Kotoko to miss Imoro, Boadu and three other key players against WAFA

The Porcupine Warriors will have to do the job on Saturday without several key players in an unfavorable ground

Asante Kotoko will miss five key players when they travel to Sogakope to face WAFA on matchday 27 of Ghana Premier League on Saturday.

Defender and captain Abdul Ganiu Ismail will once again miss the game after failing to fully recover from the injury he sustained several weeks ago. In his absence, coach Prosper Ogum Narteh has been using Maxwell Agyemang, Andrew Appau and Mubarak Yussif and two of them are expected to start tomorrow.

Also, Richmond Lamptey will not make the matchday squad since he is yet to recover from the knee injury he is suffering. The nimble-footed midfielder hasn’t kicked a ball in almost a month and will once again be missed.

Kotoko will likely struggle in defence since Imoro Ibrahim has been suspended ahead of the game. The left-back is out of the game due to accumulated yellow cards.

Interestingly, his back up, Patrick Asmah who was expected to fill the void, has also been ruled out of the game due to the club’s decision to suspend him.

Asmah reportedly had a bust up with head coach Prosper Ogum Narteh during training earlier this week.

Asmah then left the pitch fuming and allegedly accused the coach of being bias in his selections as he picks players based on favouritism and not on merit.

Kotoko have officially banned the player until the end of the season, therefore, he will also miss the game in Sogakope over the weekend.

Lastly, Richard Boadu ‘Agadas’ will also miss the game due to accumulated yellow cards. The midfielder’s yellow card recieved in the 3-1 loss to Legon Cities last weekend means that he now has three cards.

He will have to miss one game and return to action next weekend when Kotoko host Aduana Stars at the Baba Yara Sports Stadium.

Although, Kotoko have lost their last two games, they lead the log with 52 points, seven points better than Bechem United who will also travel to Kumasi to face King Faisal on Sunday.

Former Asante Kotoko striker Francis Aggrey Mboma confirmed dead

The former goal poacher who once seized the headlines in Ghana Premier League has been confirmed dead

Former Asante Kotoko and Berekum Arsenal striker Francis Aggrey Mboma has been confirmed dead, Ashesgyamera.com can confirm.

The striker who led Berekum Arsenal to achieve a lot of laurels before joining Kotoko was confirmed dead on Thursday evening after a short illness.

Aggrey, who recently got married in Berekum, was rushed to the Seventh Day Adventist hospital in Sunyani after complaining that he isn’t feeling well.

Although, the nurses and doctors present did their best, they could not save him as he was pronounced dead hours later.

Aggrey, popularly known as Mboma, joined Kotoko in 2003 as he was expected to partner Nana Arhin-Duah, Shilla Alhassan and Michael Osei up front since the club was aiming at ending their nine-year run without a league trophy.

It was reported during that time that Kotoko’s technical men spotted Aggrey when he featured for Berekum Arsenals against Kotoko in a friendly encounter at the Kumasi Sports Stadium.

Fathia; How a beautiful and naive young Egyptian woman became the wife of Ghana’s first president Kwame Nkrumah

Fathia Nkrumah enjoys a near-mythical place in postcolonial Ghanaian history. Her skin colour mattered; she was not a black African. Her native country mattered; Egypt is ancient, biblical and mystical.Yet, the wife of Ghana’s first president is known exactly for that: being the wife of Ghana’s first president.As she was, without the light and glamour of her husband’s eminence, Fathia is to an embarrassing extent, unknown to those who should. This should not be surprising since Nkrumah towered above most he stood close to.

Of course, there is also the age-old tradition in which women are supposed to passively adorn and humanise their husbands and so we are not often educated in their backstories.

But Fathia Halim Ritzk held her own. Born into a middle-class Egyptian family in 1932, Fathia’s mother had to raise her and four other siblings as a widower.

Fathia’s father, a clerk at a telephone company in Cairo, passed when she was young.

Her family was Coptic. She schooled at Zeitoun’s Notre Dame des Apôtres or Our Lady of Apostles, where she became literate in French.

After school, Fathia taught for a while at her alma mater but was reportedly not enthused with the job. So she went to work in a bank. And that’s where fate and politics would find her.

About 2,500 miles south-west of Egypt, a young intellectual was making himself a nuisance for the British colonial government in the Gold Coast.

