Sunday, June 14, 2026

South Africa repatriates 2,745 foreigners in the week

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa 

South Africa has repatriated 2,745 foreigners in the week after President Cyril Ramaphosa vowed tougher action against illegal immigration, the country's home affairs minister said on Sunday.

One of Africa's largest economies, South Africa has long attracted migrant workers from across the continent, both legally and illegally.

But saddled with an unemployment rate above 30 percent, it has experienced recurring spurts of anti-immigrant unrest, including fresh violence in recent weeks.

Mobs of South Africans carrying sticks, whips and shields have marched through parts of the country ordering foreigners with no residency papers to leave by June 30.

Growing security fears after businesses were looted and foreigners targeted have prompted citizens of Nigeria, Malawi, Ghana, Zimbabwe and Mozambique to accept voluntary repatriation organised by their governments.

"As of last night, the number we can report is 2,745 repatriations that have come in this period since the president spoke," Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber told reporters.

"It is a moving target," he said.

The government said most of those repatriated were in the country illegally.

They include Malawian nationals, about 7,000 of whom have been sheltering in an open field in the eastern port city of Durban, according to an inter-ministerial migration committee set up after the president's address.

Eight buses commissioned by the Malawian government began moving its citizens on Sunday, with South Africa providing 10 additional buses to speed up deportations, the committee said.

Among those boarding the first buses, some carried babies on their backs and small bags of belongings.

"I'm relieved we are finally leaving. It's better than living in fear here," said Fortunate Chilenje from Blantyre, Malawi's commercial capital.

The 25-year-old had lived in South Africa for three years, she told AFP, adding that threats to leave had followed her even at the camp, one of the largest to emerge since the unrest began.

The government said on Sunday it did not operate refugee camps and had no intention of establishing them, even on a temporary basis.

Another passenger, Laina Nala from Mangochi in southern Malawi, said she simply wanted to be dropped as close to her home as possible, rather than continuing on to Blantyre.

"Blantyre is too far and expensive from there," she said.

For Hassan Hasha, 27, a debt linked to his journey to South Africa still hung over his head.

He said he had barely stayed in South Africa for weeks before the anti-foreigner sentiment flared, but added: "I have resigned myself to going home".

Last week, Ramaphosa acknowledged public concerns over illegal immigration but warned authorities would not tolerate anyone taking the law into their own hands.

Tensions escalated after two Mozambicans were killed following a May 29 march against illegal migrants in the Western Cape town of Mossel Bay. Mozambican authorities put the toll at five.

There are more than three million foreigners living in South Africa, or 5.1 percent of the population, according to the statistics agency.

Sweden beat Tunisia 5-1 in strong start to World Cup

GUADALUPE, Mexico 

Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyokeres were in fine form as Sweden cruised to a comfortable 5-1 victory against Tunisia to kickstart their World Cup campaign in Group F.

Brighton's Yasin Ayari scored the pick of the goals with two stunning long-range strikes - on either side of the game in the sixth and 96th minutes - but the performances of Sweden's star forwards put the fixture firmly in their control.

Shortly after Ayari's first, with his celebrations muted out of respect for the birthplace of his father and a country he could have represented, Isak doubled Sweden's lead in the 40th minute.

Gyokeres laid the ball off to the Liverpool striker near the halfway line before he drove forward, cut in on his right foot and slotted the ball into the bottom-right corner.

Omar Rekin halved the deficit for Tunisia just before the break with a glancing header to spark hopes of a comeback (43) but Gyokeres' fine finish quickly restored the two-goal lead (59) after Isak turned provider on this occasion.

Substitute Mattias Svanberg, 18 seconds after coming on, then swept a fourth into the back of the net for Sweden as time ticked down (84). 

The offside flag initially went up, but a lengthy VAR review revealed a slight touch from Isak meant the midfielder had returned to an onside position.

A second stunner from Ayari, with this effort too good to mute his celebrations, then rounded off the dominant performance for Graham Potter's side.

Ivory Coast beats Ecuador 1-0 at FIFA World Cup with Amad Diallo goal

PHILADELPHIA, United States 

Manchester United winger Amad Diallo came off the bench to net a 90th-minute goal to get Ivory Coast's World Cup off to the perfect start with a 1-0 win over Ecuador in Group E.

