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Saturday, December 12, 2009

Coach Of Rwanda’s APR Concedes The Tough Road Ahead In African Champions League

The Rwandan champions will face Angolan Recreativo du Libolo in the preliminary round and if they win, they will face the defending champions TP Mazembe.
APR’s Dutch coach Erik Paske has admitted that his lads are in for a difficult ride in next year’s African Champions League.

The ten-time national league champions are scheduled to play Angolan club Recreativo du Libolo in the preliminary round before taking on reigning African champions TP Mazembe of the Democratic Republic of Congo in the next stage if they progress.

“We have two very tough games in the Champions League. Recreativo de Libolo and TP Mazembe are two big sides on the continent,” he told the New Times.

“It is not going to be easy even though we know that we have the quality to take something out of both games,” he added.

Paske has been looking to better Rene Feller’s performances in last year’s Confederations Cup where the military side was knocked out in the second round by a 2-0 aggregate loss to Haras El Hoduod of Egypt.

In the preliminary round, APR battered a lacklustre Kenyan side Gor Mahia 7-0 on aggregate.

APR start their campaign by hosting Recreativo de Libolo on the weekend of February 12-14 before travelling to Luanda for the return leg on the weekend of February 25-28, 2010, with the winner going on to face TP Mazembe, who got a bye into the 1/16th round.

Mazembe were crowned African champions last season after edging past Nigerian side, Heartland FC on the away goal rule after a 2-2 tie from both legs.

Source:goal.com/

Uganda: Rwanda to Face Cranes in Finale

Nairobi — Rwanda's Amavubi Stars yesterday made it to the Cecafa Orange Senior Challenge Cup final in Nairobi, Kenya to face Uganda, after a 2-1 win over the Kilimanjaro Stars of Tanzania.

Yusuf Ndaishimye and Mafisango Mutesa netted for the Amavubi, while Musa Mugosi scored for Marcio Maximo's boys.

Both sides finished with a man less after Tanzania's Kevin Yondani saw read five minutes into the second half, while Rwanda's Didier Kaped was sent to the stands in the last minute of the game.

Meanwhile, former Zimbabwe International Norman Mapeza who is currently in charge of the national team has tipped the Cranes to win the regional trophy.

Mapeza who guided Zimbabwe to their first Cosafa title two month ago said that he doesn't see any team that can stop the Cranes at the moment.

"I put my money on Uganda. They are a fine side that plays with a lot of attacking football and it's going to be tough for the teams that will face them," Mapeza told a filled press conference at the Nyayo Stadium.

The Uganda Cranes who have won a record 10 Cecafa titles since the tournament's inception in 1973 will also be playing in this year's final due on Sunday at the Nyayo Stadium.

The Cranes under Scottish coach Bobby Williamson have won a record 12 games drawn two and lost only two.

Yesterday's result

Rwanda 2 Tanzania 1

Play-off - Saturday

Tanzania v Zanzibar

Final - Sunday

Uganda v Rwanda

Source:allafrica.com/

Uganda: Rwanda to Face Cranes in Finale

Nairobi — Rwanda's Amavubi Stars yesterday made it to the Cecafa Orange Senior Challenge Cup final in Nairobi, Kenya to face Uganda, after a 2-1 win over the Kilimanjaro Stars of Tanzania.

Yusuf Ndaishimye and Mafisango Mutesa netted for the Amavubi, while Musa Mugosi scored for Marcio Maximo's boys.

Both sides finished with a man less after Tanzania's Kevin Yondani saw read five minutes into the second half, while Rwanda's Didier Kaped was sent to the stands in the last minute of the game.

Meanwhile, former Zimbabwe International Norman Mapeza who is currently in charge of the national team has tipped the Cranes to win the regional trophy.

Mapeza who guided Zimbabwe to their first Cosafa title two month ago said that he doesn't see any team that can stop the Cranes at the moment.

"I put my money on Uganda. They are a fine side that plays with a lot of attacking football and it's going to be tough for the teams that will face them," Mapeza told a filled press conference at the Nyayo Stadium.

The Uganda Cranes who have won a record 10 Cecafa titles since the tournament's inception in 1973 will also be playing in this year's final due on Sunday at the Nyayo Stadium.

The Cranes under Scottish coach Bobby Williamson have won a record 12 games drawn two and lost only two.

Yesterday's result

Rwanda 2 Tanzania 1

Play-off - Saturday

Tanzania v Zanzibar

Final - Sunday

Uganda v Rwanda

Source:allafrica.com/

Rwanda wants Sudan to explain peacekeepers death in Darfur

Rwandan President Paul Kagame said on Sunday that Khartoum had some explaination to do over the two deadly attacks on Rwandan peacekeepers in Sudan‘s Darfur region.

The governor of northern Darfur, Osman Kebir, told newsmen that several men suspected of the first ambush had been arrested and would be charged.

According to Reuters, during the attacks, three members of Darfur‘s joint United Nations/African Union UNAMID mission were killed on Friday when gunmen opened fire on their convoy in the northern Darfur settlement of Saraf Omra.

Kebir condemned the shooting, saying bandits had started to target UNAMID convoys to steal their vehicles.

The men had been taken to north Darfur‘s capital El Fasher where they would ”be presented before a court to receive punishment for their heinous act”, he said

Source:punchng.com/

Rwanda: Church Condemns Election of Openly Gay Bishop

Kigali — The Archbishop of the Church of Rwanda, Rt. Rev. Emmanuela Kolini has strongly criticized and condemned the decision of an Anglican diocese in the United States of America to elect an openly gay clergy as the bishop of Diocese of Los Angeles.

In a close-to-call election that took seven ballots, the Diocese of Los Angeles elected an avowed lesbian, Rev. Canon Mary Douglas Glasspool to be the next Bishop of the diocese, setting off another storm around the Anglican community six years after the election of Gene Robinson, a non-celibate homosexual, as the Bishop of New Hampshire.

Speaking to The New Times, Kolini condemned the election and said the fact that Mary is a lesbian was against the will of God to place such a person in position of religious leadership.

"I condemn not only the act of electing Glasspool to the position, but also lesbianism as an act against the will of God," Kolini said, adding that it only contributes to divisions in the global Anglican society.

The election of Rev. Canon Mary Douglas Glasspool, 55, has created a theological rift between The Episcopal Church of America and the vast majority of Anglicans worldwide.

According to Kolini, placing such a person in a position of leadership makes it worse because she will only give wrong directives to the society.

"God did not plan the creation of different sex for enjoyment, he had a plan, he wanted man to multiply and feel the world."

Glasspool is one of only two women to be appointed the position of Bishop in Los Angeles in over 100 years, and is also the first gay woman.

The American church set off a debate within the world Communion when it confirmed Robinson as bishop-elect of the Diocese of New Hampshire.

Anglican bishops in Africa, Asia and Latin America condemned the vote, with some threatening to sever ties with the U.S. church.

Robinson, a 56-year-old divorced father of two, has lived with his partner, Mark Andrew, for more than 15 years.

Source:allafrica.com/