Kenya wins final WC qualifier with its football body in crisis

Kenya won its final World Cup qualifying game on Monday to provide a moment of relief from the crisis engulfing its national football federation.

Published : Nov 16, 2021 08:52 IST

Kenya's midfielder Richard Odada (right) fights for the ball against Rwanda's midfielder Kevin Muhire during the World Cup qualifying match between Kenyan and Rwanda.
Kenya's midfielder Richard Odada (right) fights for the ball against Rwanda's midfielder Kevin Muhire during the World Cup qualifying match between Kenyan and Rwanda.
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Kenya's midfielder Richard Odada (right) fights for the ball against Rwanda's midfielder Kevin Muhire during the World Cup qualifying match between Kenyan and Rwanda.

Kenya won its final World Cup qualifying game on Monday to provide a moment of relief from the crisis engulfing its national football federation.

Michael Olunga volleyed Kenya ahead in the third minute on the way to beating Rwanda 2-1. Richard Odada added the second from the penalty spot, and Kenya was 2-0 up inside 15 minutes in Nairobi.

Olivier Niyonzima met a free kick with a side-foot volley for Rwanda's goal, just its second goal in six games in the group stage qualifiers.

The result meant little with both teams already eliminated from contention for next year's World Cup in Qatar. Mali won Group E to progress to Africa's final World Cup playoffs in March.

Just a few hours before the Kenya-Rwanda qualifier and just a short distance away in Nairobi, Kenya Football Federation president Nick Mwendwa appeared in court after being arrested on suspicion of corruption and questioned by police over how the federation spent more than $6 million given to it by the government.

Prosecutors want Mwendwa detained for 14 days for more questioning, and also to give police a chance to gather documents. Mwendwa was granted bail ahead of another court appearance on Wednesday when a judge will decide whether to put him back in jail for interrogation.

Mwendwa was arrested at a hotel on Friday while visiting the national team, and a day after the government disbanded the national federation and replaced its leadership with a temporary committee. Kenya's sports minister said authorities needed to investigate the federation for corruption.

The move to disband the federation puts Kenya at risk of a ban from international football. FIFA doesn't allow governments to interfere in the running of football federations and urged Kenyan authorities to reinstate Mwendwa and other officials. That appears unlikely now, with Mwendwa's bail conditions barring him from contacting federation staff or accessing its offices.

Kenya-Rwanda was one of four qualifiers in Africa on Monday, none of which had any bearing on who will progress to the decisive 10-team playoffs. In the other games, Togo won in Namibia 1-0, Niger beat Djibouti 7-2, and Guinea-Bissau drew with Sudan 0-0. All those teams had already been eliminated.

 

Mali, Egypt, Ghana, Senegal, Morocco and Congo have qualified for the playoffs by winning their groups. African champions Algeria, Tunisia and Nigeria are all seeking to join them on the final day of group games on Tuesday. West African rivals Ivory Coast and Cameroon will meet in a winner-take-all game in their group.

The five winners of the playoff games in March will qualify for the World Cup.

South Africa said on Monday it will make a formal complaint and appeal to both the Confederation of African Football and FIFA after its 1-0 loss in Ghana on Sunday.

Ghana's victory saw it clinch the playoff place in Group G at the expense of South Africa. The game and maybe a World Cup place was decided by a penalty that was hotly disputed by the South Africans, who also complained about other decisions by Senegalese referee Maguette N’Diaye that went against them.

South African Football Association CEO Tebogo Motlanthe said they will ask CAF and FIFA to investigate “the conduct” of N’Diaye and the other match officials.

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