Arab Times

African football club hit by DR Congo ‘political feud’

Future stars losing weight

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LUBUMBASHI, DR Congo, June 27, (AFP): The training pitches and classrooms are fit for one of Africa’s most illustriou­s football clubs, but the political battles rife in Democratic Republic of Congo have stopped Tout Puissant Mazembe from using their new academy.

The teenagers who are meant to be the future stars of African football are losing weight because food rations have been cut back.

Lush grass is starting to grow around the buildings that owner Moise Katumbi, exiled tycoon and key opposition leader, has built on his property in Lubumbashi.

Katumbi took over Tout Puissant Mazembe - which means All-Powerful Mazembe — in 1997 and spent millions to turn it into a continenta­l football force. They subsequent­ly won the African Champions League title three times — though they also had two early wins in the 1960s.

On the political front, Katumbi, the former governor of mineralric­h Katanga province that takes in Lubumbashi, announced he would challenge President Joseph Kabila in elections due in 2016.

But the elections were delayed and Katumbi left the country the same year after being accused of harming state security. He was also subsequent­ly sentenced in absentia to jail for real estate fraud.

The new classes and bedrooms for the Katumbi Football Academy, wholly financed by the exiled businessma­n, have been ready for a year, but are like a Wild West ghost town.

The club says insufficie­nt money is trickling in to pay for operations since Katumbi went into exile in Belgium.

There has been no shortage of potential recruits for the academy

Zola

since it opened in 2012 but its predicamen­t has become increasing­ly dire, according to managing director Regis Laguesse.

The young players are banned from the academy football pitches for “safety” reasons and can now only use the pitch at the Tout Puissant Mazembe stadium.

“Each month, I weigh the players and for the first time in five years they have lost weight because we have been forced to reduce their food,” said Laguesse, a 67-year-old Frenchman, who has trained budding footballer­s from Abidjan to Bangkok.

From the Tout Puissant Mazembe stadium there is a view of the mines that powered Congo’s economic growth after the end of its devastatin­g 1998-2003 war, until the drop in commodity prices in 2015.

The young recruits work out there in the fabled black jersey of the Mazembe team, often under a baking sun. Most have come a long way from the times when they practised in the streets or on wasteland, hoping to be noticed.

“In the neighbourh­ood, football is just a game with friends,” said 16-year-old academy member Magloire Nongo. “But for me, football is all my life.” It is the club’s popularity that keeps the academy from closing, for the moment. It plans to recruit new pupils this year and expects 6,000 applicatio­ns for the 15 spots up for grabs.

“Each time we have to filter out the men with beards who say they are only 13,” said Johan Curbilie, one of the coaches. “Or they come pressing the case for their own star, even if the kid has only one leg,” Curbilie joked.

When Mazembe play, the stadium is packed with about 18,000 people. In a recent game against CF Mounana of Gabon, the team featured Arsene Zola, 20, the first academy graduate to force his way into the first team. Twelve academy pupils have left to become profession­als.

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