Kwame Nkrumah had fast established himself as the people’s man in the country that he would lead to independence. The colonial administrators were not pleased.

So when Nkrumah got Isis Nashid, an Egyptian working for the colonial government, pregnant, he had to hide it.

In the little-known story revealed in 2015 by Souad El Rouby Sinare, Nashid had to leave Nkrumah and the Gold Coast to her native Egypt. Upon arrival, she quickly got married to avoid the shame of having a child out of wedlock.

Nkrumah continued with the freedom struggle.

But not long after the episode with Nashid, Nkrumah was convinced by Said Saleh Sinare, a businessman and personal friend, to look for a wife, preferably the woman who had his child in Egypt.

But instead of Nashid, Fathia was found available and ready.

Souad Sinare recounted: “When we informed Dr. Nkrumah of our find of a bride [to-be], he was very happy that he also informed the President of Egypt, Gamel Abdul Nasser, who was happy that his friend…had decided to marry from his [Nasser’s] country.”

Both had not met before. But she was also excited even if her mother did not like the idea of marrying a foreigner.

Her brother had already married an English woman in the 1950s and had gone away. Fathia tried to convince her mother that Nkrumah was like Nasser, a freedom fighter, but the older woman would have none of that.

Fathia effectively travelled to Ghana in 1957 to marry a man whom she did not know except for his reputation. And she did so with just one uncle but without her family’s blessings.

Gamel Nkrumah, her first son, would later say of his mother: “The new bride, who had cut herself off from her family and country by marrying Nkrumah, was isolated in more ways than one.”

She spoke little to no English and Nkrumah spoke neither French nor Arabic. She had to learn so that by the end of her first year, Fathia was delivering speeches in English.

Fathia was happy, not only about her marriage but also about Ghana. It was not a conservative society in the same mould as Egypt.

The Ghanaian women Fathia knew in the early 1960s were fiercely independent, educated and wealthy.

She endeared herself to this wealthy category of women who were mostly retailers of wax prints and the famous traditionally woven cloth called kente.

By their wealth, these “market women” were powerful and influential. They named a kind of kente after the first lady, calling it “Fathia fata Nkrumah”, Akan for “Fathia is perfect for Nkrumah”.

But before they would accept her, the market women and wives of powerful men, were actually very angry with Kwame Nkrumah. He was going to marry a “white woman”.

The women’s wing of Nkrumah’s own Convention People’s Party (CPP), reacted in the harshest way possible, telling Nkrumah they were disappointed in him.

Nkrumah had to explain to them that in spite of her skin colour, Fathia was African. This tension is microcosmic of modern-day discussions around the Africanness of continental North Africans.

But Nkrumah’s determination to defend Fathia’s Africanness also raises questions about whether he thought of her as a tool of political expedience to his hopes of Pan-Africanism.

Gamel Nkrumah himself wrote: “It was not meant to be a marriage made in heaven. It was a political union between Mediterranean-oriented North Africa and the rest of the continent, often pejoratively termed sub-Saharan or Black Africa.”

Carina Ray writing in 2006, also said of the marriage: “The US State Department and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) were rumoured to be primarily concerned with whether the marriage was intended to create a political union between Egypt and Ghana”.

Whether she was a tool in their game or a completely loved wife, Fathia Nkrumah found meaning for her role and she played it well.

Before going to Ghana, Fathia, it is said, spoke to Egyptian President Nasser. He wanted to be sure if the wife of a powerful man from a place she had no idea about is what she wanted to be.

The young woman reiterated her readiness, maybe naively.

Despite the culture shocks and noticeable temperature differences for an Egyptian in Ghana, Fathia would go on to play hostess to some of the world’s most powerful leaders; an unofficial envoy for her country, and the wife of a man whose life was constantly under threat.

In 1966, when Fathia’s eldest child was only seven, Nkrumah was overthrown in a coup d’etat. She herself was 34, still youthful and energetic.

Fathia flew out of Ghana with her three kids to Egypt, from where she would once again be an outsider looking in. It is not known if she ever saw Nkrumah again until his own death in 1972.

That was not the end of her relationship with Ghana. She was invited to live in the country but in 1979, Fathia’s mother-in-law, Nkrumah’s mother Nyaneba, died in the arms of a bitterly sad Fathia, at the age of 102.

