Togo soccer team leaves Angola tournament; Cabinda separatist says more attacks possible
By Samuel Petrequin, APSunday, January 10, 2010
Togo soccer team leaves Angola tournament
CABINDA, Angola — Togo withdrew from a continentwide soccer tournament and its players reluctantly prepared to leave Angola on Sunday. A separatist leader warned that violence would not end with the deadly ambush on the team bus that killed three and injured eight.
It took a call from Togo’s president to persuade the players to leave the African Cup of Nations; they said they wanted to stay and compete in honor of their assistant coach, a team spokesman and the Angolan bus driver who died.
The government dispatched the presidential plane to Angola to retrieve the team, but the prime minister said they would move slowly to accommodate the wounded. Togo’s Prime Minister Gilbert Houngbo said Angola had not done enough to protect the team after Friday’s attack in Cabinda — the oil-rich region in northern Angola which has seen occasional separatist violence.
“We fully understand our government’s decision to leave because they didn’t receive enough guarantees for our security,” forward Thomas Dossevi told The Associated Press Sunday. “We as players, we wanted to stay to honor the memory of our dead people, but both positions are understandable.”
Togo team captain Emmanuel Adebayor, speaking in an interview with France’s RMC radio Sunday, said the team finally decided to “pack our bags and go home” after the Manchester City striker got a call from Togo President Faure Gnassingbe himself urging them to return.
“That’s what made the difference,” Adebayor was quoted as saying in a transcript of his interview on RMC’s Web site.
Togo’s Prime Minister Gilbert Houngbo said in Togo’s capital, Lome, that “Angola and the African Football Confederation have not taken adequate security measures to ensure the safety of the Togolese national team.”
Dossevi said all team members would go to Lome together before rejoining their respective soccer clubs, some in Europe.
Saturday, most of the top officials of the African Football Confederation, known by its initials in French as CAF, went to Cabinda, where the attack took place and where some of the injured were recovering, and implored Togo to stay.
CAF president Issa Hayatou said he’d received a guarantee from Angola Prime Minister Antonio Paulo Kassoma that security would be beefed up for all teams and at all venues.
In a telephone interview Sunday with The Associated Press, Tiburcio Tati Tchingobo, minister of defense in the self-declared Federal State of Cabinda, denied his Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda forces, known as FLEC, were responsible for the ambush. He added that whoever was responsible was sparked by a level of frustration that could lead to more violence.
He said his group had no objection to the African Cup of Nations tournament, even with play in Cabinda.
“The tournament can go on, but we are worried about security. We don’t have any problem with our fellow African brothers,” he said, reached on a satellite phone number and saying he was in Cabinda.
In a communique Saturday, Tchingobo’s self-proclaimed independent government said it was irresponsible of CAF’s Hayatou to have ignored warnings from separatists that matches should not be held in Cabinda.
The Angolan information minister blamed FLEC for the attack on the Togolese team. In Sunday’s exclusive interview, Tchingobo said that was “Angolan government manipulation, to tarnish our names, to make us out as terrorists.”
Portugal’s state-run Lusa news agency said FLEC claimed responsibility in a message on Friday.
The conflicting reports could stem from divisions among pro-independence groups in Cabinda. Several claim the name FLEC.
Cabinda’s armed groups have been weakened by factional fighting. But periodic announcements from the Angolan government that the Cabinda uprising has been quelled — either by force or negotiations — have been followed by new outbreaks of violence.
The Angolan government has denied charges from international human rights groups its military has committed atrocities in Cabinda. In Sunday’s exclusive interview, Tchingobo said he feared the attack on the Togolese team would spark a crackdown by Angolan forces in Cabinda after the tournament ends.
“Angola should recognize that we are a sovereign state,” Tchingobo said. “They should pack up and go.”
The separatists argue Cabinda, an oil-rich region cut off from the rest of Angola by a strip of Congo, is distinct culturally and historically. The Angolan government rejects such claims, and its decision to stage part of the African Cup in Cabinda — building a new stadium there for the games — reflects its determination to keep control of the region.
Angola has been struggling to climb back from decades of violence, and its government was banking on the tournament as a chance to show the world it was on the way to recovery.
Cabinda’s unrest was unrelated to — and often overshadowed by — the broader civil war.
Associated Press writers Ebow Godwin in Lome, Togo, Donna Bryson in Johannesburg and Jamey Keaten in Paris contributed to this report.