discrimination of any kind”, but those planning to wear the armband feared they would immediately be shown a yellow card.

    “We’re still behind the statement,” Klaassen added. “FIFA forced us to not wear it, but the statement is still there.”

    Van Dijk himself did not appear impressed by discussion of the topic, saying: “You know exactly what the outcome was.

    “Two hours before the England game, the news came out, and I was sleeping at the time. I had no influence on anything.

    “I’m not dealing with the armband because I don’t want to get a yellow card.”

    Source: Livescore

     

  • World Cup 2022: Senegal loses first match against Netherlands

    A Senegal without talisman Sadio Mane played some impressive football on Monday evening but unfortunately suffered a late heartbreak.

    The Teranga Lions today locked horns with the Dutch national team in the second Group A encounter of the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

    Throughout the first half, both national teams entertained fans in the stands with some delightful end-to-end football action.

    The Netherlands perhaps had the best opportunity to score in the first half when Frenkie de Jong failed to capitalise on a one-on-one situation by trying to go past the retreating defenders.

    With all to play for in the second half, Senegal opened up more and caused a lot of trouble for the defense of the opponent.

    Unfortunately, the many forward advances never resulted in a goal.

    In the 84th minute, the Netherlands finally broke the deadlock of the game when Senegal goalkeeper Eduard Mendy came out for the ball too late.

    Before he could reach the ball, Cody Gakpo had already headed the ball and found the back of the net with his effort to give the Netherlands the lead.

    Late in stoppage time, substitute Davy Klaasen capitalised on another mistake from Mendy to give the Dutch national team a 2-0 goal lead.

    Eventually, the Netherlands bagged the maximum three points thanks to the 2-0 win.

    Up next for Senegal, they will take on Qatar on Friday in the second Group A game.

    The host nation lost the opening game of the tournament to Ecuador on Sunday night.

  • Mane tells Senegal’s Lions to show pride in their performance

    Sadio Mane is backing Senegal’s Lions of Teranga to show they still have sharp claws without him in Monday’s World Cup opener against the Netherlands.

    Bayern Munich forward Mane was set to spearhead the team’s quest in Qatar, but a cruel leg injury has ruled him out of the tournament.

    On paper, it seems the team are significantly weakened by his absence, but Mane says the reality could be rather different, backing the group he left to rise to their challenge.

    The former Liverpool star wrote on Instagram: “This Monday, our dear country will compete in the World Cup, Qatar 2022. I am sure the Lions will transcend and approach every game as a true final.

    “I am also convinced that all Senegalese will be in front of the small screen to support and encourage our valiant national team.

    “Like all supporters of the ‘Taniere’ [lions’ den], I am convinced that my team-mates will fight as one man and as they usually do to honour our dear Senegal. Long live Senegal, come on the Lions.”

    Senegal were surprise quarter-finalists in 2002, and as reigning Africa Cup of Nations champions they were considered by many as the continent’s biggest hope for World Cup success this time around.

    Losing Mane will change that perception for many observers.

    The 30-year-old had a tendon reattached to the head of his right fibula after being ruled out of Senegal’s squad, and he could face several months on the sidelines.

    Mane thanked well-wishers, writing: “Many of you have sent messages of support following my injury. Thank God, the surgery I had in the middle of the week went well. I want to take this opportunity to thank and show my appreciation to you all.”

    Source: Livescore

     

  • WC: Senegal get ready to play the Netherlands without Mané

    The squad and the coach of Africa’s reigning champions had to come to terms with the absence of star winger Sadio Mané and find a new strategy to realize their ambitions and advance in the competition.

    “It’s not easy to win the World Cup. We know that all of the games are going to be difficult. We’re going to have to take them one by one,” Aliou Cissé told journalists.

    “It’s true that 20 years ago, 35 years ago, African football was very different. Today, we have players who play in the best leagues in the world, in the best leagues in Europe”, he concluded.

    The Senegalese team indeed remains resourceful without Mané. AS Monaco winger Ismael Jakobs was called to join the squad but is facing administrative issues delaying his participation.

    Forward Krepin Diatta insisted on cohesion, a much-needed strength.

    “He [Sadio Mané] is our technical leader. Of course, we would have liked him to be here, but God decided otherwise. We do though keep a very strong mentality”, he said during a press conference.

    “We are comfortable being together and we are strong as a team. Of course it’s a big loss, but we have a strong mentality. We show teamwork and we’re good together and I’m sure we’re going to get some good results at this World Cup.”

    After playing the Netherlands on November 21, the Teranga Lions will face Ecuador and hosts Qatar in Group A.

    Mané who was ruled out of the tournament after picking up a leg injury, took to Instagram Sunday to cheer on his teammates. He said he was sure the team would fight “as one man”.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Bullish Cisse says Senegal are ‘ready for the challenge’ of facing Netherlands without Mane

    Aliou Cisse concedes Senegal will be without their best player heading into the World Cup but insists his squad are “ready for the challenge”.

    The African champions suffered the crushing news that star man Sadio Mane would miss the tournament after having to undergo surgery on a fibula injury sustained in Bayern Munich’s 6-1 thrashing of Werder Bremen 12 days ago.

    Mane’s importance to Senegal is highlighted by the fact he has been involved in 12 of the last 25 goals scored by Cisse’s team in the finals of either the World Cup or Africa Cup of Nations.

    And his absence has forced a tactical re-think ahead of Monday’s opener against the Netherlands at the Al Thumama Stadium in Doha.

    Cisse said: “Obviously it’s a great shame for Sadio and the team, but we have to think of the player’s well-being.

    “It’s a great challenge as all coaches build their team around the best player and that’s the case for us.

    B”ut we have a strong team with experienced players and young players who are ready to rise to this challenge. I am sure we have a strong enough team. It’s not easy to play without a player like Sadio and we have a strong opponent in the Netherlands, but the players are ready.”

    Senegal winger Krepin Diatta was a little less bullish, admitting Mane’s absence had had an impact within the squad.

    The Monaco man said: “Sadio is an extremely important player for our team and we are determined to do what we can without him.

    “But of course it affects you, he is our best player and leader. We’d like him to be here, but God decided otherwise.”

    Senegal disappointed in exiting the 2018 World Cup in Russia at the group stage, but Cisse believes that experience – and their AFCON triumph earlier this year – stands them in good stead to go further in Qatar.

    “In 2018, it had been such a long time since Senegal had been to a World Cup, and we are now getting another chance,” he added.

    “We are African champions and we have new, excellent players that have strengthened the squad. Hopefully the mistakes of Russia won’t be repeated.”

    In the opposing dugout on Monday will be Louis van Gaal, a man Cisse described as a “benchmark”, and the former Paris Saint-Germain midfielder believes guiding his team to successive World Cups is another shot in the arm for African coaches, five of whom are present in Qatar.

    He said: “It’s progress that we have been seeing for some years now. We are aware that people are looking at us. If we lose in the first round, people will say we aren’t good enough.

    “I was born in Senegal – it’s important to understand the realities of the country you are managing. We are proud to represent African coaches and it’s a message we are sending them that they can also be at the highest level.”

    Source: Livescore

     

  • Angola win Africa Cup of Nations women’s handball tournament in Senegal

    It is four-in-a-row for Angola. The Palancas Negras has won the 2022 Africa Cup of Nations women’s handball tournament.

    As in 2021, they beat Cameroon in the final on Saturday 19 November at Dakar Arena, in Senegal.

    Their victory of 29-19 confirms their undisputed continental dominance.