The forward was a surprise absentee from Emerse Fae's starting line-up but channeled any frustration in the best way possible after replacing Bazoumana Toure 10 minutes into the second half, sidefooting the winner smartly beyond Hernan Galindez after a lung-busting run down from Wilfried Singo down the right flank.

It provided Ecuador with a painful start to their World Cup campaign and ended their 19-game unbeaten streak, which looked well intact in an opening half-hour where they twice struck the crossbar through John Yeboah and Alan Minda, defying their pre-match expectations by dominating the early exchanges with and without the ball.

They never got back to those early heights and increasingly appeared at the mercy of Ivory Coast during the brief moments the 2023 AFCON champions clicked - with Yan Diomande lively almost throughout but with his end product often lacking.

Elye Wahi struck the crossbar for Fae's side in the second half before the introduction of Amad and Ange-Yoan Bonny breathed new life into them. 

But it would take until the final minute of normal time for it to count when the Manchester United winger sparked wild celebrations among the entire squad 12 years to the day since their last World Cup win.

Japan deny Netherlands by fighting back twice in World Cup opener

DALLAS, United States 

Daichi Kamada's late header rescued a deserved point for Japan against the Netherlands in their opening World Cup game in Dallas.

One of the most anticipated games in the tournament's group stages was a slow burner before developing into a second-half thriller, after the Dutch side's Premier League contingent looked to have set them on their way to an important victory.

Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk and West Ham United forward Crysencio Summerville were on target before Crystal Palace's Kamada struck with a deft header to divert Koki Ogawa's effort with two minutes left and secure a draw.

Ronald Koeman's side posed the greater threat in a subdued first half, with Donyell Malen the main danger, forcing three saves from Japan keeper Zion Suzuki.

The game burst into life after the restart, captain Van Dijk heading the Dutch in front after 51 minutes with a precise header from Liverpool team-mate Ryan Gravenberch's cross.

Japan were never out of contention and they were level six minutes later when Keito Nakamura's low shot carried too much power for Dutch keeper Bart Verbruggen.

The Netherlands responded with a moment of real quality to restore their advantage after 64 minutes, Summerville cutting inside the area before sending a low drive beyond the outstretched arm of Suzuki.

Japan continued to press and got their reward through Kamada, to the delight of the thousands of Samurai Blue fans who were in Dallas to support their country.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 15/6/2026

 

















Germany put seven past World Cup debutants Curacao

TEXAS, United States 

Four-time winners Germany overcame a brief scare from World Cup debutants Curacao before turning on the style to win their Group E opener in Houston, Texas.

Die Mannschaft went ahead in the sixth minute with the tournament's earliest goal so far coming from a powerful curling effort from one-time England youth international Felix Nmecha.

But they were stunned by a leveller from the smallest nation ever, by size and population, to take part in a World Cup.

With around 155,000 inhabitants, the Caribbean island of just 171 square miles is smaller than the Isle of Man with a population the same as Huddersfield.

Zurich midfielder Livano Comenencia wrote his name in Blue Wave folklore on 21 minutes with a left-footed drive from the edge of the box which deflected past Germany keeper Manuel Neuer, who was appearing in a fifth tournament at the age of 40.

Moments after Curacao striker Jurgen Locadia then had a penalty appeal waved away after nipping past Jonathan Tah, a hydration break midway through the half gave the unsettled Germans the opportunity to reset.

Julian Nagelsmann's side did just that, showing fresh impetus in attack and restoring their lead after 17 minutes of parity through Nico Schlotterbeck's flashing header from Nathaniel Brown's corner to the near post.

The pressure intensified and a calm penalty from Kai Havertz in the fifth minute of first-half stoppage-time - following a rash lunge on the impressive Nmecha by Riechedly Bazoer - gave the eight-time finalists breathing space.

Just 69 seconds after the interval Jamal Musiala fired in an angled finish from Joshua Kimmich's neat pass to signal Germany's intent as they took control of the game.

Left-back Brown lashed home a volley after a neat flick from substitute Deniz Undav, who then swept home a sixth from Kimmich's pass.

The former Brighton forward, now at Stuttgart, then set up Havertz for Germany' s seventh goal two minutes from time, a lovely dink over Curacao keeper Eloy Room to seal a dominant success. 

Australia win 2-0 to deny Turkey on World Cup return after 24 years

VANCOUVER, Canada 

Australia spoiled Turkey's return to the World Cup stage after 24 years by securing a 2-0 victory in their Group D opener on ​Saturday, courtesy of goals from Nestory Irankunda and Connor Metcalfe and a rock-solid defence.

