Nigerian Sunday Akoh, 20, sits on a rail waiting for the lunch at the AD Nogueirense sporting association at Nogueira do Cravo ©Patricia De Melo Moreira (AFP) |
They dream of being the
next Cristiano Ronaldo, but for many budding young stars who arrive in Portugal
from Africa and Latin America, Europe's football riches remain an illusion.
AFP
report continues:
Abandoned
by unscrupulous agents, some are unceremoniously deported, others left to fend
for themselves on the streets. Few top clubs are interested.
Valentine
Akpey, 20, trains tirelessly with his fellow Nigerian Sunday Akoh, juggling the
ball, passing and repassing, the snow-capped peaks of Portugal's Serra da
Estrela mountains in the background.
For
two years he has been on the books of Nogueirense, an amateur club in
Portugal's third division.
"I
work hard so I can win a place in a higher division", he said.
His
face drawn, and with well-maintained dreadlocks, the young Nigerian has lofty
ambitions.
"I
dream of playing for Barcelona, like Lionel Messi. The best football is in
Europe, all young Africans want to come here."
Nigerians
Valentine Akpey (3R) and Sunday Akoh (L) both 20 sit with other teammates
having lunch at the AD Nogueirense sporting association in Nogueira do Cravo
©Patricia De Melo Moreira (AFP)
|
He
was not even 18 when he arrived in Portugal with other youths, brought over by
a Nigerian agent who spotted him while he was playing in the streets of the
capital Abuja.
In
mid-2014, he was picked up by police as his visa had expired. The Portuguese
authorities gave him 20 days to get his papers in order or face deportation
back to Nigeria.
He
was saved by Nogueirense, which offered him a modest contract and now lives in accommodation
in the stadium which he shares with seven other young players, from Côte
d'Ivoire, Mali and Colombia.
- Football 'trafficking'
-
While
some see an escape from dire poverty, others like Joaquim Evangelista, head of
Portugal's professional footballers union, condemn the "illegal
trafficking of minors."
"There
are parents who go into debt to finance their son's dream and pay agents up to €3,000
(US$3,300) in Africa, even €5,000 in Brazil," he said.
FIFA,
football's world governing body, bans all international transfers of players
under 18, except those within the European Union.
Guinea-Bissau's
Ansumane Fati, 24, ended up at a small amateur club in northern Portugal where
he slept rough under the stands ©Francisco Leong (AFP)
|
However,
with Portugal's economic woes, "more and more amateur clubs agree to train
young players and act as nurseries. If the players succeed and are transferred
to big clubs, they can earn big pay cheques," said Evangelista.
But
if they fail, "the young men are abandoned by their agents and find
themselves in the street, broke." Some turn to petty crime or drugs, he
said.
At
least 15,000 African minors try their chances in Europe every year, with the
failure rate at around 70 percent, according to the Foot Solidaire, an activist
group which campaigns for young footballers. Between 1,000 and 1,500 young
footballers are illegal migrants in Portugal, border police said.
- 39 mouths to feed -
Ansumane
Fati, a 24-year-old from Guinea-Bissau, was one of the lucky ones, although it
was a long hard route to success.
Dropped
by the Sporting Lisbon academy after a three-month trial, he was abandoned by
his agent without any papers.
Fati
then began a journey far from Ronaldo's rags-to-riches tale in Portugal.
He
ended up at a small amateur club in northern Portugal where he slept rough
under the stands.
Fati
changed clubs twice before securing a place at second division outfit
Freamunde.
"Football,
it's a passion but also a way of helping my family in Guinea-Bissau", said
Fati.
"Since
my father died, I have 39 people that I have to feed".
Wearing
a brown leather jacket, an amulet round his neck, he now earns 1,500 euros a
month, 10 times what he made when he first started in Portugal.
"Foreign
players do not cost very much for clubs, who supply accommodation and food, but
the salary is often derisory," said Joao Manteigas, a lawyer who specializes in sports issues.
Fearing
expulsion or losing a job, few players dare to complain.
Brazilian
Alex Rambo, however, is one who broke the silence.
"I
was scared, but I finally spoke publicly about my case to obtain help," he
said.
An
agent had dangled a contract with top club FC Porto in front of him, but when
he arrived in Portugal the deal was never concluded.
Aged
just 18 at the time, he found himself alone and penniless in a hotel room for
two months.
Returning
to Brazil, he became a star striker for the Osvaldo Cruz club.
He has never given up the
idea of one day going back to Portugal, "but only with a contract in my
pocket."
No comments:
Post a Comment