    But they are far from satisfied. Team coach, Catito Nelson, said: “It’s the fruit of a lot of hard work. Angola has taken the lead over other African teams.

    “We must continue to work hard to improve our handball and keep this dominance so that this group of athletes continues to play at the highest level and win titles for Angola.”

    On the Cameroonian side, the disappointment remains great as at home in 2021.

    However, the Angolans are still far from weakening. Their thirst for titles reinforces their status as undisputed masters of African handball. It is a thirst for titles that got the better of the Cameroonians’ desire for revenge.

    The Indomitable Lionesses can only note the huge gap that separates Angola from the other nations of the continent.

    “Faced with a team like Angola with so many qualities: physical qualities, technical qualities, mental qualities and a great tactical sense, it does not forgive,” suggests Cameroon coach Serge Guebogo.

    “The message is simply that we have to go back to our roots and work to close the gap between Angola and the other nations.”

    It will therefore have to go back and work hard to dethrone the Angolan giant. Nothing could prevent Palancas Negras from lifting their 15th continental crown this year, the fourth in a row.

    The Angolans, who, as in Yaoundé a little more than a year ago, were able to resist in the most complicated moments of this 25th edition of the women’s handball ACN.

    Earlier  Congo beat the host country Senegal to finish on the podium and return with the bronze medal. The next tournament of the ACN Women’s Handball will be held in Cape Verde.

    Source: African News

  • Senegal’s Khaby Lame becomes FIFA World Cup 2022 Brand Ambassador

    Senegalese TikTok star, Khaby Lame has been announced as the Qatar national Bank’s official FIFA World Cup brand ambassador throughout the tournament.

    The Qatar National Bank is one of the largest financial institution in the Middle East.

    Khaby, who has over 150 million followers on Tiktok and over 80 million followers on Instagram will have a “dreaming big” themed television commercial with Qatar National Bank.

    According to QNB Spokesperson, “Lame was selected as a perfect representative of QNB Group’s values and Qatar’s can-do spirit. His ambitions have been achieved through a combination of hard work, determination, and imagination, much like the country of Qatar.”

    Early in the year, Lame was listed as the top earners in the 2022 Forbes list of Under 30 Europe Art and Culture list. With this new contract as a brand ambassador, his earnings are expected to shoot up to $10 million by the end of this year.

    Most of his earnings come from endorsement deals and content from social media especially Tiktok and Instagram.

     

    Source: theafricanhistory.com

  • Mane facing long road to recovery after World Cup dream is shattered

    Sadio Mane could face several months on the sidelines after undergoing the surgery that ended his slim hopes of playing for Senegal at the World Cup.

    The Bayern Munich forward underwent what his club described as a successful operation on Thursday.

    Bayern said in a statement: “During the operation, a tendon was reattached to the head of his right fibula.

    “The FC Bayern forward will therefore no longer be available to play for Senegal at the World Cup and will begin his rehab in Munich in the next few days.”

    According to widespread reports in Germany, Mane’s recovery is unlikely to be a quick one, with the former Liverpool forward said to be facing possibly three to four months out of action.

    African player of the year Mane sustained the leg injury when playing in Bayern’s 6-1 win against Werder Bremen last week.

    He was initially judged fit enough to be included in Aliou Cisse’s 26-man Senegal squad for the World Cup, with hopes he could be available by the knockout stages, but subsequent medical checks confirmed the need for surgery.

    A short statement from the Senegalese Football Federation read: “The FSF wishes a speedy recovery to its player Sadio Mane.”

    Senegal face Netherlands in their Group A opener on Monday before meeting Qatar and Ecuador.

    Bayern are due to resume their Bundesliga campaign against RB Leipzig on January 20. They headed into the World Cup break as leaders, chasing an 11th consecutive German league title.

    They face a Champions League last-16 tie against Paris Saint-Germain, with games scheduled for February 14 and March 8 in that heavyweight contest.

    Source: Livescore

     

  • Mane ruled out of World Cup for Senegal as fibula injury requires surgery

    Sadio Mane has been ruled out of the World Cup with a fibula injury, the Senegalese Football Federation confirmed on Thursday.

    Mane sustained the leg issue while playing in Bayern Munich’s 2-0 win over Schalke on Saturday, though he was deemed fit enough to be included in Aliou Cisse’s 26-man squad.

    It was announced on Tuesday that Mane would not play any part in Senegal’s opening matches, Cisse’s side saying they “will have to rely on playing the first games without Sadio”.

    But Thursday’s update confirms Mane’s injury will need surgery, thus ruling him out of the entire tournament in Qatar.

    A short statement from the Senegalese Football Federation read: “The FSF wishes a speedy recovery to its player Sadio Mane.”

    It comes as a huge blow for both Mane and Senegal after he played an instrumental part in their Africa Cup of Nations triumph, scoring the winning penalty in the final against Egypt in February.

    Senegal face Netherlands in their Group A opener on Monday before meeting Qatar and Ecuador, though they will have to attempt to reach the knockout stages without their star attacker.


    Source: Livescore

  • 50% of countries highly affected by climate change are in Africa – Patrick Low

    Sudan, Ethiopia, Senegal, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Tunisia, Mali, Mozambique, Morocco, Mauritania, Niger, Eritrea, Algeria, Sudan, Benin, Rwanda, Chad, Kenya, and Libya are just a few of the many African nations that have been identified as among the thirty (30) nations in the world that are most at risk from the effects of climate change.

    According to reports, these nations are experiencing the negative effects of climate change, including food crises, ocean acidification from rising CO2 levels, droughts, flood risks, storms, melting glaciers, rising sea levels that affect low-lying areas and coastal cities, declining crop yields, especially in tropical regions, and water shortages.

    These negative effects are leading to the destruction of tropical forests, forest fires, Malnutrition and heat stress, spread of vector-borne disease e.g., malaria, dengue fever etc., Physical displacement of populations and risks of mass migrations, Damage to ecosystems and species extinction, Sudden shifts in weather patterns and many more problems that are confronting humanity and the environment.

    Thus, international economist and a member of tralac Advisory Board who is also a former Chief Economist at the Word Trade Center, Patrick Low has challenged African countries to seize the opportunity of the ongoing COP 27 in Egypt to concentrate on Green Growth to improve competitiveness and enhance access in big markets.

    Addressing the 2022 tralac Annual Conference in Nairobi, Kenya, Patrick Low who currently serves as a fellow of the Asia Global Institute emphasized that there is the need for a clear and united African position to addressing the climate issues affecting the continent considering the fact that Africa’s population will double by 2050.

    Patrick Low distinguished between two main approaches to tackling climate change issues; namely abatement and adaptation where abatement which is also referred to also mitigation seeks to reduce emissions while adaptation refers to preparing the environment to sustain a given level of global warming. He however advised Africa to focus on the sustained growth trajectory relying on particularly the current integrated continental trading under AfCFTA.

    “Africa’s challenge is not abatement, but rather mapping out a sustainable growth trajectory. Green growth will improve competitiveness and enhance access in big markets,” he advised.

    The Geneva-based consultant on trade and trade-related matters also charged the continent to Support the development of a negotiated carbon price among major emitters and a market for carbon credits particularly when all the major emitters are not necessarily part of the top-tier list of countries that face the worse threats from climate change.

    “It is in all countries’ interest to act maximally, especially the major emitters on abatement and the richer countries also with finance for adaptation around the world,” he recommended.

    Patrick Low encouraged Africans to continue pushing for countries particularly big emitters of CO2 to fulfill their commitment to climate change financing in order to have funds tackle the adaptation approach of handling climate change.

