Seven Countries from West African Football Union (WAFU) B and Confederation of African Football (CAF) Commit to African youth with Pan-African Schools Football Championship
The CAF Pan-African Schools Football Championship will be an intercontinental school soccer tournament for both boys and girls
CAF President, Patrice Motsepe believes football has the
power to change the continental narrative from the ground up. “The best
investment we can make to ensure that African football is amongst the best in
the world and self-sustaining, is to invest in schools’ football and youth
football development infrastructure for boys and girls. This is one of my key
focus areas as President of CAF” said Motsepe.
As a renowned tycoon and philanthropist in Africa, Motsepe
has dedicated US$10 million to the Pan-African Schools Football Championship
initiative through the Motsepe Foundation.
This past week a meeting of heightened importance was held,
which included notable key leaders and ministers from the West African Football
Union, representing the seven countries of the region (Benin, Burkina Faso,
Côte d’Ivoire, Niger, Nigeria, Togo, and DRC) wherein CAF received their
significant endorsement of the Schools Football Championship program.
CAF believes football is an incredible catalyst for change.
Not only does the beautiful game unite the world, it can educate, inspire and
mobilise our youth to overcome their greatest challenges and become agents of
change in their communities.
As an agent of change in the continent, CAF believes that
schools are a vehicle for integration into African Society. CAF General
Secretary Véron Mosengo-Omba said, “As our schools prepare our future leaders,
a continent-wide tournament will help instil football values like respect,
discipline, teamwork and fair play into their hearts and minds.”
Set to begin in March 2022, the CAF Pan-African Schools
Football Championship will begin with a bidding process whereby countries
across the continent will bid to be a host country.
The tournament will be divided into three levels, starting
with its first leg - the National School Football Championship to be held in
June and August 2022. In this, each CAF Member association will organise a
national competition with its school football teams. The finalist teams of the
boys and girls national tournaments will then qualify for the Zonal tournament.
Each CAF Zone will then organise a Zonal School Football
Championship to be held between September and December 2022. Finalists in this
championships, and two boys and two girls schools teams will qualify to
participate in the official and ultimate Pan-African School Football
Championship to be kicked off in March 2023.
CAF hopes to generate a hype and buzz among schools across
the continent. Mosengo-Omba said, “Much
like the Africa Cup of Nations, we want to generate an excitement to become a
part of something truly momentous. We will host a bidding process and determine
the host country like we do in these tournaments. We want it to be something to
aspire to and be proud of.”
By creating a gravity of participation, Mosengo-Omba
believes the educational impact of football played at schools will be
heightened. “Football not only develops a child’s physical health but promotes
a mental and social wellbeing that are vital to growth. We also hope that a
pan-African football tournament will promote pan-African friends and keep
children away from darker corners of society like criminality and drugs.”
CAF is the governing body of African football and was
founded in 1957. The founding members are Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, and South
Africa. With a membership of 54 Member Associations, the secretariat is based
in Cairo, Egypt.
The organisation has always believed in the power of
football in African schools. It was in 2018 that CAF launched its very first
educational campaign “Learn today, Lead Tomorrow” to raise awareness and
support educational institutions in Africa through football. It is in line with
the vision that CAF supported Books and Boots, a non-profit social project
which combines education and recreation in communities.
“If you want kids to go to school, put football into
schools,” said Mosengo-Omba. “At CAF, we can’t stress enough the importance of
education and sports. By putting the two together, we have a recipe for change.
We look forward to bringing our young African leaders together through the
Pan-African Football Championship.”
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