Ahmad
Ahmad, head of the Madagascar Football Assocation (left) and Confederation of
African Football president Issa Hayatou
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Issa Hayatou, the last of
the old generation leaders in world football, faces a rare and determined
challenge when he bids for an eighth term as head of the Confederation of
African Football in Thursday's election.
AFP
report continues:
Ahmad
Ahmad, head of the Madagascar Football Association, has picked up key votes
with his calls for "change" against the 70-year-old Hayatou.
The
Cameroonian official remains favourite but many African federations refused to
say who they would back when asked by AFP.
"Issa
has never faced a challenge like this and he has had to call in some
favours," one CAF executive member said ahead of the vote at a congress in
Addis Ababa.
Hayatou
has headed CAF since 1988 and is a senior vice president of FIFA. He has been
credited with increasing the number of African teams at the World Cup and
bringing in extra finance for the continent's competitions.
But
he has also faced controversy, accused by a British newspaper of receiving US$1.5
million to vote for Qatar when it was awarded the 2022 World Cup seven years
ago.
In
2011, Hayatou was reprimanded by the International Olympic Committee over money
he received from the scandal-tainted sports marketing company ISL in 1995.
He
has always insisted the money went to CAF and has always strongly denied any
wrongdoing. "No-one has been able to hurt him despite all the rumours of
corruption," a former top member of the FIFA world body management said.
On
the eve of the vote, it was announced that Hayatou and CAF secretary-general
Hicham El-Amrani could face criminal charges in Egypt over deals secured for
African football marketing and media rights between 2008 and 2028.
- Uncertain votes -
Ahmad,
57, has also been implicated in the 2022 World Cup bribe-taking. The Sunday
Times said he received between US$30,000 and US100,000 for his vote. The
Madagascar soccer chief has called the allegations unfounded.
"If
people want change there is no other choice. Only I can dare (to challenge
Hayatou)," Ahmad told AFP during a recent interview at the Malagasy
Football Federation offices in Antananarivo.
"My
programme is the reform of the administration of CAF to avoid the involvement
of politics in the organization," he added.
Ahmad
is already a member of the CAF executive and he has been promised the support
of the 14 member Council of Southern African Football Associations (COSAFA).
Zimbabwe
Football Association chief, Philip Chiyangwa, who is also COSAFA leader, said:
"We have all endorsed Ahmad Ahmad. We need new ideas."
In
the group, South Africa has not publicly committed to vote for Ahmad.
But
an official from the Football Association of Malawi, speaking on condition of
anonymity, told AFP: "The thinking is that Hayatou has overstayed and has
run out of ideas. Africa needs fresh minds to develop football."
In
a sign of the furious lobbying going on, the influential vote of Nigeria,
Africa's most populous nation and a football powerhouse, appeared in doubt.
Nigerian Football Federation president Amaju Pinnick had wanted to vote for
Ahmad, but the government has called for a vote for Hayatou.
The
12-member Council of East and Central Africa Football Associations (CECAFA)
which includes Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Tanzania, Burundi, South Sudan,
Djibouti, and Somalia, voted a resolution in February to back Hayatou.
But
Kenya Football Federation (FKF) president Nick Mwendwa said each federation
would make their own decision in the election.
An
Egyptian Football Federation source told AFP that the country will vote for
Ahmad. The source said "a small coalition" including Morocco, South
Africa, Zimbabwe and Egypt will support Ahmad. But no official has estimated
how many votes Ahmad will get and most say Hayatou remains favourite to win.
FIFA
leader Gianni Infantino visited Africa last month and met with Chiyangwa who is
seen as one of the leaders of the anti-Hayatou camp.
Infantino has embarked on reforms of the world body, seeking to redeem its image after the scandals that forced out past president Sepp Blatter and his one-time ally Michel Platini. While many suspect he favours Ahmad, Infantino has not said publicly who he supports in the election battle.
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