    “Keep up the pressure on financing, remind RoW that Africa is an important carbon sink,” the international economist advocated.

    He added that adaptation is about reducing the impact of global warming and big emitters can pursue meaningful abatement policies, but this is less true of small emitters who are the most vulnerable to climate change with disparate income and development levels, vulnerabilities afflicting dozens of countries powerless to address them, even though everyone can play the appropriate part and therefore a Unified Africa can team with other parts of the world to corporate on the levels of addressing all climate change issues.

  • Senegal: judges can place convicts under electronic bracelet

    A group of Senegalese judges can now place some convicts or defendants on electronic bracelets rather than in prison, as the government inaugurated the center in Dakar on Tuesday to monitor them.

    This long-announced judicial device will come into full effect “as soon as we have a court decision in this direction,” an official at the electronic monitoring center said.

    The government presents the center, opened in the heart of the capital, as the first in West Africa. It is capable of tracking an individual under an electronic bracelet anywhere in the world to within a meter, he said.

    The Minister of Justice Ismaïla Madior Fall invited the magistrates to “appropriate this new device”, the electronic bracelet, during the inauguration. They should opt for deprivation of liberty “only when it is strictly necessary,” he said.

    Those convicted of rape, pedophilia, and drug trafficking are excluded from the scope.

    Senegal has been talking about introducing the electronic bracelet as an alternative to prison since 2018. It was approved in July 2020 by deputies.

    The use of this technology has raised reservations among justice professionals and rights advocates.

    The reservations relate to the capacity of the judicial system in this poor country to apply the measure, the unequal access to the means of communication that would allow it to be implemented, or the equity between those who would benefit from it or not.

    Objections also focus on the possible unsuitability of the measure to Senegalese mentalities.

    Rights advocates also say that the bracelet should not become the solution to the fundamental problem of disproportionate use of detention orders.

    Human rights defenders regularly denounce the conditions of detention and overcrowding in Senegalese prisons, the almost systematic use of detention orders, and the length of pretrial detention.

     

    Source: African News

  • Koulibaly puts blame on players for Chelsea slump

    Kalidou Koulibaly implored Chelsea players “to look each other in the eye” with the Blues players the only “culprits” for the increasing pressure on Graham Potter.

    Head coach Potter became the first Blues manager since Jose Mourinho in 2015 to lose three consecutive Premier League matches following a 1-0 defeat at Newcastle.

    The tepid nature of the Chelsea showing offered more reason for concern after the Blues managed just seven touches in the opposition box, their lowest since January against Manchester City.

    With Potter’s side eight points adrift of the Premier League’s top four, albeit with a game in hand over fourth-placed Tottenham, Koulibaly urged his team-mates to take responsibility for their recent form.

    “It hurts, we came here to take three points,” the Senegal international told Canal Plus.

    ”We knew that they were in a good moment, that they are putting on the intensity and that especially at home they have their audience behind them.

    “Today, Chelsea are not in their place and the only culprits are us. So we must look each other in the eye and continue to work to put Chelsea in their place.”

    The World Cup break could come at a good time for Chelsea as the Premier League pauses, with the Blues not in action again until a home clash with Bournemouth on December 27.

    Koulibaly will head to the Middle East with Senegal, who are in Group A alongside hosts Qatar, Ecuador and the Netherlands, though he hopes Chelsea can atone for their mistakes after the break.

    He added: ”The break comes at a good time for us, we need to recharge the batteries, think about something else and come back after the World Cup with a different mentality.”

  • Mane part of Senegal’s World Cup squad despite doubts over fibula injury

    Sadio Mane has been named in Senegal’s squad for the World Cup despite suffering a fibula injury less than two weeks before the tournament begins.

    The Bayern Munich attacker limped out of his side’s 6-1 Bundesliga thrashing of Werder Bremen on Tuesday, and the Bavarian giants subsequently confirmed he had injured his right fibula head.

    Reports in Germany and France said Mane’s availability for Senegal’s World Cup campaign – which begins against the Netherlands on November 21 – was in question, but Bayern did not rule him out of the tournament.

    Senegal coach Aliou Cisse has opted to take a risk on Mane by naming him in his 26-man party for the trip to Qatar, though he acknowledges the former Liverpool star’s condition must improve if he is to feature.

    “We are monitoring the situation and have sent one of our doctors to assess him,” Cisse said at a press conference in Dakar on Friday.

    “On Thursday, Sadio spent the whole day in Munich before travelling to Austria for further tests. The good news is that he does not need an operation.

    “We want the situation to evolve in two to three weeks. I don’t want to rule him out.”

    Mane scored the winning penalty as Senegal beat Egypt to win their first Africa Cup of Nations title earlier this year, and he has been directly involved in 12 of the last 25 goals scored by Senegal players at major tournaments (AFCON and World Cup), netting nine and assisting three.

    Chelsea defender Kalidou Koulibaly will captain the Lions of Teranga in Qatar, with Blues team-mate Edouard Mendy also set to start in goal.

    Senegal squad: Seny Dieng (Queens Park Rangers), Alfred Gomis (Rennes), Edouard Mendy (Chelsea); Fode Ballo-Toure (Milan), Pape Abou Cisse (Olympiacos), Abdou Diallo (RB Leipzig), Ismail Jakobs (Monaco), Kalidou Koulibaly (Chelsea), Formose Mendy (Amiens), Youssouf Sabaly (Real Betis); Pathe Ciss (Rayo Vallecano), Krepin Diatta (Monaco), Idrissa Gueye (Everton), Pape Gueye (Marseille), Cheikhou Kouyate (Nottingham Forest), Mamadou Loum (Reading), Nampalys Mendy (Leicester City), Moustapha Name (Pafos), Pape Matar Sarr (Tottenham); Boulaye Dia (Salernitana), Famara Diedhiou (Alanyaspor), Bamba Dieng (Marseille), Nicolas Jackson (Villarreal), Sadio Mane (Bayern Munich), Iliman Ndiaye (Sheffield United), Ismaila Sarr (Watford).

    Source: Livescore

  • Senegal’s Sadio Mane to miss 2022 World Cup tournament

    Sadio Mane will unfortunately not partake in the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

    The Senegalese has been left injured following Bayern Munich’s league game on Tuesday, November 8.

    Mane went down on 15 minutes and had to be replaced by Leroy Sane.

    “He’ll have to have an X-ray to see what’s happened. He took a blow to his tibial plateau [the head of the shin]. It’s a painful spot,” said Bayern coach Julian Nagelsmann.

    It comes just 13 days before Mane’s Senegal play their first game at the 2022 World Cup against the Netherlands.

    Bayern, meanwhile, cruised to victory with Serge Gnabry scoring a hat-trick.

    However, French newspaper, L’Equipe reports the Senegal starman will not be available for the Mundial to be staged in Qatar.

    The former Liverpool player is reported to be suffering from a tendon and is expected to miss several weeks of competition.

    Senegal coach Aliou Cissé is due to announce his list of players who will go to Qatar on Friday.

  • Senegal arrests journalist and government critic

    A prominent journalist has been arrested in Senegal over accusations that he distributed information liable to harm the country’s security.

    Pape Alé Niang, who runs the news website Dakar Matin, is well-known for his columns on current affairs, which are often critical of the Senegalese government.

    Mr Niang’s lawyer said his client had been detained at the central police station in Dakar on Sunday over three alleged offences.

    Local media say the arrest came after the journalist published recent articles about rape charges against Senegal’s main opposition leader, Ousmane Sonko.

