Page Nav

HIDE

Grid

GRID_STYLE

Classic Header

{fbt_classic_header}

Top Ad

Advertise Here

Breaking News:

latest

Samuel Eto’o: Ex-Player Helps Homeless Former Captain

Ex-Cameroon, Barcelona and Chelsea striker Samuel Eto'o has said he will buy a house for former national team captain Norbert Owona, wh...

Ex-Cameroon, Barcelona and Chelsea striker Samuel Eto'o has said he will buy a house for former national team captain Norbert Owona, who is homeless and whose plight has been highlighted in a documentary.

Owona, who is 67 and played for Cameroon in the 1960s and 1970s, has been living rough on the streets of Douala - the city in which he once played for club Union Douala.

However an inguinal hernia forced him to go to hospital, where Eto'o visited him and made his pledge on Sunday. Eto'o has also said he donated 500,000 CFA francs (£686) to Owana, according to another former player, Joseph Kamga.

Kamga - who played for Cameroon at the 1982 World Cup in Spain - has been campaigning on behalf of several players who have suffered difficulties since quitting the game, saying the situation some have found themselves in is "indescribable".
Samuel Eto'o Visits Former Ailing Cameroon Captain 

Owona had written to some government ministers about his state of health and his appeal for help. BBC Pidgin's Leocadia Bongben in the capital, Yaounde, said the former Indomitable Lion sounded weak but grateful on the phone.

"Eto'o is a very kind man, very kind," he told her. He added that the 37-year-old, a four-time African footballer of the year, had given him about $1,000 (£750) as well as promising to give him a new house.

"I have been homeless with no food to eat," Owona said. He complained of "living like an animal" and said it was "unfair to receive such treatment from his country".

Owona said it was difficult to get medical help because he had no money or home, having spent all his savings to pay for the cancer care of his wife and children.

Kamga, told the BBC that Owona was not the only Indomitable Lion veteran to be facing hard times. "The situation of some of my team-mates is beyond description," said Kamga, who played at the 1982 World Cup in Spain. But Owona's situation has spurred the sports authorities into action, he added.

The Cameroon Football Academy is now discussing a project to help former players become coaches or go into football management, our reporter says. - BBC


Tinzwei Is A Worth Voyage For Those In Pursuit For Up-To-Date World Events.

Read More At The Online Coronavirus Portal Or Use The 24-Hour Public Hotline:
South Africa: 0800 029 999 or just Send Hie to 0600 123 456 on WhatsApp


No comments