Tag: Issa Hayatou

  • Issa Hayatou: End of a golden era in African football

    Issa Hayatou: End of a golden era in African football

    • By Ikedi Ohakim

    THE death of Dr. Issa Hayatou, the longest-serving president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF) recently at the age of 77, marks the end of a golden era in African football. Hayatou served as CAF president between 1988 and 2017 and even though he left office seven year ago, he remained an inspiration for all those who are desirous of seeing African football attain more glorious heights. Under Hayatou, football in Africa experienced an exponential limp both in intra and international competitions. Unfortunately, the last seven years seem to have witnessed a reversal of the gains the continent garnered in the management and prosecution of its football in the nearly three decades of Hayatou.

    It was under Hayatou that the African Cup of Nations finals  was expanded to include more national teams – from eight to sixteen. Similarly, competitions at the club level also grew both in numbers and scale, allowing more clubs to participate in the African Cup of Champions Club, the CAF Confederation Cup, the CAF Cup, and the CAF Super Cup. Within this period also, African football expanded in scope to include youth and women’s competition. But, of course, the hallmark of Hayatou’s CAF presidency was that under him, the continent began to make appearances at the FIFA World Cup finals. Not only did Nigeria, Senegal, and Cameroon get to the World Cup finals, but also Hayatou succeeded in getting African places at the finals increased from two to six.

    The climax was the hosting of the FIFA tournament by South Africa in 2010, the first and only time by an African nation. But perhaps Hayatou’s most visionary ambience for African football was to create more incentives for footballers within  the continent, itself, the final objective being to reduce the flow of African players to other continents, especially Europe. Hayatou, in fact, stirred a big controversy when he described the situation with the metaphor of  rich countries importing  “raw materials” – talents – from Africa and often sending their less valuable technicians. Here, he was apparently alluding to the situation whereby the best of African talents – in football – get signed on by clubs in other continents, especially Europe, in exchange for poorly rated foreign coaches or so-called technical advisers.

    This initiative was highly applauded by both writers and politicians in the continent.

    Regardless of the fact that it did not enjoy the level of support it deserved from African governments and club owners, Hayatou succeeded in getting the Union of EuropeanFootball Association (UEFA) to pay fees to African governing bodies and clubs for African-born players working in Europe. This was followed by the Meridien Project, initiated in 1997, creating  the UEFA – CAF Meridien Cup and which provided for the payment of fees to African National Associations every two years. Two years later, CAF and FIFA went into an agreement, the 1999 Goal Project, which gives forty six African Football Associations financial support of one million dollars over four years.

    Read Also: Issa Hayatou (1946 – 2024)

     Apart from impacting directly on the development of African football, these collaborations created a cordial relationship between Hayatou and UEFA leaders to the extent that the latter backed him to the hilt when he aspired to take over from Sepp Blatter in 2002. Even though he lost to Blatter with the backing of the American and Asian confederations, Hayatou eventually became the acting president of FIFA in 2015 following the corruption case that led to the removal of Blatter. He held that position until February 2016 when the current president, Glanni Infantino, was elected.

    I had the privilege of working closely with Dr. Issa Hayatou when, as governor, I led the preparations for the participation of the Heartland Football Club of Owerri in the 2008/2009 CAF Champion League. It was the 45th edition of Africa’s Premier Football Club tournament organized by CAF.

    Immediately after the official launching of our flagship programme, the Clean and Green Initiative in August 2007, and as part of the New Face of Imo Vision, I  authorized the recruitment of a foreign Technical Adviser for Heartland by name Mitko Dobrew as part of our  also GREENING SPORTS PROJECT. I recall with nostalgia that we also engaged the services of three of Nigeria’s best international soccer stars: Christian Chukwu, Samson Siasia and Ben Iroha. We rebranded Heartland and targeted the African cup. In 2008, however, it finished second in the Premier League by one point against Kano Pillars and that earned it automatic place for the African championship slot.

