‘Africa real’ World Cup winners, says Venezuela’s Maduro
CARACAS, Venezuela (AFP) — Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro believes Africa and not France are the true winners of the 2018 World Cup in Russia.
France beat Croatia 4-2 in Sunday’s final in Moscow, but with a team featuring a number of players of African heritage.
“The French team seems like the African team. In reality Africa won the African immigrants who arrived in France,” Maduro said at an event to celebrate Police Day in Venezuela on Monday.
“How much have they despised Africa, and in the football World Cup France won the trophy thanks to African players or the sons of Africans.”
Two of France’s goalscorers against Croatia have African roots: Paul Pogba’s parents are from Guinea while Kylian Mbappe’s parents are Cameroonian and Algerian.
Of the players who started in the final, Samuel Umtiti was born in Cameroon, Blaise Matuidi’s parents are Angolan and Congolese, N’Golo Kante’s parents are Malian, while Raphael Varane’s father is from the Caribbean island of Martinique.
Of the 23-man squad, 16 have African roots of some sort, although captain Hugo Lloris, goalscorer Antoine Griezmann, and striker Olivier Giroud are of European heritage.
Maduro nonetheless congratulated the team for the “beautiful” way they played, and paid tribute to his ally and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin for putting on “the best World Cup in the history of football”.
The Venezuelan leader, who has presided over a collapse of the country’s economy and who has been widely condemned for the repression of opponents, called on France and Europe as a whole to use this victory as a springboard to end the mistreatment of Africans and Latin Americans.
“That’s enough racism in Europe against Africans, enough discrimination against migrants,” he said.
“Hopefully France and Europe will appreciate that us, southerners, Africans, Latin Americans, are worthy and powerful.”
Maduro has a tense relationship with French President Emmanuel Macron, who has accused him of implementing a “dictatorship” in the South American country.