New
FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura smiles on May 14, 2016 in Abuja ©Pius
Utomi Ekpei (AFP)
|
FIFA's new general
secretary Fatma Samoura has officially started work, becoming the first woman
and non-European to hold the powerful post at the scandal-tainted organization.
AFP
report continues:
Samoura
was named to the job in May, in a surprise move by FIFA president Gianni
Infantino, who has sought to repair the reputation of world football's
governing body since over taking over from the disgraced Sepp Blatter.
A
54-year-old Senegalese national, Samoura worked at the United Nations for more
than two decades, serving primarily in Africa.
In
an interview conducted by FIFA, Samoura said her top priority was filling
senior positions including the chief financial officer and chief compliance
officer.
Her
two predecessors as general secretary, Jerome Valcke and Markus Kattner, were
both sacked over corruption allegations.
Valcke
is the target of a criminal investigation in Switzerland, along with Blatter.
Following
the string of high-profile corruption scandals over the last year, which have
seen many of the most powerful names in football management brought down,
Samoura said boosting morale at FIFA was also crucial.
"My
second priority is to try as much possible to focus on the staff, who have been
going through extreme stress over the last 12 months because of the corruption
scandals," she said in the FIFA interview after her official first day at
her post on Monday.
She
also stressed the implementation of major reform package at FIFA, which was
designed to clean up the graft that plagued the Blatter era.
The
general secretary was given added authority under those reforms to function
more like a CEO.
Speaking broadly about her job, Samoura said: "I want to inject diversity, more equity, a better governance structure, a stronger monitoring and evaluation system and an obligation to inform and report on the good deeds of FIFA."
Speaking broadly about her job, Samoura said: "I want to inject diversity, more equity, a better governance structure, a stronger monitoring and evaluation system and an obligation to inform and report on the good deeds of FIFA."
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