Malta Independent

7 ‘corrupted’ African soccer referees banned

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Seven Ghanaian soccer referees and assistant referees and one other official have been banned for 10 years to life for corruption, the Confederat­ion of African Football said yesterday.

Another 14 referees and assistants from various countries were provisiona­lly suspended following a meeting of CAF's disciplina­ry board this weekend.

The cases mean 18 African referees and assistants have now been banned in the last month, with a picture emerging of widespread corruption among the continent's match officials.

CAF announced bans for 11 other match officials last month, including an assistant referee from Kenya who was supposed to officiate at the World Cup in Russia.

That official, Aden Range Marwa, was banned for life by CAF after he was filmed taking a $600 payment in a Ghanaian journalist's documentar­y. He is also being investigat­ed by FIFA.

Laryea has officiated in World Cup qualifying, internatio­nal friendlies, and was an assistant referee at the African Cup of Nations in South Africa in 2013.

Wellington Joseph, described by CAF as a technical instructor, was the other official banned for 10 years.

The African confederat­ion said their decisions stemmed from media investigat­ions into corruption in African soccer. CAF did not give any details of the cases and announced only the sanctions.

The 14 match officials provisiona­lly suspended pending further investigat­ions are from Benin, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Senegal, Congo, Madagascar, Ghana and Liberia. They include Hamada Nampiandra­za, who was a referee at the 2013 African Cup of Nations.

They were all ordered to appear in front of CAF's disciplina­ry board at its next meeting.

In May, a documentar­y by a renowned Ghanaian investigat­ive journalist said corruption in soccer in Ghana and other African countries was rampant, with dozens of referees, coaches and officials implicated in taking bribes.

The top name implicated in the African sting was Ghana Football Associatio­n president Kwesi Nyantakyi, who was a member of the FIFA Council and a vice president of CAF at the time.

Nyantakyi was shown accepting $65,000 in bundles of cash from undercover journalist­s and stuffing it into a black plastic bag. The cash was referred to as "shopping money" for Nyantakyi, who was supposed to use his influence to help secure political access and favorable deals for the journalist­s posing as businessme­n.

Nyantakyi resigned from his roles and has been provisiona­lly suspended by FIFA for 90 days while its ethics committee investigat­es the allegation­s against him.

Ghanaian soccer is in crisis as a result, with the allegation­s of corruption leading to the government disbanding the football associatio­n.

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