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    Thursday, July 18, 2019

    CAF, FIFA Sign Partnership MoU

    The Confederation of African Football (CAF) and FIFA have signed a memorandum of understanding to create what CAF chief Ahmad Ahmad called an unprecedented partnership that would allow the continuation of reforms aimed at modernising CAF.
    The MoU was signed in Cairo today at the CAF General Assembly, by Ahmad Ahmad and FIFA chief Gianni Infantino.

    The two organisations signed a protocol outlining a road map with the areas and objectives of the CAF-FIFA partnership through which FIFA will provide its expertise to assess the current situation in CAF and help accelerate the ongoing reform process.
    This road map will be implemented with the close collaboration of FIFA General Delegate for Africa Fatma Samoura and CAF General Secretary Mouad Hajji, working closely with the CAF administration and a group of experts, selected according to their expertise.
    The road map covers three main areas and consists of 11 points.
    Please Read the road map here:CAF and FIFA joint road map

    Speaking to African delegates at their meeting in Cairo, Infantino said he had “to laugh” in the face of Blatter’s criticism that Fifa were engaging in modern-day “colonialism” by sending secretary general Fatma Samoura to oversee a six-month forensic audit and administrative reform of the Confederation of African Football.
    “I have heard about colonisation, that Fifa is colonising Africa again,” Infantino said, a clear reference to the statement released by former Fifa boss Blatter to the BBC this week.
    “What does it mean, colonialisation? I don’t know. It’s not part of my vocabulary. But I know what it means to work, to team up. We all suffer when we see what is going on here (at Caf).”
    Samoura, Infantino pointed out, is from Senegal, so is African herself.
    Blatter said Fifa’s involvement also flouted their own rules. National associations are members of Fifa, but continental bodies like Caf are not.
    Fifa managed to work past opposition to the move by some within Caf’s executive committee to agree on a roadmap for reform.
    Infantino was “puzzled” by the criticism, he said.
    Instead, Infantino framed the issue – hugely embarrassing for soccer’s largest continental confederation and the Fifa vice-president who leads it – as just another challenge for the world soccer family to overcome.
    Infantino attempted to present a more positive picture.
    He said Caf’s current predicament wasn’t as bad as the Fifa corruption scandal of 2015, which led to the downfall of some the most powerful men in world soccer, including Blatter, and brought Infantino to power.
    “We turned the boat (around),” Infantino said. “We intend to do the same for Africa and for Caf.”

    That belies the reality that it’s another stark failure by soccer leadership and a leader whom Infantino backed.
    Ahmad, the president of Caf, is at the centre of the crisis and the subject of allegations of corruption and other misconduct.
    He has denied wrongdoing, but was taken in for questioning by French authorities while attending a Fifa meeting in Paris last month.

    He is also the subject of a Fifa ethics committee investigation.
    Among other things, Ahmad is accused of improper business deals, misusing Caf money on expensive cars, sexual harassment of staff, and cheating on his expenses.
    He sat next to Infantino at the congress at a luxury hotel in Cairo, and called for the leaders of national associations in Africa to stand and applaud for the Fifa head.
    Ahmad, who hadn’t held any senior roles at Caf before he was elected president, is accused of driving the organisation into the ground.
    The bottom line was delivered on the congress floor on Thursday when Caf announced a $17 million loss for the year ending June 30.
    “We are lagging behind all (other) confederations in all aspects,” Ahmad said before that financial blow was revealed.
    He said the general assembly meeting would be dedicated to reforming the entire administration.
    This was Caf’s first major meeting since the announcement last month that Fifa would take the unprecedented step of overseeing the complete reorganisation of one of their confederations.
    Caf, with 56 countries affiliated to it, are the largest of Fifa’s six continental bodies.
    Fifa secretary general Samoura, who formerly worked for the United Nations, will move to Egypt as Fifa general delegate for Africa to lead the clean-up for six months from August 1.
    The work will start with a financial audit to detect “potential wrongdoings,” according to a roadmap agreed by Fifa and Caf.
    Samoura’s term can be extended and she will be aided by a group of outside experts.
    The deal has been portrayed by both parties, publicly at least, as a partnership, with Ahmad seeking out Fifa’s help and Fifa responding

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