    Source: BBC
  • World Cup: Senegal ‘will give everything to play a great tournament’ – Diatta

    4 years after the latest World Cup, the trophy awaits its new champion. The tournament will kick off on November 20 in Qatar.

    Senegal started the year on a high by capturing their maiden Africa Cup of Nations title.

    One of its stars Sadio Mané won the CAF best player award in July. In September he became the second African player to reach the podium of the Ballon d’Or prize.

    As the world tournament in Qatar approaches, the Teranga Lion winger Krepin Diatta craves for an equally rewarding end to 2022.

    “We won’t hide from the fact that we know we have a good team, with great players in each position”, the AS Monaco player says.

    “Now it is the World Cup, the biggest competition, so we won’t hide and we will give everything to play a great tournament, I think this is what we have to do.”

    If their mind is already set, the men of Alliou Cissé can build on what they’ve accomplished so far. In their friendlies ahead of the Qatar World Cup, they secured a win and a draw.

    The African champions will evolve in group A with hosts, Qatar.

    “There are so many good teams overall, and we will have to be ready from the start and do everything to make it out of this group”, the 23-year-old winger says.

    “We should not say that we are supposed to qualify from this group, it would be a mistake because we have to play and stay focused on it, and I think that if we do that then we have a chance to qualify.”

    Senegal’s first game will take place on November 23 against the Netherlands.

    They’ll also have to face Ecuador for a spot in round 2.

    On November 20, the world cup will start at the sixty-thousand-seat Al Bayt Stadium.

    All 64 games over the course of 29 days involving 32 team

     

    Source: African News

  • Senegal: Fishermen fear the worst from new gas terminal

    In Senegal, a new offshore gas terminal, located in the Atlantic Ocean about ten kilometres off Saint-Louis, is beginning to upset fishermen who are lamenting the loss of an area rich in fish. 

    A new danger may be looming on the horizon. At least, that’s what Senegalese fishermen fear. The new offshore gas terminal visible through the morning mist cloaking the Atlantic Ocean, where Senegal meets Mauritania, is the threat.

    The launch of gas production is expected to start next year. As it draws closer the Secretary-General of the fishing union braces for the worst; meaning the end of any fishing activity in the area.

    “Cohabitation is impossible. Once gas extraction begins, it will mean death for Saint-Louis’s fishing sector’, Moustapha Dieng predicts.

    “Saint-Louis is the capital of fishing, if you take into account the number of boats in Saint-Louis, the types of fishing found in Saint-Louis, they exist nowhere else”.

    “However, the fishing area is very small, it is practically stuck between the mouth of the river and the border with Mauritania where there are coastguards who’ve already killed 19 fishermen because they forbid access to their waters”, Dieng laments.

    Lately, seafarers have seen their catch dwindle. The authorities stepped up their control over the offshore platform and a security perimeter has been set up to the great displeasure of fishermen who say the area is precisely where most fish is found.

    The gas project has also drawn criticism from environmental groups.

    “No one can deny that resource exploitation has and will continue to have impacts on our environment”, Pape Fara Diallo analyses.

    “There will also be social impacts and when you see the communities that live next to where the resources will be exploited, especially here in Nguet Ndar (ed: fishing village of Saint-Louis) “, the chair of the National Publish What You Pay Coalition adds.

    “We feel people are concerned, we see the discrepancy between the billions that we are told will come from the extraction of offshore gas and the poverty that you see around you.”

    Injustice?

    Senegal’s gas discoveries account for 0.5 % of world reserves.

    But Energy and Oil Minister Sophie Gladima said “they were important enough to radically change the economy and industrial fabric of the nation and thereby its future prospects.”

    She underlined the legal framework needed to bring thousands of Senegalese jobs into the sector, and the setting up of the National Institute of Oil and Gas to turn out a highly qualified workforce.

    But fishermen say they are being excluded from the future planned out by the state.

    “Not being the greatest polluters since we are not industrialised, it would be unfair in the search for a solution (to global warming) to ban Africa from using the natural resources which are underground,” Sall told visiting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in May.

    Radical change

    Greenpeace Africa’s ocean campaign manager Aliou Ba stressed that exploiting fossil fuel deposits will further “exacerbate” the climate crisis, with efforts to limit the temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius looking increasingly forlorn.

    Francois Gemenne, an expert with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said:  “What’s at stake is that these countries can and do choose a decarbonised economy.

    “And that requires the transfer of technology and investment in renewables, which is still generally lacking.”

    The pre-COP27 talks held in Kinshasa at the start of October heard calls for alternative technologies and major financing to sustain a green transition.

    Source: Africa News

  • Senegal: Fishermen fear the worst from new gas terminal

    In Senegal, a new offshore gas terminal, located in the Atlantic Ocean about ten kilometres off Saint-Louis, is beginning to upset fishermen who are lamenting the loss of an area rich in fish.

    A new danger may be looming on the horizon. At least, that’s what Senegalese fishermen fear. The new offshore gas terminal visible through the morning mist cloaking the Atlantic Ocean, where Senegal meets Mauritania, is the threat.

    The launch of gas production is expected to start next year. As it draws closer the Secretary-General of the fishing union braces for the worst; meaning the end of any fishing activity in the area.

    “Cohabitation is impossible. Once gas extraction begins, it will mean death for Saint-Louis’s fishing sector’, Moustapha Dieng predicts.

    “Saint-Louis is the capital of fishing, if you take into account the number of boats in Saint-Louis, the types of fishing found in Saint-Louis, they exist nowhere else”.

    “However, the fishing area is very small, it is practically stuck between the mouth of the river and the border with Mauritania where there are coastguards who’ve already killed 19 fishermen because they forbid access to their waters”, Dieng laments.

    Lately, seafarers have seen their catch dwindle. The authorities stepped up their control over the offshore platform and a security perimeter has been set up to the great displeasure of fishermen who say the area is precisely where most fish is found.

    The gas project has also drawn criticism from environmental groups.

    “No one can deny that resource exploitation has and will continue to have impacts on our environment”, Pape Fara Diallo analyses.

    “There will also be social impacts and when you see the communities that live next to where the resources will be exploited, especially here in Nguet Ndar (ed: fishing village of Saint-Louis) “, the chair of the National Publish What You Pay Coalition adds.

    “We feel people are concerned, we see the discrepancy between the billions that we are told will come from the extraction of offshore gas and the poverty that you see around you.”

    Injustice?

    Senegal’s gas discoveries account for 0.5 % of world reserves.

    But Energy and Oil Minister Sophie Gladima said “they were important enough to radically change the economy and industrial fabric of the nation and thereby its future prospects.”

    She underlined the legal framework needed to bring thousands of Senegalese jobs into the sector, and the setting up of the National Institute of Oil and Gas to turn out a highly qualified workforce.

    But fishermen say they are being excluded from the future planned out by the state.

    “Not being the greatest polluters since we are not industrialised, it would be unfair in the search for a solution (to global warming) to ban Africa from using the natural resources which are underground,” Sall told visiting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in May.

    Radical change

    Greenpeace Africa’s ocean campaign manager Aliou Ba stressed that exploiting fossil fuel deposits will further “exacerbate” the climate crisis, with efforts to limit the temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius looking increasingly forlorn.

    Francois Gemenne, an expert with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said:  “What’s at stake is that these countries can and do choose a decarbonised economy.

    “And that requires the transfer of technology and investment in renewables, which is still generally lacking.”

    The pre-COP27 talks held in Kinshasa at the start of October heard calls for alternative technologies and major financing to sustain a green transition.

