The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Caf boss dumping his allies:

- Robson Sharuko Senior Sports Editor

ONE-BY-ONE, the powerful allies who propelled CAF president Ahmad Ahmad to power are either being pushed out of office or are now facing domestic boardroom uprisings to try and dislodge them from their posts.

Some are now accusing Ahmad of orchestrat­ing a shadowy operation whose ultimate mission is to ensure a number of Southern African leaders, who were his allies just a few years ago, are ousted.

Ahmad rode on a rebellion triggered by the COSAFA leaders to take on the then CAF strongman, Issa Hayatou.

He was a virtually unknown CAF executive committee backbenche­r when the COSAFA leaders picked him to take on Hayatou in a boardroom battle fraught with dangers.

The Cameroonia­n and his cronies had, in an attempt to limit challenges to the throne, come up with a clause barring those who were not on the CAF executive committee from battling for the presidency.

With Ahmad being a member of that committee, though on the periphery of power, the COSAFA bosses picked him as their surprise choice to take on the Cameroonia­n.

Signs that a brutal crackdown would follow, should Hayatou remain in charge of CAF, were sent out when the Cameroonia­n strongman stripped Madagascar of its rights to host the 2017 CAF Under-17 finals.

The tournament was swiftly moved to Gabon.

Philip Chiyangwa, who was Ahmad’s campaign manager, angered the CAF leadership by inviting scores of the continent’s football leaders to Harare, to a belated birthday party also attended by FIFA boss Gianni Infantino.

The then ZIFA boss was threatened with sanctions — including a ban from the World Cup and this was seen as a game — should Ahmad’s challenge fail. rebellion against Ahmad’s Morocco

But, when the rebellion succeeded with campaign and a direct challenge to Hayatou being pushed out of power, the his authority. Southern African football alliance began

◆ Ahmad’s closest lieutenant­s also to disintegra­te over sharp difference­s saw this as an attempt by the two once Ahmad took over as CAF president. countries to publicly humiliate

◆ Ahmad’s fierce support for him and send a message that, even Morroco’s bid to host the 2026 though they had helped him rise World Cup, which was opposed to become CAF president, they in this region with Zimbabwe, remained the powers behind the South Africa and Botswana openly throne. rebelling, effectivel­y broke the

◆ And when the Moroccans suffered alliance. a humbling defeat in a one-sided

◆ Zimbabwe and South Africa made battle to host the 2026 World Cup, it clear they would vote for the joint Ahmad and his backers were left bid by the United States, Canada with a lot of egg on their faces. and Mexico to host the 2026

◆ Some people had to pay a huge price, given the Moroccans had invested heavily in their failed bid, and the North Africans — powered by their massive financial clout — had become Ahmad’s biggest ally and supporters.

◆ A number of key CAF events, including symposiums and meetings, were moved to Morocco by the Ahmad leadership, to demonstrat­e the strong pact between the two parties, and the North African country was forgiven for turning its back on hosting the 2015 AFCON finals.

◆ The Moroccan Football Associatio­n were presented with the CAF presidenti­al award, for being the best run African national football governing body last year, when Mauritania — whose national side won the Team of the Year — should possibly have been worthy winners of the award.

◆ Morocco national team coach Herve Renard was named African Coach of the Year when the Atlas Lions didn’t do any better than Senegal’s Aliou Cisse whose side, among the five African representa­tives at the World Cup in Russia, came closest to reaching the second round. And Ahmad has been hitting back amid reports he is now leading a shadowy operation in which his former regional allies, who spectacula­rly propelled him to power, are being pushed out or leaving them vulnerable to boardroom coups.

The CAF boss was heavily involved in the background during the elections which removed Chiyangwa from his post as ZIFA president.

Ahmad and his trusted lieutenant, Walter Nyamilandu, the Malawi Football Associatio­n boss, kept exchanging notes in telephone calls on how to deal with the Zimbabwean situation.

Nyamilandu was picked by CAF as their representa­tive at the ZIFA elections last month even though he had been an interested party in the polls, given the exchange of intelligen­ce he kept having with Ahmad, in the countdown to the polls.

Some sources even suggest the Moroccans, still furious with the way Chiyangwa led the rebellion against their World Cup bid, were roped in to provide the funding to ensure he would be dislodged from his position as ZIFA boss.

However, the correct investment towards that cause remains a subject of dispute with some claiming US$50 000 was poured into the project.

Others say as much as US$100 000 was oiled into the machinery to ensure a success story was written.

After dethroning Chiyangwa, from ZIFA, the heat has now been turned on SAFA president Jordaan.

The humiliatio­n he suffered recently, when South Africa received just a single vote in its bid to host the 2019 AFCON finals compared to 16 votes for Egypt, is another attempt to expose him to an internal rebellion in his home country.

Jordaan blamed the humiliatin­g defeat to African football politics, and he is right, but what he didn’t probably mention was the real mission to try and ensure he is kicked out of his role as SAFA president.

It’s all part of a grand plan which also saw Jordaan somehow being humbled by Nyamilandu — Ahmad’s trusted lieutenant — in the battle for a seat on the FIFA Council.

Some have long suggested that Nyamilandu’s surprise success story was written with the backing of the Ahmad and his North African friends.

And, now, Jordaan has been thrust back into the spotlight agains after former SAFA chief executive Leslie Sedibe tried to re-open the wounds of the controvers­y related to the US$10 million paid by South Africa to the Caribbean nations ahead of the 2010 World Cup finals.

Sedibe, who was banned from the game, claimed the Gupta family, a name that evokes strong emotions in South Africa, were roped in to underwrite the deal and ensure the SAFA books would not show a US$10 million deficit.

Zambian Football Associatio­n president Andrew Kamanga, whose organisati­on did not vote for Ahmad during the battle for the CAF presidency after Hayatou brought the CAF Under-20 Championsh­ips to that country, is also a target.

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CAF president Ahmad Ahmad

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