As things standpublished at 16:37 Greenwich Mean Time 11 November 2020
With about 10 minutes to go to half time:
Kenya 0-1 Comoros
Mauritania 1-0 Burundi
Guinea 0-0 Chad
Senegal 0-0 Guinea Bissau
Kenya held at home by Comoros
Mane inspires Senegal to comfortable win
Berahino rescues point for Burundi
Rising Guinea star Camara scores only goal against Chad
Equatorial Guinea score late to beat Libya
Ben Sutherland
With about 10 minutes to go to half time:
Kenya 0-1 Comoros
Mauritania 1-0 Burundi
Guinea 0-0 Chad
Senegal 0-0 Guinea Bissau
Mauritania 1-0 Burundi
And it's getting a bit interesting in Group E now too.
It's Bakary N'Diaye turning in at the near post. A win here will put them top of the group, above Morocco - at least for now.
Kenya 0-1 Comoros
We said Comoros were looking good!
A well-taken free kick by M'Changama gets a deflection and leaves Arnold Origi in the Harambee Stars goal looking at a space where the ball isn't.
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
The big story of qualifying so far - albeit we're still in the early stages - has been Comoros. In a group with Kenya, Egypt and Togo, the island nation currently tops the lot, having got an astounding draw with the Pharaohs and secured an amazing win over Togo.
They're currently playing Kenya - and dominating. Still 0-0 though.
We're under way in most of the Afcon qualifiers today - but they are all 0-0 so far.
Settle in.
There are five games kicking off at 1600:
Guinea v Chad
Mauritania v Burundi
Senegal v Guinea-Bissau
Kenya v Comoros
And then at 1900:
Libya v Equatorial Guinea
The qualifiers for the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations - actually being held in 2022 - are back under way.
It's the first significant football action for international teams on the continent since March, when the Covid-19 pandemic first became widespread in Africa.