Fifa probe African teams

However, a Fifa statement issued after the final weekend qualifier said they are probing allegations that Ethiopia, Equatorial Guinea and Togo fielded ineligible players this year in qualifiers.

The standard punishment dished out by the world football governing body during the African qualifying competition is that a country found guilty forfeits any points gained and opponents are awarded a 3-0 victory.

A 2-1 win by Ethiopia in Botswana and a 2-0 victory by Togo at home against Cameroon during June and a 4-3 home win by Equatorial Guinea over the Cape Verde Islands three months ago are being investigated, a statement said.

Should Ethiopia lose three points they would no longer be sure of winning Group A, if Togo lose three points Cameroon would replace Libya as Group I leaders, and if Equatorial Guinea lose three points Tunisia would not be certain of topping Group B.

It has been established through match reports on Fifa’s website that the ineligible Ethiopian player is Minyahile Beyene, who should not have played against Botswana on June 8, 2013 as he was on two yellow cards.

He was booked against South Africa in June 2012 in a match played in Rustenburg and against Botswana in March 2013 in Addis Ababa and therefore, he was suspended for the match against Botswana on June 8 in Lobatse.

In a similar case recently, Sudan were docked three points and three goals which were handed to Zambia for using an ineligible player in their 2-0 win over Chipolopolo in a 2014 World Cup qualifier in June 2012.

As it stands, Ethiopia have reached the World Cup play-offs following their 2-1 victory over Bafana on Sunday in Addis Ababa, but their fate is now in Fifa’s hands.
If they are docked three points, those would be awarded to Botswana. Ethiopia would then have 10 points, Bafana 8, Botswana 7 and Central African Republic 3 with the last round of matches to be played in September.

Meanwhile, a spectacular own goal by Bernard Parker gifted lowest Group A seeds Ethiopia a 2-1 triumph over 2010 World Cup hosts South Africa in Addis Ababa and an unassailable five-point lead with one round left.

Mohamed Salah followed up a hat-trick against Zimbabwe last weekend by scoring the goal that earned Egypt a 1-0 win over Mozambique in Maputo and created a five-point Group G gap over Guinea.

Reigning African Footballer of the Year Yaya Toure netted twice in Dar es Salaam as Cote d’lvoire recovered from conceding a second-minute goal to defeat Tanzania 4-2 in Group C and they cannot be overtaken.

Tunisia needed a point in Equatorial Guinea to secure first place in Group B and that is what they got from a 1-1 draw with Oussama Darragi equalising for the “Carthage Eagles”.

After winning 1-0 in Rwanda, Algeria had to wait five hours before Mali were held 2-2 at home by Benin, a result that gave the “Desert Foxes” an uncatchable four-point advantage.

Ghana, who were quarter-finalists the last World Cup, took a significant step toward reaching the play-offs with a 2-0 win over Lesotho in Maseru through goals from Christian Atsu and captain Asamoah Gyan.

The “Black Stars” moved one point ahead of Zambia in Group D and host the shock 2012 Africa Cup of Nations champions in the final series of mini-league fixtures during September.

South Africa took on Ethiopia before a sell-out 25 000 crowd needing at least a point to stay in contention and an attacking approach paid off on 34 minutes when Parker cracked a half-volley wide of Jemal Tassew into the far corner.

But the “Walyas Antelopes” — 19 places below “Bafana Bafana” (The Boys) on the Fifa African rankings — levelled just before half-time as Getaneh Kebede rifled the ball into the net from close range after a scramble. The decisive goal came after 70 minutes when Parker fluffed an attempted clearance off an Ethiopian free-kick, sending a flying header past goalkeeper and captain Itumeleng Khune into his own net.

South Africa had several late half-chances but Ethiopia, who returned to the African Cup of Nations tournament this year after three decades in the doldrums, came closest to scoring. Salah helped Swiss club Basle reach the Europa League semi-finals this year and he was once again the star for Egypt, scoring the only goal in the Mozambican capital five minutes before half-time.

The “Pharaohs’ maintained the only perfect record in the African qualifying competition with a fifth consecutive victory and finish their schedule at home to second-place Guinea.
A stoppage-time goal from substitute Wilfried Bony sealed victory for Ivory Coast, who recovered from conceding an early goal to lead 3-2 at half-time in a thriller.

Toure bagged a first-half brace after Lacina Traore had equalised while Amri Kiemba and Thomas Ulimwengu scored for the “Taifa Stars”, who stayed third behind the Ivorians and Morocco.

Democratic Republic of Congo and six-time World Cup qualifiers Cameroon drew 0-0 in Kinshasa — a result that eliminated the Congolese and left Libya with a two-point Group I lead ahead of a September visit to Yaounde.

While new “Indomitable Lions” coach Volker Finke was relieved to avoid a second loss in as many weeks after a 2-0 defeat by Togo, the absence of injured striker Samuel Eto’o was sorely felt. Juvenal Edjogo converted a first-half penalty for the Equatoguineans in Malabo — his fourth goal of the campaign — and Darragi brought Tunisia level on 64 minutes from another spot-kick.

Saphir Taider scored early in the second half to achieve victory for Algeria in Kigali and a Mali side that has struggled since French coach Patrice Carteron left needed to come from behind twice to hold Benin. — AFP.

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