The Australians created little but took their chances superbly, while ‌waves of Turkish attacks were repelled by the well-drilled green and gold defence as the Socceroos snatched a victory few would have predicted.

Back at the World Cup finals for the first time since coming third in 2002, Turkey turned to 21-year-old playmaker Arda Guler to shoulder the creative burden for their side, and he got his first shot away in the seventh minute.

That effort flew harmlessly ​over but the Australians heeded the warning and kept him shackled until the 27th minute when he fired a volley on target that was saved by ​Patrick Beach.

Australia took the lead on their next attack when the pacy Irankunda chased a ball from Paul Okon-Engstler down the ⁠left channel before cutting inside and slotting past Ugurcan Cakir to open the scoring.

Abdulkerim Bardakci almost levelled three minutes later, chesting the ball down and unleashing a swerving ​shot off the outside of his left boot, but Beach pulled off a superb fingertip save to turn the ball onto the post.

Australia got to the break with their ​one-goal lead intact, and the pattern of the game started to settle with Turkey dominating possession and the Socceroos backing off.

Guler was at the heart of most Turkey attacks but was confronted by banks of Australians behind the ball as they conceded space on the flanks to pack the middle of the pitch.

With Turkey throwing everything at the Australian defence in a futile attempt to find ​the equalizer, they were stunned once again when Metcalfe picked up a loose ball and tried his luck from distance, his bouncing shot finding the net in the ​75th minute.

The result puts Australia second in the group behind the United States after the co-hosts' 4-1 win over Paraguay on Friday. The top two meet next on June 19 in Seattle.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Scotland secured a narrow victory over Haiti in their Group C opener

BOSTON, United States 

Scotland beat Haiti 1-0 in their World Cup 2026 Group C opener on Saturday, with John McGinn opening the scoring in the 28th minute. 

After Che Adams won possession, McGinn collected the ball at the edge of the box and fired a shot that took a deflection past goalkeeper Johny Placide.

The early goal settled the Tartan Army, who then sat deep and invited Haiti to come forward. Scott McTominay had earlier struck the post with a rasping drive from distance, a moment that could have made Scotland's task easier.

Haiti's attacking forays lacked precision in the opening 45 minutes despite creating opportunities through Ruben Providence and Louicius Deedson, while Jean-Ricner Bellegarde tested Angus Gunn with an ambitious long-range effort that sailed high over the bar.

Les Grenadiers returned with renewed intensity after the break, pressing Scotland relentlessly and creating multiple chances. 

Providence came close with shots from inside the box, while Wilson Isidor tested Gunn with a powerful effort from distance.

The Haitian midfield tried repeatedly to unlock the Scottish defence, with Bellegarde firing from the edge of the area and Isidor's movements creating space in dangerous areas. 

However, their lack of clinical finishing proved decisive, chances were squandered, crosses went unrewarded, and Scotland's disciplined defensive approach kept them at bay.

Algerian referee Mustapha Ghorbal ran a tight ship, issuing yellow cards to Haiti's Bellegarde for a late challenge and Scotland's Aaron Hickey for a harsh tackle.

As the match wore on, fatigue crept in and the pace dropped noticeably. 

Both teams made substitutions in search of fresh impetus, Scotland introducing Lyndon Dykes and Ryan Christie, while Les Grenadiers brought on Lenny Joseph and Josue Casimir.

The final exchanges remained tense but ultimately sterile, with neither side managing to create clear-cut opportunities. Scotland's defence held firm under sustained pressure, with Gunn barely troubled in the final quarter. 

The victory marks Scotland's first World Cup win since 1998, when they last faced Brazil and Morocco, the same opponents that are now in their group. 

For Haiti, their first match since returning to the World Cup after 52 years ended in defeat, though they proved they can compete with more experienced nations.

Scotland's three points put them in a strong position in Group C, while Haiti must respond immediately.

EAST AFRICA NEWSPAPERS 14/6/2026

 











Vinícius Júnior rescues lacklustre Brazil as Morocco earn deserved World Cup draw

NEW JERSEY, United States 

Vinicius Junior scored a brilliant equaliser for Brazil in a 1-1 draw with Morocco as the five-time World Cup winners made an uncertain start to the tournament in New Jersey.