    Source: Africanews

  • Meet the baye fall of Senegal

    The Baye Fall is a Senegalese Muslim sect that is most easily identifiable by their dreadlocked hair, bright patchwork garbs, spiritual amulets, and well-known tenet of hard work. Learn more about them below.

    While the Baye Fall are often confused with the Rastafarians of the Caribbean due to

     

    Baye Fall

    the Baye Fall harken back to the year 1883, when founder Amadou Bamba Mbacke founded the Mouride Brotherhood.

    The Baye Fall would be named after “fierce” disciple Ibrahima Fall (pictured below) who is known as the “architect” of the sect’s philosophies of sustainable economics.

    Ibrahim Fall

    As the story has been told, when Ibrahim Fall would come to one of the areas that he would later establish for his people, he noticed that they spent most of their time praying and fasting. Ibrahim Fall would soon promulgate that working for the Serigne Toube and Amadou Bamba Mbacke is a higher level of prayer and devotion.

    That decree — including humility — would serve as one of those key principles of Baye Fall’s emphasis on physical labor.

    Consequently, in addition to working on farms, the Baye Fall have established a number of textile, metal, and carpentry workshops, which employs nearly 5,000 people from a number of different villages about an hour from Dakar.

    Yaye Fall

    Yaye Fall (the women of Baye Fall)

    Serigne (Holy One) Abdoul Aziz Fall is the grandchild of Serigne Ibrahima Fall and the current holy leader of the movement. Of his standing and place in the movement, Abdoul Fall explains, “I was born in it, inherited it, and am also a follower of it.”

    Shedding more light on the precepts of the Baye Fall, Abdoul Fall says, “Our command is also the way of Serigne Touba, which is also the way of Ibrahim Fall. It is the same way of life that you see on the farms today. It’s all about educating the people in the way of Islam: hard work, perseverance, and discipline and giving your heart and services to the people.

    “The serignes are the living legacies of the founder of sect and the people charged with continuing the work of grandfathers of the Baye Fall movement.”

    Baye Fall

    Baye Fall

    Credit: Laylah Amatullah Barrayn

    bayefall4

    Baye Fall

    As for their hair, Leader Ibrahima Fall reportedly wore dreadlocks in the flattened-lock style that many present-day followers wear today.

    Baye Fall

    Credit: Laylah Amatullah Barrayn

    The Baye Fall aren’t all work in no play, though. They are also known for a vibrant art and music scene that combines reggae instrumentation with traditional drumming and singing.

    Today, one can visit the final resting places of Amadou Bamba and Ibrahima Fall in the holy city of Touba, Senegal’s second-largest city.

    Source: Face2faceAfrica

     

  • Ukraine foreign minister begins Africa tour in Senegal

    There has been sparse media coverage in Senegal following a visit to Dakar by Ukraine Foreign Affairs Minister Dmytro Kuleba, who is embarking on an African tour.

    The Ukrainian diplomat met Senegal’s Foreign Minister Aissata Tall Sall and they signed several bilateral co-operation deals.

    Mr Kuleba is on an apparent counteroffensive tour following a visit to the continent by Russia’s top diplomat Sergei Lavrov in July, ahead of plans to host the second Russia-Africa summit in Ethiopia next year.

    Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly made overtures to African leaders to condemn Russia over its invasion of his country.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine foreign minister starts Africa tour in Senegal

    There has been sparse media coverage in Senegal following a visit to Dakar by Ukraine Foreign Affairs Minister Dmytro Kuleba, who is embarking on an African tour.

    The Ukrainian diplomat met Senegal’s Foreign Minister Aissata Tall Sall and they signed several bilateral cooperation deals.

    Mr Kuleba is on an apparent counteroffensive tour following a visit to the continent by Russia’s top diplomat Sergei Lavrov in July, ahead of plans to host the second Russia-Africa summit in Ethiopia next year.

    Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly made overtures to African leaders to condemn Russia over its invasion of his country.

  • Heavy gunfire, soldiers on the streets in Burkina Faso capital

    Soldiers are on the streets and heavy gunfire has been heard near the main military camp and residential areas of Burkina Faso’s capital.

    A large blast also rang out on Friday near the presidential palace where soldiers took up positions.

    Soldiers were seen along the main avenue leading to the presidential palace, administrative buildings and the national television station, which stopped broadcasting. Journalists said state television instead showed a blank screen saying “no video signal”.

    Several main roads in Ouagadougou were blocked by troops. A spokesman for the military government that seized power in January was unreachable.

    It was not clear yet if this was a coup attempt, but it bore the hallmarks of other power grabs that have swept across West and Central Africa over the past two years.

    Reporting from Saint Louis in Senegal in West Africa, Al Jazeera’s Nicolas Haque said there was a sense of panic across the capital.

    “All the streets leading to the presidential palace, the parliament, and the constitutional court are being manned by soldiers. People who have tried to approach these areas have been told to return and move away,” he said.

    No public announcement about the motivation behind the troop movements in Ouagadougou was given.

    ‘A lot of confusion’

    Violence has raged in Burkina Faso since Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba seized power in a coup in January, toppling the West African country’s elected leader.

    “Late at night, around 3am, gunfire erupted in the capital as the president of transition, who took over in January, was in the presidential palace. There is no word about him nor his whereabouts,” said Haque.

    The latest news from around the world.Timely. Accurate. Fair.

    “There is a lot of confusion about who is in charge and who is behind what we are seeing in Ouagadougou.”

    In his first statement after the January coup, Damiba, often seen in public in military fatigues and aviator sunglasses, pledged to restore security.

    More than 40 percent of Burkina Faso, a former French colony, is now outside government control. In recent years, violence by armed groups has spilled over into the Ivory Coast and Togo.

    The military takeover was largely celebrated by civilians fed up with former President Roch Kabore’s civilian government that was unable to rein in fighters who have killed thousands of civilians in recent years and taken over large parts of the north and east.

    But attacks in the impoverished West African country have worsened and the army is in disarray. The rank and file, which gave Damiba their support in January, have grown frustrated at the lack of progress, security sources say.

    Friday’s developments come two days after Burkina Faso’s government said at least 11 soldiers were killed and 50 civilians were missing after fighters attacked a 150-vehicle military-escorted convoy taking supplies to a northern town.

    In a statement on Tuesday, the government said the assault took place on Monday in the commune of Gaskinde in Soum province, where armed groups linked to al-Qaeda and ISIL (ISIS) have escalated attacks and seized territory since 2015.

    As in neighbouring countries, fighters affiliated with al-Qaeda and ISIL have stoked the unrest, even after Damiba earlier this month sacked his defence minister and assumed the role himself.

    Fighters have blockaded areas of the north, leaving communities stranded. Government convoys and air drops deliver essential goods to trapped civilians.

    Much of the country became ungovernable since 2018. Millions have fled their homes, fearing further raids by gunmen who frequently descend on rural communities on motorbikes. Thousands have been killed in attacks.

    Burkina Faso has become the epicentre of the violence that began in neighbouring Mali in 2012 but which has since spread across the arid expanse of the Sahel region south of the Sahara Desert.

    As well as Burkina Faso, Mali, Chad, and Guinea have all seen coups since 2020, raising fears about a backslide towards military rule in a region that has made democratic progress in recent decades.

     

    Source: Aljazeera

     

  • Africa’s matches to watch

    Nigeria’s visit to Algeria will provide a good test for the Super Eagles with Ghana vs Brazil the glamour fixture involving a team from the continent.

    Nigeria’s clash with Algeria in Oran headlines a number of high-profile friendly matches involving African countries during this international break.

    The Super Eagles will visit Algeria next Tuesday as Jose Peseiro tests a host of players but that will come after Ghana have faced Brazil in France on Friday.

    The Black Stars will use the match to prepare for the 2022 World Cup with the Samba Boys set to stretch them to the limit.

    Looking at the facts and numbers ahead of Nigeria and South Africa‘s opening match at the 2002 Women Africa Cup of Nations

    African champions Senegal have a date with Bolivia on Saturday while South Africa host Sierra Leone in another friendly encounter the same day.

    Nigeria, Super Eagles
    Getty Images | Super Eagles

    Algeria vs Nigeria

    Nigeria coach Peseiro will seek to make it three straight wins when the Super Eagles take on the Desert Foxes in Oran next Tuesday.

    Nigeria beat Sierra Leone 2-1 before thrashing Sao Tome and Principe 10-0 in the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers in June but the 2019 African champions will provide a different kind of test.

    Nigeria and Algeria have faced each other six times with the Super Eagles winning thrice while the North Africans have managed one victory, the win coming during the 2019 Afcon semi-final when they won 2-1 en route to the final.

    Both teams missed out on a ticket to the World Cup in disappointing fashion during the playoffs, Nigeria falling to Ghana on away goals, while Algeria were edged out courtesy of a last-minute goal by Cameroon, having looked like they had sealed their ticket to Qatar.

    For Peseiro, it will also be an opportunity to test a host of new players, especially upfront, where captain Ahmed Musa, Samuel Chukwueze and Emmanuel Dennis were the latest to withdraw from the squad due to injuries, joining long-term injury absentees Victor Osimhen and Umar Sadiq.

    That leaves Lorient striker Terem Moffi, Cremonese’s Cyriel Dessers, Nottingham Forest forward Taiwo Awoniyi and Kelechi Iheanacho of Leicester City to battle it out for a starting berth.

    • Ghana
      BlackStars of Ghana

      Brazil vs Ghana

      The glamour tie involving an African team, the five-time world champions will certainly provide Ghana with the one of their biggest tests in recent years during Friday’s meeting at the Stade Oceane in Le Havre, France.

      Brazil lined up with Thiago Silva and Marquinhos at centre-back with Alex Telles (left-back) and Eder Militao (left-back) as Casemiro and Lucas Paqueta were paired in central midfield while Neymar played just behind Richarlison as Vinicius Jr and Raphinha occupied the wings during Tuesday’s training.

      That might give Ghana coach Otto Addo a hint on how to line up or where to exploit as he prepares his charges for the high-profile encounter. Ghana have conceded five goals without reply in their three meetings with Brazil, losing 1-0 twice in 2007 and 2011 as well as 3-0 defeat in the 2006 World Cup at the Round of 16.

      While history favours the South Americans, Addo has a number of experienced players in his squad who can hold their own against the Selecao such as Thomas Partey, Daniel Amartey and the in-form Mohammed Kudus.

      He was also recently boosted by the availability of Inaki Williams, Tariq Lamptey and Mohammed Salisu who switched allegiance to the Black Stars in June.

      Ghana have Portugal, Uruguay and South Korea in their World Cup group and after falling to Japan and Chile in their last two matches, Brazil should give them a taste of what to expect in Qatar.

    • Bafana Bafana head coach Hugo Broos.
      Safa | Bafana Bafana

      South Africa vs Sierra Leone

      Bafana Bafana coach Hugo Broos can get some of his critics off his back with a victory against Sierra Leone in a friendly match at the FNB Stadium on Saturday.

      Broos was criticised for his selection and tactics following South Africa’s 2-1 loss to Morocco in the 2023 Afcon qualifiers in June and had to apologise for saying the PSL’s lack of ‘quality’ was the reason for the national team’s struggles.

      The Belgian coach has included Mamelodi Sundowns talisman Themba Zwane into the squad that has several newcomers, among them Melusi Buthelezi (TS Galaxy), Sibongiseni Mthethwa (Stellenbosch FC), Luke le Roux (Varbergs), Cyprus-based Mihlali Mayambela and Orlando Pirates marksman Zakhele Lepasa.

      Zwane was among the players Broos was criticised for not including and he will hope the 33-year-old can replicate his good club form with national team against the Leone Stars, whose last game was a 2-1 loss to Nigeria three months ago.

    • Sadio Mane of Senegal during the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations.
      BackpagePix | Sadio Mane

      Senegal vs Bolivia

      France will also host another top African nation this weekend as Senegal take on Bolivia at the Stade de la Source in Orleans, using the match as a tune up for the World Cup.

      Aliou Cisse’s men will face the Netherlands, the hosts and Ecuador in Group A in Qatar and the tactician has called up five new players, including Noah Fadiga, the son of Khalilou Fadiga, and Nottingham Forest defender Moussa Niakhate, as he looks to shake things up.

      Eight players from the victorious 2021 Afcon squad are missing due to injuries or a lack of game time with right-back Bouna Sarr out of the World Cup with a knee injury and left-back Saliou Ciss without a club. Spartak Moscow forward Keita Balde has also been handed a three-month ban due to a doping violation.

      However, with Chelsea pair Edouard Mendy and Kalidou Koulibaly, Everton’s Idrissa Gueye, Crystal Palace midfielder Cheikhou Kouyate, Watford’s Imaila Sarr and Bayern Munich superstar Sadio Mane available, the Teranga Lions have enough to cause Bolivia problems.

      Mane became his country’s top scorer with 33 goals when he scored a hat-trick in the 3-1 win over Benin before his penalty earned a 1-0 over Rwanda in the Afcon qualifiers in June and despite his goal drought at Bayern, he is still the man to watch against the South Americans.

       Cameroon 2022
      Getty Images | Vincent Aboubakar

      Cameroon vs Uzbekistan

      The Indomitable Lions are under pressure to improve following their lacklustre 1-0 win over Burundi in June’s 2023 Afcon qualifiers when Fecafoot boss Samuel Eto’o read the riot act to the players for taking their positions in the team for granted.

      Rigobert Song’s men can start righting those wrongs against Uzbekistan in South Korea’s northern city of Goyang on Friday with Vincent Aboubakar set to captain the team.

      Song has handed Brentford forward Bryan Mbeumo his first call-up after he switched allegiance from France to Cameroon in August and he will likely make his debut against Uzbekistan.

      Cameroon are in a race against time to be ready for their return to the World Cup after missing the 2018 edition and have Switzerland, Serbia and Brazil to contend with in their group in Qatar.

    •  Morocco
      Getty Images | Hakim Ziyech

      Morocco vs Chile

      Another World Cup-bound side taking on a South American team in this window, the Atlas Lions are under new management after former Wydad Casablanca coach Walid Regragui replaced Vahid Halilhodzic this month.

      Regragui’s first task was to repair strained relationships between players and the technical bench and that was seen from his selection of Chelsea winger Hakim Ziyech, who had retired from international duty after falling out with Halilhodzic, and the inclusion Bayern Munich full-back Noussair Mazraoui.

      Morocco will also have a number of youngsters for Friday’s friendly against Chile in Barcelona in what will be the first meeting between the two countries as the North Africans prepare for the global tournament in Qatar where they have Croatia, Belgium and Canada in their group.

      Source: goal.com

  • AU chairman urges lifting of Zimbabwe sanctions

    Senegal’s President Macky Sall wants sanctions against Zimbabwe to be lifted.

    He made the call in his address to the 77th UN General Assembly in New York.

