Africa soccer Cup starts, Togo hope to join later

CABINDA, Angola, (Reuters) – Togo’s soccer team flew  home yesterday after the deadly ambush of their team bus but the  sports minister said they hoped to return to Angola, where  Africa’s biggest sports tournament got underway.

Though overshadowed by the deaths of a Togo squad coach and  a press officer in Friday’s gun attack in Cabinda, the African  Nations Cup began as planned in a 50,000-seat stadium in the  Angolan capital Luanda.

A spectacular fireworks display lit up the purpose-built  stadium, whose rims bend like the horns of the black sable  antelope — Angola’s national symbol.

Soccer fans observed a minute of silence as a sign of  respect for the Togolese and their driver, who was killed at the  scene, before hosts Angola and Mali kicked off the tournament.

Togo’s players and head coach, though shocked by the attack,  said they would remain in the competition to honour the dead,  but their prime minister ordered the team home and sent a plane  to bring them back.

It would be wrong to let the team stay and take part, Togo’s  Prime Minister Gilbert Houngbo said.

“Anybody that is involved in security matters will tell you  that it would be irresponsible to just pretend that nothing has  happened and just let the show go on,” he told the BBC World  Service. “Security is non-negotiable.”

Togo striker and captain Emmanuel Adebayor told reporters at  Cabinda airport: “We have to mourn our dead, we’re going back to  do so, that’s life and we’re obviously very sad.”

Togolese Sports Minister Christophe Tchao added to the  uncertainty by telling reporters in Cabinda that Togo had asked  the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to find a way for  the team to rejoin the competition later.

“We have ordered a three-day mourning,” Tchao said. “The  players are leaving with the bodies of their fallen brothers and  we have asked the CAF to find an arrangement so we can catch up  with the competition later.”

Team media officer Stanislas Ocloo, assistant coach Amalete  Abalo and a driver were killed when gunmen from the Front for  the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda fired on the team bus  in Cabinda, an enclave separated from the rest of Angola.

Seven people were wounded including reserve goalkeeper  Kodjovi Obilale, now in stable condition in a South African  hospital after surgery.

Friday’s ambush shows how easily insurgents can grab world  headlines with attacks on soft targets and raises questions  about security for the soccer World Cup in South Africa in June,  but South African President Jacob Zuma dismissed any comparison.

The attack by a separatist group Angola’s government  recently said no longer existed cast a shadow over an event  supposed to show Angola at peace after years of civil war.

Angola has spent $1 billion building stadiums, roads and  hotels for the competition, which brings together Africa’s best  national teams.

The biennial tournament, which lasts until Jan.  31, will be broadcast live around the world.

Cabinda, the scene of rebel FLEC attacks even after Angola’s  27-year civil war ended in 2002, provides half the oil output of  the country, which rivals Nigeria as Africa’s biggest producer.

South Africa’s Zuma, who attended the opening ceremony,  stressed on arrival that his country remained 100 percent ready  to host the World Cup, and said the Angolan attack had no  bearing on the tournament in South Africa.