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African neighbours set for football feast

World football's focus is set to fall on Gabon and Equatorial Guinea where from Saturday the oil rich neighbours co-host the 28th Africa Cup of Nations.

For lovers of the beautiful game, focus over the next three weeks falls on Gabon and Equatorial Guinea where from Saturday the oil rich neighbours co-host the 28th Africa Cup of Nations.

Like a lord mayor's banquet without the principal guest, this feast of football takes place bereft of continental kings Egypt, winners of the last three editions.

Adding further intrigue in a topsy-turvy qualifying race, African superpowers Cameroon, Nigeria and South Africa have also failed to turn up.

In this quartet's absence World Cup quarter-finalists Ghana and Didier Drogba's Ivory Coast are favourites to claim a prize that has alluded both for far too long.

The 2012 Nations Cup cast list is full of surprises, not least Libya, who qualified against the backdrop of the bloody overthrowing of Muammar Gaddafi's regime.

Plaudits too should be flung at Niger and Botswana's feet, these two minnows with Equatorial Guinea taking their place at the high table of African football for the first time.

Gabon and Equatorial Guinea have invested massively in improving or building from scratch stadia, roads and hotels to prepare for their sojourn in the spotlight.

Both nations have met the deadline, but it has been a close run thing - the keys to Gabon's stadium in Franceville were only delivered on Monday.

"We have two objectives," said Laure Olga Gondjout, secretary general to Gabon President Ali Bongo.

"For the people of Gabon to win the 'Palme d'Or' for organising a successful Africa Cup of Nations and for the senior team to emulate the juniors (the title winning under-23 side) and lift the trophy."

Equatorial Guinea get the show on the road against the Libyans in Bata on Saturday with far more than national pride at stake.

The son of the country's autocratic president Teodoro Obiang is offering the players' a stunning $US1 million ($A962,603) cash incentive to win the Nations Cup curtain raiser, and $US20,000 ($A19,252) for every goal they score.

Pride, not money, is what is motivating Ghana and Ivory Coast.

Ghana last grabbed gold 30 years ago when pipping hosts Libya in a Tripoli penalty shootout.

Coach Goran Stevanovic says: "We were runners-up at the last Cup of Nations in Angola two years ago and a repeat of what has already been achieved is not good enough."

Ivory Coast have earned the unwanted reputation as 'chokers' after fluffing their lines in the quarter-finals in the last two Cups.

"Our ambition is to improve on two years ago when we were eliminated in the quarter-finals," said Chelsea star Drogba.

Newcastle United's Ivorian midfielder Cheik Tiote paints a more dramatic picture for a country whose sole success came two decades ago.

"We have great players so we have to win something - we have to win this Cup of Nations.

"Every time there is an African tournament people tell us that we are favourites to win, but when you look at our trophy cabinet there is nothing there. Absolutely nothing."

A plethora of Premier League stars have answered their countries' call to African arms, often at the frustration of their club managers back in England.

Manchester City are harder hit than most, with coach Roberto Mancini glumly resigned to losing Ivorian brothers Yaya Toure and Kolo Toure at a crucial part of the season.

As well as Tiote, Newcastle will miss in-form Demba Ba, the big centre-forward who has scored 15 goals in 19 appearances since his arrival.

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