Ethiopia on Tuesday admitted fielding a suspended player in a FIFA World Cup qualifier this month, and FIFA match records showed Togo were guilty of a similar offense.
Midfielder Manyahile Beyene played for Ethiopia in Botswana instead of serving a one-match ban having been cautioned in Group A games away to South Africa and at home to Botswana.
Ethiopia soccer federation president Sehelew Gebremariam revealed that Ethiopia had blundered by fielding Beyene in the away game against Botswana.
Photo: AFP
“We accept the allegation, it is a mistake by our side, shocking news to us,” he said in Addis Ababa.
Ethiopia are likely to be docked three points by FIFA, but will still lead South Africa by two points and Botswana by three with an away fixture against the Central African Republic to come.
“[The] players have got the commitment, the spirit [and] the inspiration. The coach also has inspiration. Nobody is frustrated, we still see hope,” Gebremariam said.
Another midfielder, Alaixys Romao of Togo, started in a Group I game against Cameroon in Lome when he should have been sidelined following cautions in two earlier matches.
FIFA issued a statement at the weekend saying they were probing games involving Togo, Ethiopia and Equatorial Guinea over the alleged use of ineligible players, but did not name them.
The standard punishment for a team guilty of using an ineligible player is that their opponents are awarded a 3-0 victory, with Sudan, Burkina Faso and Gabon already punished during the qualifying competition for the finals in Brazil next year.
Sudan played suspended Eldin Adris, Burkina Faso used Cameroon-born Herve Zengue and Gabon picked Charly Moussono, who represented Cameroon at the 2006 Beach Soccer World Cup.
Should Togo, Ethiopia and Equatorial Guinea be found guilty, it would have a major impact on three groups, with eliminated countries South Africa and Botswana (Group A) and Cape Verde Islands (Group B) coming back into contention.
Cameroon, who trail Libya by two points with a home fixture against them to come in September, would take a one-point advantage, leaving them needing a draw to reach the playoffs.
The matches being investigated are Togo 2, Cameroon 0 on June 9 in Lome, Botswana 1, Ethiopia 2 on June 8 in Lobatse and Equatorial Guinea 4, Cape Verde Islands 3 on March 24 in Malabo.
On Tuesday, FIFA said in a separate statement they were also probing whether Equatorial Guinea contravened the competition regulations when they lost the return match against Cape Verde 2-1 on June 8 in Praia.
An undisclosed decision was reached by FIFA regarding the Equatorial Guinea-Cape Verde game in Malabo, but the part-island state must have been found guilty as they lodged an appeal.
It does not appear yellow card-related, though, as match reports show Ben Konate was the only Equatorial Guinea player to receive two cautions and he served a one-match suspension.
A probable cause of the probe is the use of foreign-born players by Equatorial Guinea, with the side that started in Malabo containing no player born in the country.
Five were born in Brazil, three in Spain and one each in Ivory Coast, Liberia and Ghana. Malabo-born Konate was among the three substitutes used, with the others born in Brazil and Colombia.
FIFA rules state that if a player is not born in the country he wishes to represent, a parent or grandparent must have been born there or he must have lived there continuously for at least five years.
Respected London-based magazine World Soccer has regularly reported that some players fielded by Equatorial Guinea, who co-hosted last year’s Africa Cup of Nations and reached the quarter-finals, meet none of the criteria.
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