Africa Cup opens with condemnation of rebel attack

The Africa Cup opened yesterday with President Jose Eduardo dos Santos condemning the rebel attack that killed at least two members of the Togo squad, but insisting the games would go on. The gun attack Friday, in the restive northern province of...

The Africa Cup opened yesterday with President Jose Eduardo dos Santos condemning the rebel attack that killed at least two members of the Togo squad, but insisting the games would go on.

The gun attack Friday, in the restive northern province of Cabinda, has cast a pall over the opening of Africa's premier football tournament, which had been meant as a coming-out party for the oil-rich nation after decades of civil war.

"We condemn this act of terror, but the competition will continue in Cabinda," Dos Santos said. "We are together, may the best team win."

Togo's government has dispatched a plane to return its team home last night even though players wanted to contest the 16-nation competition to honour their assistant coach and a team spokesman killed in the attack claimed by separatist guerrillas.

Cabinda is to host seven of the tournament's 22 matches, but with goalkeeper Kodjovi Obilale still in critical care at a South African hospital, Togo's prime minister ordered the team home.

"We understand the position of the players who want to in some way avenge their dead colleagues, but it would be irresponsible for the Togolese authorities to allow them to continue," a spokesman told reporters in Lome.

Captain Emmanuel Adebayor told a French radio station that Togo President Faure Gnassingbe had personally told the team to return, a conversation that turned the team's decision.

"We all decided to do something good for the country and play in the Africa Cup to honour those who died," said Adebayor, a Manchester City striker.

"Unfortunately, the head of state and the country's authorities have decided otherwise. We will pack up and go home."

South African President Jacob Zuma condemned the shooting as "shocking and unacceptable", but brushed away speculation that the attack could affect his nation's hosting of the World Cup in June.

He "reiterated that South Africa remains 100 per cent ready to host the FIFA World Cup, and dismissed speculation that the Angolan incident had any bearing on the World Cup tournament in South Africa," his office said in a statement.

Rebels ambushed the Togo convoy as they drove into the Cabinda enclave from neighbouring Congo-Brazzaville on Friday, leaving players cowering under their seats during a 20-minute gunbattle with security forces.

Separatist rebels threatened to carry out more attacks, saying they had warned CAF boss Issa Hayatou against holding matches in Cabinda.

"This is going to continue, because the nation is at war, because Hayatou persists," said Rodrigues Mingas, secretary general of the Forces for the Liberation of the State of Cabinda-Military Position (FLEC-PM).

"We wrote two months before the Nations Cup to Mr Issa Hayatou to warn him that we were at war. He did not want to take our warnings into consideration," Mingas told AFP by telephone.

"They were warned, they knew it, and they closed their eyes."

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