AP, Douala :
Cameroon marched on at the African Cup of Nations with a brace by striker Karl Toko Ekambi sending the tournament host into the semifinals with a 2-0 win over Gambia.
Burkina Faso joined Cameroon in the last four by surprising Tunisia 1-0. Teenage forward Dango Ouattara scored Burkina Faso’s goal in first-half injury time and was sent off in the 82nd minute for an elbow on Tunisia defender Ali Maaloul, leaving his team to cling on to the lead he gave it for the last 10 minutes.
The Burkina Faso squad have had to try and focus on soccer this week amid the distracting news of a coup back home. The players erupted in joyous celebrations at the final whistle in Garoua. They swept up coach Kamou Malo, hugged him and danced and chanted while he was trying to give a post-match TV interview.
Toko Ekambi scored his goals for Cameroon in the space of seven minutes in the second half at the Japoma Stadium on Saturday, where security was increased following the crush that left eight fans dead at the home team’s last game.
That incident at the Olembe Stadium in Yaounde on Monday is the subject of an investigation which could yet see the venue removed as host of the African Cup final on February 6.
Cameroon are still on course to make that final – wherever it are held – after dominating against Gambia, which were playing in its first African Cup and caused a major surprise to make it to the quarterfinals.
Toko Ekambi headed in from a cross in the 50th minute and side-footed into the roof of the net from another cross in the 57th to see the Indomitable Lions into the last four after the tournament’s first quarterfinal.
The French-born Toko Ekambi now has five goals at the tournament, one behind Cameroon captain Vincent Aboubakar.
Cameroon will play the winner of the Egypt vs. Morocco quarterfinal, which is on Sunday.
Cameroon authorities said they had placed 250 extra police officers at the Japoma Stadium for Cameroon’s quarterfinal, while yellow-vested security officials formed a line between the crowd and the field during the game.
The added security was also because of an invasion of fans at a game at the Japoma Stadium earlier in the tournament between Algeria and Ivory Coast.
The Cameroon government has blamed the stampede at the last-16 game between Cameroon and Comoros on an influx of ticketless fans who forced their way into the stadium to avoid security checks and Covid-19 screening. Fans must show negative coronavirus tests and be vaccinated to attend African Cup games.
But witnesses have said that security failures were partly to blame for the tragedy, where 38 people were also injured, seven of them seriously.
Either way, the stampede realized pre-tournament fears over Cameroon’s preparations, and particularly the readiness of its stadiums. The Central African nation was meant to host the African soccer championship in 2019 but was stripped of that year’s version because its stadiums were too far behind schedule.