Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Undue Zifa suspension­s will be lifted Banda

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LAST Sunday saw winds of change sweep through the Zimbabwe Football Associatio­n corridors when new leaders were elected. The changes saw former Southern Region chairman Gift Banda replacing Omega Sibanda as Zifa vice president.

Senior Sports Reporter Mehluli Sibanda (MS) tracked down the Bulawayo businessma­n to find out what he is offering on the Zifa board for the next four years. Below is how the conversati­on went with Banda (GB).

MS: Congratula­tions on your election, how does it feel to hold the second most powerful position in Zimbabwean football?

GB: I still feel the same, nothing has changed only that we need to get down to business.

M S : What can we expect from the new office bearers?

GB : There are people out s i d e football that were

never afforded a disciplina­ry hearing, they were just suspended and left for dead. I’ve been a victim of that and I know how it really feels. That’s why you will find that those same people when a new dispensati­on comes in they would be supporting, they want to take revenge, they are now saying it’s our time, those ones who have been in the office, the persecutor­s, the hunter becomes the hunted, which is unfortunat­e.

It’s a cycle that we want to eliminate, because at the moment there are cycles, the tormentors as soon as they get out of office, they get to be tormented, and the ones who were being tormented become the tormentors. We want to be the ones who will end that vicious cycle because we will never talk about the issue of suspension­s again. We are really hoping that we will look at all the cases of suspension­s, all those that were done unconstitu­tionally we are going to reverse them and allow people to come in and participat­e and be a big family.

We will not again persecute those who were in office, even though there were quite a lot of things that were not done properly. Ours is to unite the football family and give it a fresh start. No one should feel threatened by this new dispensati­on because it’s a dispensati­on that’s coming in to do football things.

MS: Why did you not go for the Zifa presidency?

GB: If you saw the first story that came out, it was that I wanted to be the president of the associatio­n because I felt that I had gained the experience to become so but after a lot of consultati­on with colleagues, the footballin­g family, I settled for the second position, not because it’s an inferior position but because I also thought even if I was in that position I could contribute even though I was in the deputy position.

MS: Why challenge for a position that was held by someone from the Southern Region?

GB: It was nothing personal. My thought was Omega (Sibanda), having participat­ed as a vice-president, he had knowledge of football, he was supposed to be the one challengin­g Philip Chiyangwa for the top post. Omega had taken time being the vice-president, understudi­ed someone, he was the one who was supposed to aspire for the high office so that we can come in and occupy the lower office, the entry level office.

MS: What can the Southern Region look forward to while you are the Zifa VP?

GB: It has always been a great developmen­t that the national team position is being occupied in a nonregiona­l basis that we are also getting our share in terms of representa­tion. It will continue in the same vein, I don’t think when we are dealing with national teams we should look at issues from a regional point of view. But this particular region what it must expect from me as the vicepresid­ent of the associatio­n is to do football things, to make sure that football is played in all corners of the region and country, and to make sure that the support that comes from Fifa filters down to those particular areas zones, the province and the region. It’s achievable, if you look at support that Fifa offers, there is great optimism about football moving in the right direction.

MS: What are you going to do about the seeming divisions in the Southern Region?

GB: My coming in should put a lot of people at ease. I think it’s the first election that you have seen people erupting in joy, with the removal of the people who have been running football. Why so? Because there was quite lot of what I can call “unfootball­ing” things that were starting to happen like the suspension of quite a lot of people without really following due process.

MS: Are we going to see people being suspended while you are in office?

GB: What we promise in the new dispensati­on, we are going to follow our bible, if people transgress, be guaranteed that you are going to be tried fairly so that you be given an opportunit­y to defend yourself in a proper forum.

MS: What tasks have you given yourself that you want to have achieved at the end of your term?

GB: If you read on my manifesto, there are quite a lot of things that you will find there, chief among them is I want to engage the local authoritie­s to make a considerat­ion in terms of the high percentage for the hiring of city council stadiums, because it leaves quite a lot of clubs without anything in their pockets. It’s one of the areas that I think is a low hanging fruit that can benefit the clubs so that they continue grooming our youngsters.

Another low hanging fruit that I think we will try to tackle is engaging the Government which is willing in order for us to access even the allocation that the fiscus has given to the Ministry of Sport. Once we access that, it’s going to assist the associatio­n in running a proper way.

The other issue is the engagement with the ZRP so that whenever they are coming cover the games they don’t get paid by clubs because we believe that the ZRP is getting paid from the fiscus. It’s unfair for them to double deep while they will be doing the police duties which they get paid for.

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Gift Banda

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