FIFA ban African football head for five years after ethics investigation
Send a link to a friend
[November 24, 2020]
MANCHESTER, England
(Reuters) - The head of African football, Ahmad Ahmad, has been
banned from football for five years by FIFA following an ethics
investigation by world soccer's governing body.
Ahmad, who is president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF),
had intended to stand in an election in March in which he would have
faced a number of challengers.
FIFA said in a statement the independent Ethics Committee has found
Ahmad guilty of offering and accepting gifts and other benefits, and
misappropriation of funds.
FIFA had "sanctioned him with a ban from all football-related
activity (administrative, sports or any other) at both national and
international level for five years," it said.
It also fined him 200,000 Swiss francs ($200,000). Ahmad declined to
comment when contacted by Reuters.
Former CAF general secretary Amr Fahmy, who died earlier this year from
cancer, had been dismissed after he made corruption allegations against
Ahmad last year in a document sent to FIFA.
The document, sent on March 31 2019 by Fahmy to a FIFA investigations
committee and seen by Reuters, accused Ahmad of ordering his
secretary-general to pay $20,000 bribes into accounts of African
football association presidents. They included Cape Verde and Tanzania.
The document also accused Ahmad of costing CAF an extra $830,000 by
ordering equipment via a French intermediary company called Tactical
Steel. The company denied any wrongdoing and said it had won the
contract on merit.
Furthermore, it accused him of harassing four female CAF staff, whom it
did not name; violating statutes to increase Moroccan representation
within the organisation; and over-spending more than $400,000 of CAF
money on cars in Egypt and Madagascar, where a satellite office has been
set up for him.
Senior CAF officials, speaking on condition of anonymity at the time of
his dismissal, said Fahmy was fired in reprisal for compiling the
document with the allegations against Ahmad.
[to top of second column] |
FIFA's logo is seen in
front of its headquarters during a foggy autumn day in Zurich,
Switzerland November 18, 2020. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
Ahmad was questioned by French authorities in June, 2019 after he
was taken from his Paris hotel and questioned by officers of OCLIF,
the French police agency fighting financial crime and corruption,
French media reports said.
In August last year, FIFA general secretary Fatma Samoura was
appointed "general delegate" for Africa and took control of a large
part of CAF's affairs.
In February, at the end of that process, a review of CAF's finances
by Price Waterhouse Cooper (PWC) was highly critical of how the
African organisation’s finances had been managed.
A copy of the 55-page report was seen by Reuters and outlined a
series of concerns about CAF’s book-keeping.
"The accounting records of CAF are unreliable and not trustworthy,"
said the PWC report.
Based upon the procedures performed and documents reviewed, several
red flags, potential elements of mismanagement and possible abuse of
power were found in key areas of finance and operations of CAF.
"Given the serious nature of certain findings and red flags
identified from the preliminary due-diligence, we cannot rule out
the possibility of potential irregularities."
(Reporting by Simon Evans; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Christian
Radnedge)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |