ChinAfrica

Infrastruc­ture boost

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However, not everything is gloomy in the world of African football. While financial and organizati­onal issues do not show sign of going away, things look much better on the infrastruc­ture side.

Cameroon’s Lions claimed victory in the 40,000-seater Angondje Stadium, in Libreville, which is representa­tive of the large-scale modern stadiums that have emerged across the continent, a direct result of China’s growing role in the African football industry.

Indeed, of the four stadiums in which the ACN 2017 took place in Gabon, three were built by Chinese companies. Completed in 2011 by the Shanghai Constructi­on Group, the Angondje Stadium is symbolical­ly dubbed the Stadium of Sino-gabonese Friendship.

Since the first Chinese-built Zanzibar Amaan Stadium in the 1970s, China has built more than 50 stadiums across the continent in 34 countries, a trend that some experts have called “stadium diplomacy.”

In addition to their multifunct­ional nature, these “turn-key” stadiums have played a key role in the organizati­on of the ACN. Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon, which organized the ACN in 2010, 2012 and 2017, respective­ly, all benefited from the architectu­ral feats of China.

Cameroon, which has become the host country for the next competitio­n following the victory of its Lions on the Gabonese turf, will continue the tradition. The 2019 ACN will be held in the new $75-million Bafoussam Stadium, a project of China Machinery Engineerin­g Corp. (CMEC).

Wang Chunhao, Project Manager at CMEC, said that while constructi­ng the stadium, they took into account local characteri­stics of Cameroon.

“For this 20,000-seater stadium, we have chosen seats in red, green and yellow color, which are the colors of the flag of Cameroon,” he said in a statement on the company’s website.

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