Feeling like those who loved her were no more, Fathia left Ghana again, this time by choice and not compulsion. She would return to visit in 1997 for the country’s 40th independence.

In 2007, she died in Cairo aged 75.

Fathia had been a young woman with convictions of grandeur but also the victim of political nastiness. Above all, she had dared to follow her dreams and that is what probably matters.

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The pressure at Black Stars can kill you – Kwesi Appiah

The former Black Stars gaffer has opened up on his time with the national team and believes it was necessary for him to take a break

Former Ghana coach Kwesi Appiah has revealed that one can lose his life as a result of the pressure associated with the national team.

Appiah, who led Ghana to 2014 Fifa World Cup, left his role as the Black Stars coach in 2019 following the expiration of his contract.

After Appiah’s departure, three coaches have been appointed due to inconsistent performance and pressure associated with the job.

“There are so many pressure you deal with at the National team level,” Appiah told TV3.

“Some with the GFA, clubs, agents, the players themselves coming with their egos and so if you don’t take a break [and] you want to stay under this pressure, you will die,” he added.


C.K Akonnor was the successor of Appiah but he could not survive after barely five months. After him, Milovan Rajevic was appointed but he was also shown the exit after a terrible performance at 2021 Africa Cup of Nations held in Cameroon.

Currently, Otto Addo has been named as the interim coach and he will likely lead the Black Stars to 2022 Fifa World Cup having qualified the team.

Ghana have been paired with Portugal, South Korea and Uruguay in Group H of the competition which kicks of in November.

“I don’t know what is wrong with Imoro & Kotoko players,” Supporters’ chairman Christopher Damenya fires after two defeats

The supporters chief has slammed the players’ recent performance after losing two league games in a row

Asante Kotoko supporters’ chairman Christopher Damenya has lashed out on Imoro Ibrahim and other players following the club’s recent poor performance in Premier League.

Kotoko lost 2-1 to Real Tamale United and we’re also shocked 3-1 at home by Legon Cities last weekend. The results have somehow given other clubs the chance to fight for the title as Bechem United are currently only seven points behind.

“It’s sad that we have lost two matches in a row when we want to win the league. Apart from the penalty the referee awarded against us in the game 2ith Legon Cities, I can say we didn’t do anything on the field. Legon were better in both halves,” Damenya told Hello FM.

“There were some loopholes, and our players failed to pick 50-50 balls. But I don’t know what is wrong. The coach taught them what they were supposed to do. Seriously, I don’t know what is wrong with the players.

“We didn’t even deserve a draw in the game because all the players flopped today. Apart from Richard Boadu, Mudasiru and, to some extent, Fabio Gama, the players didn’t do anything on the field. Our fullbacks flopped totally. Someone like Imoro I don’t know what was wrong with him. Maybe he was sick.

“The players should be mindful because they are discouraging us with their poor performances in recent games. No player should think that he is helping Kotoko; it is Kotoko that is helping him. Because it’s the club that pays him.

“They have to note that every player puts in a lot of work when they come up against them because they also want the opportunity to play Kotoko. 
 
“The Kotoko players should have this in mind: we are not playing with the team. Whoever is not ready to play for the club should say it to us for them to leave. So that we will get players who have the team in their hearts and want to play,” he added.

Kotoko will travel to Sogakope this weekend to face relegation-threatened WAFA in a must win game.

Hearts of Oak close in on Cameroonian striker Ouatching to fight Mfegue and Mbella

The Phobians have concluded talks to sign the Cameroonian striker as they prepare to improve on their performance next season

Hearts of Oak have completed negotiations to sign Cameroonian striker Yassin Ouatching as a free agent, according to reports in the local media.

The 23-year old has been on the radar of the Phobians for a quite number of months after he caught the eye of coach Samuel Boadu during a two-week trial with the Phobians at the clubs’training ground.

The youngster, who has not played for any club since August of 2021, is believed to have signed a three-year deal with the Phobians and will have to return to Cameroon to prepare physically and spiritually before he returns for the new season.

If his deal is officially announced, Ouatching will become the third Cameroon player to play in Ghana Premier League since Asante Kotoko already have George Mfegue Rodrigues and Etouga Mbella.