Ismael Saibari ran through to give Morocco a 21st-minute lead with a clever scoop in the Group C opener on Saturday, but Vinicius produced a moment of magic to ensure Brazil came away with a point.

Brazil are chasing a record sixth World Cup title, 24 years after last lifting the trophy, but this performance suggests there is a lot of work to be done by Carlo Ancelotti’s side.

Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos and Kaka were all members of Brazil’s 2002 World Cup-winning squad and were among those in attendance at New York New Jersey Stadium.

Brazil have turned to the hugely successful Ancelotti in a bid to end the country’s title drought. He is the first foreign coach to lead Brazil at football’s biggest tournament.

A fifth-placed finish in South American qualifying underlined the scale of the challenge facing Ancelotti. However, the Italian insists Brazil possess a squad capable of competing with anyone in the expanded 48-team tournament.

He was without Neymar for the start of the competition, with Brazil’s all-time record goalscorer still recovering from a calf injury, having not played for his country since 2023.

Morocco coach Mohamed Ouahbi urged his players not to fear Brazil, and his message appeared to resonate as the 2022 semifinalists started brightly in one of the standout matches of the first round.

After Neil El Aynaoui and Achraf Hakimi threatened the Brazil goal, Saibari made the breakthrough when he latched onto a fine pass from Brahim Diaz.

The PSV Eindhoven forward raced beyond Marquinhos and Gabriel Magalhaes, holding his nerve with a clinical chipped finish over the advancing Alisson Becker.

Brazil drew level 11 minutes later through Vinicius, who will have a vital role to play if Brazil are to shine this summer.

The Real Madrid star received the ball from Bruno Guimaraes on the left side of the area before cutting back onto his right foot and hammering into the far corner past Yassine Bounou.

It belatedly breathed life into a lacklustre Brazil, and Lucas Paqueta saw his acrobatic effort pushed away by Bounou before half-time.

Bounou saved well from Igor Thiago as Brazil caught Morocco napping with a quick throw-in after the break, while Raphinha and Danilo shot right at Bounou as the Selecao pressed for a winner.

Morocco nearly snatched it at the death when Alisson parried a long-range effort from El Aynaoui and had to react sharply to block the follow-up from Chemsdine Talbi.

Brazil next face outsiders Haiti while Morocco take on Scotland in their second match.

Switzerland stunned by late Qatar equaliser

CALIFORNIA, United States 

Qatar scored a dramatic stoppage-time equaliser as they fought back to draw against Switzerland to claim their first-ever point at a World Cup finals.

Boualem Khoukhi headed home Homam El Amin's cross in the 94th minute to spark wild celebrations among Julen Lopetegui's squad.

It delivered a remarkable conclusion to a one-sided affair that Switzerland had dominated and had looked likely to be settled by Breel Embolo's first-half penalty.

The Switzerland striker fired in after Remo Freuler was clattered by Qatar goalkeeper Mahmoud Abunada, although television replays appeared to show that the Bologna midfielder had strayed marginally offside in the build-up.

At that stage Murat Yakın's side were heading to the top of Group B with tougher tests to come in their next two fixtures against Bosnia-Herzegovina and Canada.

However, they were heavily punished for some profligate finishing and a drop in intensity in the closing stages.

Nottingham Forest forward Dan Ndoye failed to convert several good opportunities while Ruben Vargas and Embolo also missed gilt-edged chances.

And it allowed Qatar, who were outclassed for long periods, to snatch the most unlikely of points.

Full World Cup fixtures in East African Time

The tournament, which is being hosted jointly by the USA, Canada and Mexico,is seing matches played in multiple venues in different cities, with teams travelling widely through the group stage and beyond as shown:

Group Stage

Thur, 11 Jun

  • 22:00 — Mexico vs South Africa

Friday, 12 Jun

  • 05:00 — South Korea vs Czechia

  • 22:00 — Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina

Sat, 13 Jun

  • 04:00 — USA vs Paraguay

  • 22:00 — Qatar vs Switzerland

Sun, 14 Jun

  • 01:00 — Brazil vs Morocco

  • 04:00 — Haiti vs Scotland

  • 07:00 — Australia vs Türkiye

  • 20:00 — Germany vs Curaçao

  • 23:00 — Netherlands vs Japan

Mon, 15 Jun

  • 02:00 — Ivory Coast vs Ecuador

  • 05:00 — Sweden vs Tunisia

  • 19:00 — Spain vs Cabo Verde

  • 22:00 — Belgium vs Egypt

Tue, 16 Jun

  • 01:00 — Saudi Arabia vs Uruguay

  • 04:00 — Iran vs New Zealand

  • 22:00 — France vs Senegal

Wed, 17 Jun

  • 01:00 — Iraq vs Norway

  • 04:00 — Argentina vs Algeria

  • 07:00 — Austria vs Jordan

  • 20:00 — Portugal vs DR Congo

  • 23:00 — England vs Croatia

Thu, 18 Jun

  • 02:00 — Ghana vs Panama

  • 05:00 — Uzbekistan vs Colombia

  • 19:00 — Czechia vs South Africa

  • 22:00 — Switzerland vs Bosnia and Herzegovina

Fri, 19 Jun

  • 01:00 — Canada vs Qatar

  • 04:00 — Mexico vs South Korea

  • 22:00 — USA vs Australia

Sat, 20 Jun

  • 01:00 — Scotland vs Morocco

  • 03:30 — Brazil vs Haiti

  • 06:00 — Türkiye vs Paraguay

  • 20:00 — Netherlands vs Sweden

  • 23:00 — Germany vs Ivory Coast

Sun, 21 Jun

  • 03:00 — Ecuador vs Curaçao

  • 07:00 — Tunisia vs Japan

  • 19:00 — Spain vs Saudi Arabia

  • 22:00 — Belgium vs Iran

Mon, 22 Jun

  • 01:00 — Uruguay vs Cabo Verde

  • 04:00 — New Zealand vs Egypt

  • 20:00 — Argentina vs Austria

Tue, 23 Jun

  • 00:00 — France vs Iraq

  • 03:00 — Norway vs Senegal

  • 06:00 — Jordan vs Algeria

  • 20:00 — Portugal vs Uzbekistan

  • 23:00 — England vs Ghana

Wed, 24 Jun

  • 02:00 — Panama vs Croatia

  • 05:00 — Colombia vs DR Congo

  • 22:00 — Switzerland vs Canada

  • 22:00 — Bosnia and Herzegovina vs Qatar

Thu, 25 Jun

  • 01:00 — Morocco vs Haiti

  • 01:00 — Scotland vs Brazil

  • 04:00 — South Africa vs South Korea

  • 04:00 — Czechia vs Mexico

  • 23:00 — Curaçao vs Ivory Coast

  • 23:00 — Ecuador vs Germany

26 Jun

  • 02:00 — Tunisia vs Netherlands

  • 02:00 — Japan vs Sweden

  • 05:00 — Türkiye vs USA

  • 05:00 — Paraguay vs Australia

  • 22:00 — Norway vs France

  • 22:00 — Senegal vs Iraq

27 Jun

  • 03:00 — Cabo Verde vs Saudi Arabia

  • 03:00 — Uruguay vs Spain

  • 06:00 — New Zealand vs Belgium

  • 06:00 — Egypt vs Iran

28 Jun

  • 00:00 — Panama vs England

  • 00:00 — Croatia vs Ghana

  • 02:30 — Colombia vs Portugal

  • 02:30 — DR Congo vs Uzbekistan

  • 05:00 — Algeria vs Austria

  • 05:00 — Jordan vs Argentina

Knockout stage

Round of 32

  • 28 Jun 22:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 29 Jun 20:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 29 Jun 23:30 — TBD vs TBD

  • 30 Jun 04:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 30 Jun 20:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 1 Jul 00:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 1 Jul 04:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 1 Jul 19:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 1 Jul 23:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 2 Jul 03:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 2 Jul 22:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 3 Jul 02:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 3 Jul 06:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 3 Jul 21:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 4 Jul 01:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 4 Jul 04:30 — TBD vs TBD

Round of 16

  • 4 Jul 20:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 5 Jul 00:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 5 Jul 23:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 6 Jul 03:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 6 Jul 22:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 7 Jul 03:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 7 Jul 19:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 7 Jul 23:00 — TBD vs TBD

Quarter-finals

  • 9 Jul 23:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 10 Jul 22:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 12 Jul 00:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 12 Jul 04:00 — TBD vs TBD

Semi-finals

  • 14 Jul 22:00 — TBD vs TBD

  • 15 Jul 22:00 — TBD vs TBD

Third place play-off

  • 19 Jul 00:00 — TBD vs TBD

Final

  • 19 Jul 22:00 — TBD vs TBD