2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 11 - South Africa vs Morocco - 0:1

Morocco beats South Africa

1 Jul 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 11 - Namibia vs Ivory Coast - 1:4

Ivory Coast defeats Namibia

1 Jul 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP A - DAY 10 - Uganda vs Egypt - 0:2

Egypt beats Uganda

30 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP A - DAY 10 - Zimbabwe vs Congo DR - 0:4

Congo DR beats Zimbabwe

30 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP B - DAY 10 - Madagascar vs Nigeria - 2:0

Madagascar defeats Nigeria

30 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP B - DAY 10 - Burundi vs Guinea - 0:2

Guinea beats Burundi

30 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP E - DAY 09 - Mauritania vs Angola - 0:0

Angola held by Mauritania

29 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP F - DAY 09 - Cameroon vs Ghana - 0:0

A goalless draw

29 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP F - DAY 09 - Benin vs Guinea-Bissau - preview

A draw a between Benin and Guinea-Bissau

29 Jun 2019
2019 AFRICA CUP - GROUP D - DAY 08 - Morocco vs Ivory Coast - 1:0

Morocco beats Ivory Coast

28 Jun 2019

STARS IN EUROPE - IVORY COAST - Yaya Toure says racism 'breaks' players

AFRICA CUP 2015 MAN CITY YAYA TOURE

 

Yaya Toure says racist abuse has the power to "break" players and wants to see tougher sanctions brought in.

Manchester City midfielder Toure, who suffered racist abuse at CSKA Moscow last season, was speaking as Fifa launched a system where match observers will monitor discrimination incidents.

"I have been in the situation where there have been monkey chants and it's difficult to deal with that," he said.

"When you hear something like that it hurts you and breaks you."

The Ivory Coast international, who turns 32 on Wednesday, said existing punishments do not go far enough.

"You need to give them a radical sanction - paying a £20,000 fine is not enough, you need to do more," said Toure, who was also subjected to racist abuse on social media in November.

The new system will identify, and send observers to, high-risk matches among the 900-plus qualifiers for the 2018 World Cup. 

All 64 games at the finals will also be monitored.

The system is being overseen by European anti-discrimination body Fare, whose executive director Piara Powar said: 

"If there is evidence of discrimination this will be passed to Fifa and there will be associations who will be banned or play behind closed doors.

"There will be some pain as a result of this process but without that pain people will not really understand how they should be tackling these issues."

 

 

17 May 2015
(BBC Sport UK)

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