The Borneo Post

Near Oyem, a white elephant in the Gabon rainforest?

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OYEM, Gabon: Built in rainforest outside Gabon’s fourth largest town as one of the venues for the Africa Cup of Nations, the Oyem stadium risks becoming a white elephant now the tournament has moved on.

Ghana beat DR Congo at the venue in the quarter- finals on Sunday, the last of seven matches to be played at the stadium during the competitio­n.

It is anyone’s guess when the next game will be held. Not least because constructi­on work has not actually finished, and is not likely to be completed until June according to those in charge at the site. The 20,000- seat stadium is impeccable on the inside and meets the standards of both the Confederat­ion of African Football (CAF) and FIFA.

Its setting is remarkable too, but diggers are still present around the ground and around 100 Chinese constructi­on workers were still putting the finishing touches to the green spaces, car parks and planned 20-room hotel while games went on.

“The government’s objective will be to make this stadium the economic hub for the Woleu Ntem region,” Franck Domingo, in charge of constructi­on, told AFP, explaining that the idea is to create 2,000 jobs by the end of 2017.

The ideal, set out by former sports minister Blaise Louembe when the foundation stone was laid in September 2015, was certainly ambitious. Louembe called it “a veritable opportunit­y to make this place the centre point of an urban developmen­t project out of which a new town can blossom with housing, shops, schools and other amenities”.

The stadium is 17 kilometres from Oyem itself, but Domingo said that will help “develop the villages round about”.

Yet Pierre Mba, a resident in the neighbouri­ng village of AssokNgomo, insisted the running water and electricit­y that were supposed to come with the stadium had not yet appeared.

“For me, the Africa Cup of Nations, this stadium, are things to be proud of, not only for Oyem but for my village,” he said.

“But we are angry because none of what we have been promised has arrived.”

The issue will be resolved within three months according to those in charge of the site.

Meanwhile, local inhabitant­s wonder what the stadium will be used for in future and how financiall­y viable it can be after costing 75 million euros ( US$ 80 million) to build according to certain sources.

Vincent Essono Mengue is an independen­tly elected mayor and former minister who calls the project a “terrible waste”.

“If we had money to spend somewhere it would not be on the Africa Cup of Nations. We need more roads. We have patched up the ones that are there just so that when you (the visitors) come you don’t see the holes,” he told AFP.

Remy Ebanega, the president of the profession­al players’ union in Gabon, shares that view.

He does not see how US Oyem, the leading local team where he started his career and who now play in the country’s second division, can fill the ground all year round. — AFP

 ?? Reuters photo ?? New Zealand’s Sam Cane runs in to score a try against Argentina during the IRB Rugby World Cup Pool C at Wembley Stadium, London in England in this Sept 20, 2015 file photo. —
Reuters photo New Zealand’s Sam Cane runs in to score a try against Argentina during the IRB Rugby World Cup Pool C at Wembley Stadium, London in England in this Sept 20, 2015 file photo. —
 ??  ?? Ghana’s forward Jordan Ayew (right) scores a goal past Democratic Republic of the Congo’s goalkeeper Ley Matampi during the Africa Cup of Nations quarter-final football match between DR Congo and Ghana in Oyem in this Jan 29 file photo. — AFP photo
Ghana’s forward Jordan Ayew (right) scores a goal past Democratic Republic of the Congo’s goalkeeper Ley Matampi during the Africa Cup of Nations quarter-final football match between DR Congo and Ghana in Oyem in this Jan 29 file photo. — AFP photo

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