Business Day

Ruling clears way for Motsepe to get top Caf post

- Mark Gleeson

Confederat­ion of African Football (Caf) president Ahmad Ahmad’s five-year ban from football has been reduced to two years, the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (Cas) said on Monday, ending his hopes of re-election this week.

The ruling clears the way for SA billionair­e Patrice Motsepe to replace him and become the organisati­on’s eighth president in its 63-year history.

Ahmad was banned from football for five years by Fifa in November and fined 200,000 Swiss francs after an ethics investigat­ion by world soccer’s governing body, which found the 61-year-old guilty of offering and accepting gifts and other benefits as well as of misappropr­iation of funds.

On appeal, Cas on Monday reduced the ban to two years — meaning Ahmad cannot stand for re-election this week — and cut his fine to 50,000 Swiss francs. Ahmad, who was also a Fifa vice-president, had hoped his appeal would be successful and allow him to seek re-election in Morocco on Friday. Instead, he is sidelined from football until November 2022.

Motsepe is set to replace him from Friday after an agreement brokered by Fifa president Gianni Infantino last week that will see the 59-year-old mining magnate, owner of Mamelodi Sundowns, elected unanimousl­y and two of his rivals — Augustin Senghor of Senegal and Ahmed Yahya of Mauritania — -named as Caf vice-presidents.

Ahmad, a former fisheries minister in his native Madagascar, was elected in 2017 in a surprise triumph over long-standing incumbent Issa Hayatou.

Fifa banned him in November from all football-related activity, however, on several charges of corruption, among them diverting funds to a French intermedia­ry company called Tactical Steel for the purchase of sports equipment that Caf previously bought directly from the manufactur­ers.

But Cas said the documents in the Fifa file did not support the conclusion that Ahmad received any personal benefit.

He was neverthele­ss found guilty of failure to record various financial transactio­ns, acceptance of cash payments, and of making bank transfers of bonuses and indemnitie­s without a contractua­l basis.

He was also judged to be guilty of using Caf funds to take Muslim presidents of African football associatio­ns to Mecca on a pilgrimage he initially said he would pay for.

 ??  ?? Patrice Motsepe
Patrice Motsepe

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