    Heartland crushed so many African clubs with a rich history until it got to the finals. The first leg of the finals  with TP Mazembe of the Democratic Republic of Congo was played at the Dan Anyiam stadium, Owerri. It ended 2-1 in favour of Heartland. The second leg was on November 7, 2009 at the Federic Kibassa Maliba stadium in Lubumbashi which unfortunately ended 1-0 in favour of the Congolese under very controversial circumstances.

    But TP Mazembe was awarded the trophy on technical grounds based on the Away Goal rule; with Heartland getting the Silver medal, that is, second place. In addition, Heartland’s striker, Uche Agba, whom I gave a lot of personal attention to during  the preparations, earned the second highest goal scorer of the tournament with seven goals; after TP Mazembe’s Kaluyituka who scored eight goals.  

    In appreciation of and support for our efforts, the then President, the late Umaru Yar’Adua, provided the club with his presidential jet for our trip to Lubumbashi for the match. But it was a very rough encounter. In spite of the fact that T.P Mazembe won, the Congolese were very hostile to us but we were saved from anything sinister through the intervention of CAF officials led by Dr. Issa Hayatou. Before that glorious outing in 2008/2009, Heartland only got to the quarter-finals of the African championship when it was known as Iwuanyanwu Nationale, losing to Esperance of Tunis in the first leg in 1994. It would be recalled that it was on that trip that the team, Iwuanyanwu Nationale, suffered an air crash tragedy at Tamanreaset, Algeria, losing two of its players, Aimola Omale and goalkeeper, Uche Ikeogu.

    The proprietor of Iwuanyanwu Nationale, Chief Iwuanyanwu, who departed a couple of weeks ago, had during his life time severally acknowledged the big support his club received from Hayatou. Even though the two had ceased playing active roles in African football, it is a matter of regret that these two pillars of  African soccer had to pass on at time the continent would have still wished to draw inspiration from their wealth of experience. Truth be told, this is not the best time for African sports. Nigeria, the giant of Africa, has just returned from the 2024 Paris Olympics without a single medal.

    Even though nine African countries won gold medals, it cannot be said to be a very good outing for the continent.  In the men football, only four African countries were at the Olympics but none got even a bronze medal.  In the 1996 Olympics, Nigeria got the gold for men’s football but the performance of Africa since then in that category has been nothing but abysmal. I am of the strong belief that if African nations had rallied round Hayatou when he canvassed for those initiatives that were earlier mentioned in this article, the situation would have been most properly  different.

    Back to Nigeria, however, we should go back to the vision of the likes of Hayatou.  Nigeria is arguably a “football nation” but her performance has not matched her size.  At the 2023 African Cup of Nations, Nigeria again lost a big opportunity to rule African soccer,  losing to a less-rated host country, Cote d’Ivoive by 2-1 goal margin on February 11, 2024.  It was a match Nigeria had everything going for it to win.

    Today, Nigeria ranks in the third position in African football, after Morrocco and Senegal in that order. These are two countries that are quite small and peopled by much less talented professionals.  Although Nigeria jumped four places from the 42nd position to the 28th position after that tournament, all hands must be on deck in order to ensure that there are no further slides down.

    The back and forth surrounding the search for a new coach for the national team, the Super Eagles, should have been avoided because it makes Nigeria’s football vulnerable.  As things stand, it is clear that the choice of a fellow to replace Jose Peseiro, who left after the 2023 African Cup of Nations, has been plagued by politics, intrigues, and power play.  I think something more serious should be on the table.    

    To be sure, there is the need to pay great attention to our economic and political challenges but it should not be at the expense of sports development. The perennial lackluster attitude to preparations for our participation in international sports competitions must cease. The reason why the developed countries pay so much attention to sports and spend heavily on them is that they realize that economic and political prowess alone are not enough to earn them honour and prestige in the international arena.

