Morocco has refused to host January’s African Cup finals amid fears over the spread of the Ebola virus, throwing the 2015 tournament into jeopardy yesterday.

The country, which had already said it wanted the 16-team event postponed, rejected an ultimatum set by the Confederation of African Football to confirm the hosting of the continental championship due to take place Jan. 17-Feb. 8.

A statement from Morocco’s sports ministry said: “The decision is dictated by health reasons because of the serious threat of Ebola and the risk of its spreading.”

A decision on the tournament will now be made this week when CAF has an executive committee meeting in Cairo but Morocco will almost certainly be stripped as hosts.

CAF said earlier yesterday it would make no statement until after Wednesday’s meeting.

Morocco is concerned that supporters from west Africa converging on the country for the tournament could bring with them the deadly virus and put at risk their tourist industry.

They asked CAF to postpone the event to June, or even January 2016, but this was rejected last week by African football’s governing body, who set Morocco a deadline to confirm it would host the three-week tournament.

CAF can now either move the event to another country or cancel it at great financial cost.

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