    The Senegalese leader, and the current chairman of the African Union, said the measures against Zimbabwe were aggravating the suffering of the people.

    The US and the European Union (EU) maintain sanctions on Zimbabwe, citing a lack of progress in democratic and human rights reforms as well as restrictions on press freedoms.

    The sanctions target both specific individuals and companies – including President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

    Zimbabwe’s economy has faced deep economic crises over the past few years with periods of hyperinflation – but there’s little evidence to suggest that the sanctions are responsible.

    President Sall was the first African leader to address the General Assembly.

    He urged the Security Council to address conflicts in Africa in the same way it addressed other conflicts.

    He also called for reforms in the council that would make it more inclusive and possibly grant Africa a permanent seat.

    Mr Sall also called for Africa to be given a seat in the G20 group, which includes leaders of the world’s 20 major economies.

    More African leaders are expected to address the UN general assembly on Wednesday on the second day of the high-level debate.

    Source: BBC

  • Senegal star Keita Balde banned until December for anti-doping violation

    Senegal forward Keita Balde has been suspended until December 5 over an anti-doping violation in Italy, his new club Spartak Moscow announced, severely compromising his chances of playing at the World Cup.

    Balde, 27, signed a three-year deal with Russian Premier League side Spartak last month after spending the past season with Cagliari in Serie A.

    Balde “has been suspended by the Italian national anti-doping agency until December 5 for a procedural violation during an anti-doping inspection while he was playing for Cagliari,” Spartak said in a statement.

    The Russian club did not specify the nature of the infraction, but said that no prohibited substance had been detected in the sample tested.

    According to Spartak, Balde will not be able to resume training until three weeks before the end of his suspension, in line with Fifa regulations.

    Spanish-born Balde won the Africa Cup of Nations with Senegal in February, but the suspension could see him left out of the squad for the World Cup in Qatar, which runs from November 20-December 18.

    Senegal play the Netherlands on November 21 in their opening Group A match. They also face hosts Qatar and Ecuador.

    Balde’s suspension would rule him out until the quarterfinals.

     

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Former Barcelona midfielder Toure explains why Senegal will perform well at this year’s World Cup

    Former Ivory Coast and Barcelona midfielder Yaya Toure has disclosed why Senegal will perform well at this year’s World Cup in Qatar.

    Senegal made it to their third World Cup in history and will represent Africa alongside Cameroon, Tunisia, Ghana and Morocco.

    The West African country have been drawn in Group A alongside Netherlands, Ecuador and Qatar.

    “And then there is the World Cup. He [Mane] knows he will be eagerly awaited. We see that Senegal has a fairly strong workforce with many players playing in big teams in Europe,” Toure told RFI.

    “We see Kalidou Koulibaly in Naples, an already established player, sought after by all the big clubs, who is among the best in the world. There is Gana Gueye who plays in Paris [Saint-Germain].

    “It’s a bit like the Ivory Coast of the time when we played the [Afcon] and the World Cup. There is also Chelsea goalkeeper Edouard Mendy who won the Champions League… Next to him, Sadio Mane has all these interesting players.”

    Senegal kick off the tournament on the opening day with a tough fixture against the Netherlands, before facing hosts Qatar and ending the group stage with South American side Ecuador.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • IMF releases $216m to Senegal

    The International Monetary Fund has released nearly $216 million U.S. dollars for Senegal after a review of its aid programs for the West African country.

    The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced Wednesday ( June 22)

    “The completion of the audits allows the immediate release of about 215.78 million dollars,” the institution said in a statement.

    In addition, the board approved an increase in aid to the country.

    “As a result, total access under the 18-month agreements approved in June 2021 has been increased by about $172.6 million, from about $650 million, at the time of approval, to about $776.67 million,” the fund said.

    “Soaring global fuel and food prices, compounded by the war in Ukraine and, to a lesser extent, the freeze on trade with Mali are disrupting the post-pandemic recovery,” the institution commented.

    The IMF has revised down its 2022 growth forecast for the country to around 5% while inflation is expected to reach 5.5%, driven by rising food and energy prices.

    Source: Africanews

  • Protests in Senegal leave at least one dead

    Clashes between police and protesters in Dakar left at least one dead on Friday, according to humanitarian aid charity La Croix Rouge.

    Senegal’s main opposition coalition supporting Ousmane Sonko had maintained calls for this rally despite its ban by authorities.

    The movement rejects the invalidation of a national list of candidates (“Yewwi Askan Wi” or “Free our people”) for the legislative elections on July 31st.

    “It is just because we are outraged in this country that we went out to express our anger. I have two wives, children, and work, but I am protesting for Senegal, which does not belong to President Macky Sall.

    “As an opponent, we supported him because he was suffering injustice and now he is the one who is imposing injustice- this cannot go on!”, says demonstrator Bala Mbaye in Dakar.

    A party spokesperson says three opposition figures were arrested and Ousmane Sonko and Dakar’s mayor were prevented from leaving their homes by security forces.

    Tensions between the leading party and the opposition have reached other parts of Senegal. Some media in Casamance claim two other protesters were killed in the region.

    Source: Africanews

  • Mane excites fans after playing on muddy surface in hometown

    Mane joined Senegalese legends Papiss Cisse, the by former Newcastle striker, as well as ex-Liverpool forward El-Hadji Diouf, alongside international team-mate Mbaye Diagne in the kickabout with some locals from the village.

    “Back to the source with a gala match on the Bambaly pitch where it all started!!! A big thank you to my brothers @papissdembacisse @mbayediagne909 @desire.segbe and without forgetting my lifelong idol, sacred @elhadji_diouf11_officiel,” Mane wrote in a post online.

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by Sadio Mane (@sadiomaneofficiel)

    The 30-year-old is known for his numerous charities in Bambali where he has helped build a hospital, a school as well as a mosque, and fans were in awe at his humility for trading the well-manicured pitches he is used to for the rough, muddy surface.

    Source: Goal.com 

  • Senegal minister fired after babies die in fire

    Senegal President Macky Sall has sacked his Health Minister, Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr, after 11 babies were killed by a fire in a hospital on Wednesday.

    Mr Sarr will be replaced by Marie Khemesse Ngom Ndiaye, the ministry’s director general, following the tragedy in Tivaouane city.

    The blaze, which rapidly engulfed the newborn unit at the Tivaouane hospital, is being blamed on an electrical short circuit.

    President Sall declared three days of national mourning. He also ordered an investigation into the tragedy.

    He is expected to visit Tivaouane on Saturday to meet the babies’ relatives.

    Many observers say that Senegal’s health system is beset by staffing, infrastructure, equipment and funding problems.

    A series of other deaths also have raised concerns about maternal and infant health in the West African nation known for having some of the best hospitals in the region.

    Source: BBC

  • Eleven newborn babies die in Senegal hospital fire

    Eleven newborn babies have died in a hospital fire in the western city of Tivaouane in Senegal, the country’s president has said.

    The fire at Mame Abdou Aziz Sy Dabakh Hospital was in the maternity department, President Macky Sall tweeted.

    Initial reports suggest the fire was caused by a short circuit, according to Senegalese politicians.

    Three babies were saved from the fire, said the city’s mayor, Demba Diop Sy.

    The fire spread very quickly and emergency services were still at the scene, Mr Sy told local media.

    The hospital had been newly inaugurated, according to AFP, citing local media reports.

    “To their mothers and their families, I express my deepest sympathy,” President Sall wrote in a tweet.

