Afrique Orientale - meaning and definition. What is Afrique Orientale
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What (who) is Afrique Orientale - definition

FOOTBALL CLUB
Sporting Afrique F.C.; Sporting Afrique Football Club; Sporting Afrique

Afrique contemporaine         
JOURNAL
Afrique Contemporaine; Afr. Contemp.; Afr Contemp
Afrique contemporaine is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by De Boeck Brussels, Belgium.
Canal+ Afrique         
FRENCH SUBSCRIPTION TV SERVICE
CanalSat Horizon; CanalSat Horizons; CanalSat Afrique; Canalsat Horizons
Canal+ Afrique is an African version of Canal+, available mainly in the francophone countries of Central and West Africa, as well as some non-francophone countries such as Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Ghana and Cape Verde. The Service is broadcast off the Satellite NSS 7 at 22° West.
Alisma orientale         
SPECIES OF PLANT
Alisma plantago-aquatica subsp. orientale; Alisma plantago-aquatica var. orientale; A. orientale; Ze xie
Alisma orientale, commonly known as Asian water plantain, is a flowering plant species in the genus Alisma found in Asia.

Wikipedia

Sporting Afrique FC

Sporting Afrique Football Club was a professional football club which played in Singapore's S.League in 2006. The team was made up not of Singaporeans, but of players of African descent. Its squad consisted of players from Nigeria, Cameroon, Kenya and Ghana. The club finished in 9th place out of 11 teams in the S.League in the 2006 season. They were involved in a number of off-field controversies, and their application to participate in the S.League again in 2007 was rejected by the FAS. The club played its home games at the Yishun Stadium.

In allowing Sporting Afrique to join the league, the S.League hoped that their involvement would make the competition more exciting, and possibly unearth some good players who might be able to change their nationality to Singaporean and thus play for the Singapore national football team (as Nigerian-born Agu Casmir and Itimi Dickson had done).

In June 2006, it was reported that, while the players had been promised monthly salaries of S$1,600 (~US$1,000), they only received S$100 a month (~US$60), as S$700 was deducted for food (reportedly a monotonous diet of rice and chicken), and S$800 for accommodation despite all 22 team members living 5 or 6 per room in the same house in an area where a typical house rental was around S$3,000. Their contracts also forbade talking to the media, but team members contacted the BBC anonymously, drawing international attention. Club president Collin Chee, who had initially claimed to be "not short-changing any of them", eventually backed down and agreed to raise their salaries to S$600, with performance bonuses and better housing.