The Cameroonian duo at Kotoko have been an instant hit as they have scored a combined goals of 23 (Etouga -17, Mfegue -6) as Kotoko lead the Premier League log.

Profile:
Name: Yassin Ouatching
D.O.B.: 28/11/1998
P.O.B.: Douala, Cameroon
Position: CF, LW and RW
Previous Clubs: Zwekapim United (Myanmar), Mohammedan SC (Bangladesh)

Free Agent: since August 2021.

Statistics:
Myanmar National Premier League
Zwekapim United
13 – games
6 – goals

Bangladesh Premier League
Mohammedan SC
12 – games
3 – goals

APC president Samson Deen visits athletes and officials in Birmingham ahead of Commonwealth Games

The president of the African Paralympic Committee (APC), Samson Deen, met with athletes and officials from 11 African countries who are camped at the University of Birmingham in a training program organized by the Commonwealth Games Federation.

Deen visited the camp on the invitation of the GAPS to deliver his support to the project and encourage participants from the continent to take key interest and accelerate their knowledge to impact other friends from their countries.

Samson Deen visits athletes and officials in Birmingham
He used the opportunity to thank Ellen Barwise and Richard De Groen for the great effort they have made so far in making sure we overcame the challenges in making it possible to bring athletes and officials across the continent.

GAPS – What is it?

GAPS is a sport for development and peace programme that supports the development of inclusive sports pathways throughout the Commonwealth. Developed by the Commonwealth Games Federation and Griffith University, GAPS has expanded into a mutually beneficial and collaborative relationship with other partners joining on this exciting but challenging journey.

The expansion of the programme is ongoing as we work towards bringing GAPS to Africa with Stellenbosch University, Americas and Caribbean with the University of Western Ontario and Europe with the University of Birmingham. Oceania and Asia’s expansion will be led by Griffith University.

Who is it for?

GAPS is for emerging athletes and coaches from the Commonwealth. It aims to support the development of inclusive sports pathways, removing barriers to participation for people with a disability and for women and girls to become actively involved in sport. The development of coaches is fundamental, but so is tackling many barriers and constraints that prevent participation.

The programme involves multi-stakeholder partnerships and the building of long-term collaborations with universities, sports organisations and government agencies. Through these partnerships, we can begin to shift mindsets and start to have a positive influence on communities to believe that it is a fundamental human right for women, girls, and people with a disability to be included in their sports pathways.

On behalf of the Commonwealth Games Secretariat and GAPS, Richard De Groan encouraged Ghana and the president of the APC to make the organisation of the ACCRA 2023 African Paralympic Games a reality and congratulated Deen for the success so far chalked in bringing the IPC and sports bodies into believing in Ghana and Africa.

“Kotoko haven’t paid Mfegue’s transfer fee to Avion FC but they can’t go to Fifa,” agent Tigana explains why

Despite the Cameroonian club’s chief revealing their decision to send Asante Kotoko to Fifa following a breach of contract, an agent has opened up on issues surrounding the player

Football agent Amadou Fontem Tigana, who owns Royal Soccer Scout Management, has dared Avion Academy of Doula president Pierre Batamak to file legal complaints against Asante Kotoko at Fifa if they think their hands are clean.

This comes after an interview by Batamak in Cameroon on Monday, where he insisted that Kotoko have refused to honour a contract signed with them last year.

The Cameroonian club released striker Rodrigues Mfegue Omgba to Kotoko at the start of the season in a three-year deal and according to Batamak, Kotoko owe Avion an amount of €15,000 as part of the transfer fee agreed.

He further explained that despite several notices to Kotoko, they have decided not to honour their part of the contract.

“They were supposed to complete the payment on March 15 but have not done so to date,” president Pierre Batamak revealed in an interview with Cameroonian journalists.

“If payment is not made by May 1st, we will work with our legal team to report Kotoko to FIFA,” he added.

However, Fontem Tigana who reportedly brokered the deal for Mfegue to sign for Kotoko, believes it is rather Avion FC president Batamak who is making things difficult since he is not ready to pay the 30 per cent agency fee.

READ ALSO: Avion FC threatens to report Asante Kotoko to Fifa next week over Mfegue

It will be recalled that Tigana was the one who negotiated the deals for Mfegue and Etouga Mbella with Kotoko chief executive officer Nana Yaw Amponsah but he has been sidelined as Avion are not ready to pay him his part of transfer fee.

Etouga Mbella and agent Tigana

“It’s true Kotoko haven’t paid the €15,000 balance for Mfegue but it is because of Avion FC that is why the matter has reached this stage,” Tigana said as quoted by AshesGyamera.com.

“I brokered the deal for both Mfegue and Etouga before they were able to arrive in Ghana but when the first payment was made for Mfegue, his club insisted that they don’t know me but for Mbella, I don’t have any issue with his club.

“How can that be possible? I’m someone who worked day and night to see to it that Mfegue was signed so their conduct came as a surprise. I had the mandate from the player to represent him so I was shocked at the sudden turn of events.

“Kotoko are ready to pay the balance but they have not done so because of the confusion between myself and the leadership of Avion FC.

“If they feel that Kotoko have breached a contract signed with them, they should send the matter to Fifa and I will even be happy since that will help me to recieve my share of the money.

“I don’t think Kotoko will send the money until my issue is resolved because Nana Yaw Amponsah knows the role I played throughout and since he is a former player agent, he understands the situation thoroughly,” Tigana added.

According to AshesGyamera.com’s investigations, Tigana has recieved £4,000 for his role played for Etouga to join Kotoko but another Cameroonian player agent called Christian Mbongo has insisted that he is the one that had the original mandate from Mfegue to represent him.

Therefore, even if Fontem Tigana spoke to Kotoko on behalf of Mfegue, he had no legal rights from his player to do so. He has further advised his colleague to deal with Avion and rather not involve Mfegue in the financial tussle.

Mfegue has been an instant hit and one of the supporters favourite at Asante Kotoko after scoring six goals and providing three assists this season.

Avion FC threatens to report Asante Kotoko to Fifa next week over Mfegue

The Cameroonian club’s chief has revealed their decision to send Asante Kotoko to Fifa following a breach of contract

Avion Academy of Doula president Pierre Batamak has revealed the club’s readiness to report Asante Kotoko to Fifa following their refusal to honour a contract signed with them.

The Cameroonian club released striker Rodrigues Mfegue Omgba to Kotoko at the start of the season in a three-year deal but Kotoko have refused to pay them the agreed fee.

According to Batamak, Kotoko owe Avion an amount of €15,000 as part of the transfer fee agreed for Mfegue but the Ghanaian club have refused to honour their part of the agreement.

“They were supposed to complete the payment on March 15 but have not done so to date,” president Pierre Batamak revealed in an interview with Cameroonian journalists.

“If payment is not made by May 1st, we will work with our legal team to report Kotoko to FIFA,” he added.

According to our findings, Kotoko paid 50% of the player’s transfer fee after he joined them last October but were supposed to pay the rest by March 15 but they have not done so.

Kotoko has this week to make the payment to avoid legal disputes with Avion officials.

Mfegue Georges has been crucial to Kotoko’s charge towards another domestic title; scoring six goals and provided three assists in 20 games.

Mfegue joined the club alongside compatriot Mbella Etouga – the current lead scorer in the Ghanaian Premier league with 17 goals

Bechem United 1-1 Karela United: Augustine Okrah’s goal reduces Kotoko’s lead at the top to seven

The midfielder left it late to snatch a point for the Hunters from a losing position

Bechem United shared the spoils 1-1 with Karela United in the last game of matchday 26 of Ghana Premier League at the Nana Fosu Gyeabour Park in Bechem on Monday.

After losing in a bizarre manner last week against Eleven Wonders in the Bono Ahafo derby, Bechem were hoping to return to winning ways

After an end to end action in the first half where chances were at the premium, the game came to its expectation after the break.

Umar Bashiru benefited from Osei Kuffour’s mistake at the back to open the scoring by 52nd minute and shut the vociferous home fans.

Francis Twene combined with Hafiz Konkoni to set up Okrah but his shot was blocked.

However, Okrah got lucky and scored a wonderful equalizer for Bechem by the 79th minute.

Bechem now have 45 points as they have reduced the lead by Kotoko (52) to seven points. Bechem will travel to Baba Yara Sports Stadium in Kumasi to face King Faisal next weekend while Kotoko travel to Sogakope to lock horns with WAFA.