    “This situation is very unfortunate and extremely painful,” Health Minister Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr said from Geneva, where he was attending a World Health Organization meeting.

    He said an investigation was under way and he would be cutting his trip short to return to Senegal immediately.

    The incident has sparked a wave of indignation on social media over the state of the country’s healthcare provision.

    Opposition MP Mamadou Lamine Diallo criticised the government, tweeting: “More babies burned in a public hospital… This is unacceptable”.

    Rights group Amnesty International has urged the government to create an “independent commission of inquiry to determine responsibility and punish the culprits, no matter the level they are at in the state apparatus,” country director Seydi Gassama said in a tweet.

    Amnesty called for all of Senegal’s neo-natal wards to be inspected after a similar incident occurred in the northern town of Linguère last year.

    Four newborn babies were killed there after a fire broke out at a hospital’s maternity ward. At the time, the mayor said there was an electrical fault in the air conditioning unit of the maternity ward.

    Wednesday’s tragedy also follows a national outcry over the death of a woman in labour, Astou Sokhna, who died while reportedly begging for a Caesarean during her 20-hour labour ordeal. Her unborn child also died.

    Source: BBC

  • Senegal rejects attempt to toughen anti-gay laws

    A bill introduced in the Senegalese parliament meant to toughen existing laws against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people has been rejected.

    Gay sex is already punishable by up to five years in jail.

    The bill would have lengthened the term to a maximum of 10 years and led to a threefold increase in the maximum fines.

    It would also have specifically targeted LGBT and similar activities as crimes.

    The Office of the National Assembly, which stopped the proposed bill from proceeding to the floor, said the current law is clear and severely punishes homosexuality.

    The bill had been initiated by 11 MPs, who said they had the backing of key religious groups.

    Senegal has a 95% Muslim population and homosexuality is widely considered unacceptable.

    Source: today.ng

  • Senegal’s economy struggles amid COVID-19 pandemic

    Senegal’s recent protests have shone a light on simmering frustrations over sluggish economic activity and unemployment in the West African state, which have been compounded by a year of coronavirus restrictions.

    But many argue that anger also boiled over because of deepening poverty in the nation of 16 million people, especially among the young.

    Tourism sector hit hard

    At the Soumbédioune craft market in central Dakar, usually a draw for tourists looking for souvenirs, merchants are struggling as the pandemic drags on.

    Moulaye Ndiaye, a sculptor from Dakar’s crafts market, shares his local observations.

    “Everything is slowed down, or rather, everything has completely stopped. For other sectors, the shopkeepers in the city centre, for example, it’s not that bad, they are still working. But we, who are craftsmen, who depend directly on tourism, are very affected by all this.”

    Gorra Sarr, a crafts vendor, expresses what he believes is the frustration of the Senegalese people.

    “What I can say is that the Senegalese are tired, and they are hungry. If you notice, they have attacked the stores where we sell food. For example, they didn’t attack us because we don’t sell anything to eat.”

    Situated in the westernmost part of Africa, Senegal is bordered by Mauritania, Mali, Guinea and Guinea-Bissau. It is surrounded by the Gambia, an English-speaking country with one of the smallest land areas on the continent.

    Senegal has a tropical, dry climate and a population of 15.4 million, a quarter of which lives in the region of the capital, Dakar, on 0.3% of the territory.

    The country is one of the most popular tourist destinations in West Africa, which is home to Dakar and Saint Louis, two dynamic cultural hubs.

    Senegal is also home to several diverse wildlife parks, including the Niokolo-Koba National Park, the Oiseaux du Djoudj National Park, and the Bandia Game Reserve. Senegal is known as the land of “teranga”, which is the Senegalese value of hospitality, respect, and community. Teranga is a Wolof word (one of the national languages) that encompasses the Senegalese spirit of warmth and friendliness to visitors.

    Visitors to Senegal are sure to experience a warm welcome on their arrival, as well as throughout their visit. The Senegalese beaches are beautiful and sandy, with rich populations of fish. Savoury Senegalese food is sure to tempt your taste as well.

    The pandemic not only hit the hospitality and tourism industries but also slashed foreign remittances which represent about 10% of the country’s GDP.

    About two million people had fallen into poverty since the onset of the coronavirus crisis.

    Pape Abdou Fall, President of Soumbédioune crafts market’s sculptor’s association, provides some more insight into the situation.

    “Before COVID, we were already in a state of crisis, which COVID has aggravated. We who work in the tourism sector, it is a total crisis. I can say that 95% of our work is the tourists, because we make wooden sculptures, and the sculptures are bought by tourists.”

    Economic situation

    Between 2014 and 2018, Senegal recorded some of the strongest economic growth in Africa, consistently above 6% per year. Real GDP growth was 5.3% in 2019, down from 6.3% in 2017. It is mainly driven by the services sector, while on the demand side, the main drivers of growth are investment (+12.5%) and exports (+7.2%).

    Since the beginning of 2020, the coronavirus pandemic (coronavirus) has significantly changed the country’s economic outlook. In 2020, growth has slowed sharply to an estimated 1.3%, with services (such as tourism and transport) and exports particularly affected. Senegal has responded with containment measures and an ‘economic and social resilience programme’ (ESRP) to protect lives and livelihoods. However, weak budgetary reserves and safety nets, a vulnerable health system and a large informal sector pose challenges.

    Economic recovery is likely to be gradual and driven by a strong return of private consumption and investment. The reforms envisaged under the Plan Sénégal Émergent (PSE) need to be deepened so that growth returns to its pre-pandemic trajectory.

    A significant influx of private investment is essential to increase Senegal’s productive capacity and sustain export growth. Services continue to dominate GDP, while the primary sector (agriculture, in particular) is the most dynamic engine of growth. The current health crisis has delayed oil and gas projects, which are only expected to contribute to revenues and exports around 2025.

    The COVID-19 pandemic risks jeopardising the socio-economic gains from improved access to key services, both in terms of affordability and infrastructure deployment. It could result in severe losses to households through reduced in-work and out-of-work income (especially private remittances), domestic price inflation and disruption of essential service provision.

    Senegal’s economy was growing before the pandemic, with its GDP increasing by 5.3% in 2019, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

    However, despite the IMF forecasting a recovery this year after a slowdown in 2020, coronavirus restrictions have ravaged Senegal’s large informal sector and growing numbers of people are struggling to make ends meet.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Coronavirus: Senegalese President declares state of emergency, curfew in two regions

    Senegalese President, Macky Sall declared Tuesday a reimposition of a state of emergency and a curfew from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. from Wednesday on the regions of Dakar and Thies in order to contain the quick spread of the new coronavirus.

    Speaking on national television after an emergency meeting of the National Epidemic Management Committee, Sall said that these two regions accounted for more than 90 percent of confirmed cases in Senegal.

    Sall called on all members of the government to take all measures to ensure the application of the state of emergency.

    He also urged the population to comply with individual and collective prevention provisions by avoiding non-essential movements, gatherings and other public and private meetings, and to respect barrier gestures.

    Regarding vaccines, the president said that he ordered a national vaccination plan to be proposed as soon as possible, adding that Senegal continues its collaboration in the framework of COVAX initiative.

    Despite this “new wave of epidemic outbreak,” Senegal has human and material resources to deal with the spread, the Senegalese president said. He announced that the government would detail the measures to be adopted in this new phase in the Council of Ministers on Wednesday.

    Sall lifted the curfew and the state of emergency on June 29, 2020 after several months of semi-lockdown.

    Senegal has recorded to date 19,964 confirmed cases with 428 deaths.

    Source: GNA