Wednesday, 28 November 2018
SPORT: Super Falcons Defeat Indomitable Lionesses 4-0, Qualify For Final
The Nigeria's Super Falcons on Tuesday, 27th November 2018 defeated the Indomitable Lionesses of Cameroon 4-2 during penalties in the semifinals of the ongoing 2018 African Women Cup of Nations (AWCON).
Nigeria vs Cameroon
Nigeria finished second in group B after two wins and a loss, while Cameroon were top of group A with two wins and a draw.
Super Falcons head coach Thomas Dennerby made no changes to the starting line up for their previous two games that ended on victory.
The Super Falcons were however bullied to creating very few chances in the first half as the Indomitable Lionesses controlled possession and set the tone of the game.
The Cameroonians aimed to revenge previous defeats by the Nigerian side as the game at the Accra Sports Stadium ended in a goalless draw at halftime, with neither team creating any clear cut chances.
The second half followed in the same pattern as the first with both sides unable to get the breakthrough.
Thomas Dennerby tried to change the game by introducing Falconets stars Rasheedat Ajibade and Anam Imo but the game ended goalless at 90 minutes full time.
The first half of extra time ended goalless with the Super Falcons in the ascendancy before the whistle. The second half ended goalless also as both side proceeded to penalty shoot out.
Captain Onome Ebi, Ajibade, Asisat Oshoala and Ngozi Ebere all converted their spot kicks to give Nigeria a 4-2 victory.
Rostrum365 Sport crew gathered that Cameroon star Ajara Nchout was voted Woman of the Match as she played a crucial role as the Indomitable Lionesses pressed the Super Falcons.
By winning the semifinal game the Super Falcons have qualified for the forthcoming 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup to be hosted in France and will face the Bayana Bayana of South Africa in the final match of the ongoing 2018 AWCON billed for Saturday, 1st december 2018.
It would be recalled that the Falcons were in their first match during the group stage defeated by the South-Africa side by 1-0.
Tuesday, 27 November 2018
SPORT: Super Falcons Tackle Indomitable Lionessses Today Over AWCON
The Nigeria's Super Falcons will today being Tuesday, 27th November 2018 slug it out with the Indomitable Lionesses of Cameroon in the ongoing African Women Cup of Nations (AWCON)being hosted in Ghana.
The Falcons on Saturday, 24th November 2018 graciously entered the semi-final phase of the tournament having humiliated the Equatorial Guinea side by 6-0, hence finishing second in their group.
Rostrum365 gathered that the Swede coach, Thomas Dennerby has warned the Indomitable Lionesses to be wary of his ever-ready Super Falcons.
Dennerby says his Super Falcons side are in good shape to take on Cameroon in Tuesday's semi-final clash in the ongoing AWCON.
The Super Falcons will rekindle their rivalry with Indomitable Lionesses when they go toe-to-toe at the Accra Sports Stadium in the quest to clinch a spot in the final of the competition.
With both sides set to meet for the ninth time in the tournament's history, the holders' gaffer believes his ladies will fight hard with everything in them to claim a win over Joseph Brain's side.
The match is expected to commence by 5:00pm Nigerian time.
Saturday, 24 November 2018
BREAKING: Macron Agrees to Return 26 Cultural Artefacts to Benin Republic
The French President, Mr. Emmanuel Macron on Friday, 23rd November 2018 graciously approved to return 26 cultural artifacts to Benin Republic “without delay”.
It would be recalled that the West African nation was a colony of France from 1872 till 1st August 1960 when they got their independence.
The move could put pressure on other former colonial powers to return looted African artworks to their countries of origin.
The decision — which Macron said should not be seen as an isolated or symbolic case — came as the president received the findings of a study he commissioned on repatriating African treasures held by French museums.
Macron agreed to return the 26 works, mainly royal statues from the Palaces of Abomey — formerly the capital of the kingdom of Dahomey — taken by the French army during a war in 1892 and now in Paris’ Quai Branly museum.
In addition, he proposed gathering African and European partners in Paris next year to define a framework for an “exchange policy” for African artworks.
The president “hopes that all possible circulation of these works are considered: returns but also exhibitions, loans, further cooperation”, the Elysee palace said.
Ousmane Aledji, director of the Benin cultural centre Artisttik Africa, said he was pleased to see “a new form of cultural exchange” with France.
Britain has also faced calls to return artefacts, including the Elgin Marbles to Greece and the Benin Bronzes to Nigeria, while museums in Belgium and Austria house tens of thousands of African pieces.
Calls have been growing in Africa for restitution of artworks, but French law strictly forbids the government from ceding state property, even in well-documented cases of pillaging.
In 2016 Benin demanded France return items including statues, artworks, carvings, sceptres and sacred doors.
While that request was initially denied, in November 2016 Macron raised hopes in a speech in Burkina Faso, pledging to “return African heritage to Africa”.
Following his speech, Macron asked French art historian Benedicte Savoy and Senegalese writer Felwine Sarr to study the matter.
Their report, a copy of which has been seen by AFP, has been welcomed by advocates of the restitution of works which were bought, bartered, or in some cases simply stolen.
It proposes legislation be developed to return thousands of African artefacts taken during the colonial period to nations that request them.
There are conditions, however, including a request from the relevant country, precise information about the works’ origins, and the existence of proper facilities such as museums to house the works back in their home country.
Macron’s office said that museums will be invited to “identify African partners and organise possible returns” and should quickly establish “an online inventory of their African collections”.
The president also called for “in-depth work with other European states that retain collections of the same nature acquired in comparable circumstances”.
A UNESCO convention against the export of illicit cultural goods adopted in 1970 called for the return of cultural property taken from a country but it did not address historic cases, including from the colonial era.
With museums fearing they could be forced to return artefacts, former colonial powers have been slow to ratify the convention: France only did so 1997, Britain in 2002, Germany in 2007 and Belgium in 2009.
On Tuesday, the governor of Easter Island in the Pacific tearfully begged the British Museum to return one of its famous statues.
The London museum has held the Hoa Hakananai’a, one of the most spiritually important of the Chilean island’s stone monoliths, for 150 years.
Of the estimated 90,000 African artworks in French museums, around 70,000 are at the Quai Branly museum, created by ex-president Jacques Chirac, a keen admirer of African and Asian art.
Elsewhere in Europe, 37,000 objects from Sub-Saharan Africa were at Vienna’s Weltmuseum and 180,000 were at Belgium’s Royal Museum for Central Africa in Tervuren.
The report commissioned by Macron said such collections were effectively depriving Africans of their artistic and cultural heritage.
“On a continent where 60 percent of the population is under the age of 20 years old, what is first and foremost of a great importance is for young people to have access to their own culture, creativity, and spirituality from other eras,” it said
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