    Some might argue that these developed countries invest handsomely in sports because they have the resources. My response to that is two folds; one,it is not the financial resources that matter in the first place. It is realizing and accepting the importance sports play both at home and in the optics within the comity of nation. If we develop the right attitude, the financial resources would not be the problem. In other words – and this is the second point – we are not even making judicious use of the little we can afford to channel towards sports development.

    In my days in Imo,  we did not wait to amass billions before putting up our thinking caps for sports development. Rebranding sports and using it to attract both national and international attention as well as engage our youths was part of our GREEN vision. And once that determination was there, we discovered that what was needed was a little bit of pragmatism. For example, we decided to focus more on sports like football, athletics, boxing, and hockey, areas we felt we had a comparative advantage. And it paid off both at home and in our international engagements.

    At the National Sports in Kaduna in 2008, Imo State came first. At the African Hockey Championship in 2009, we also came first. We were the leading state in both female and male handball. The climax of our success was our outing at the 2008 African Championship football tournament in which we came second as earlier narrated in this write-up. As a matter of fact, it was during the preparations for that tournament that I got close to Hayatou and we both found ourselves in a cordial personal relationship.

    The point, therefore, is that we must sit up as a nation in the area of sports. There is no intention here to indulge in a blame game but I make bold to state that left for the average Nigerian, we should jettison most of the things we are doing and pay attention to sports. A young youth was once asked what he thinks is Nigeria’s biggest problem and his response was quite interesting. To paraphrase the youngster, if Nigeria gets it right with football, every other thing will fall into place! That might have been an exaggeration but it is, nonetheless, significant. Another version of this passion is the oft repeated saying that the only time Nigerians forget their differences is when watching a Nigerian team playing another country’s team in a football match. We can go on and on in demonstration of the fact that sports, generally, is a measure of both strength – locally and internationally – on one hand; and love and national unity on the other.

    • Ohakim is a businessman and former governor of Imo State.
  • Issa Hayatou (1946 – 2024)

    Issa Hayatou (1946 – 2024)

    • Longest-serving CAF president who transformed African football will be sorely missed

    For 29 eventful years, he was perched on the pinnacle of African football administration as president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), from 1988 to 2017. His tenure, the longest in CAF history, earned him the epithet ‘emperor’ in some circles. But his leadership undoubtedly transformed African football.

    It was a measure of his stature in world football administration that he was briefly interim president of the International Federation of Association Football, better known as FIFA, from October 2015 to February 2016, and helped to bring some stability to the organisation in a period of leadership crisis.

    In tributes to Issa Hayatou, the Cameroonian former leader of African football who died on August 8, aged 77, FIFA president Gianni Infantino described him as a ‘passionate sports fan,’ and CAF president Patrice Motsepe praised him for his contributions to the growth of African football.

    He had a successful career as an athlete before he became a football administrator. He represented Cameroon in basketball and athletics, and held national record times in the 400-metre and 800-metre sprint events.

    At 28, in 1974, he became secretary-general of the Cameroonian Football Federation (FECAFOOT), and was later president of the body in 1986. He was elected the fifth president of CAF after the position became vacant in 1987. His seventh re-election campaign, in 2017, ended in defeat. After his loss, he was appointed president of the National Football Academy in Cameroon.

    His era as CAF boss witnessed progressive restructuring and introduction of football competitions under the body, including the Africa Cup of Nations, CAF Champions League, CAF Confederation Cup, and CAF Super Cup. Former CAF secretary-general Hicham El Amrani was reported saying his actions boosted “both infrastructure and player development.”

     Notably, Women’s Under-17 and Under-20 versions of the Africa Cup of Nations were introduced in his era. He was credited with leaving $130m in CAF coffers, though he had inherited only $1.25m.

     Also, under him, African representation increased at the World Cup from two teams in 1990 to five when the tournament expanded in 1998. The high point of his CAF presidency was bringing the World Cup to Africa for the first time when South Africa hosted in 2010.

    He was senior vice president of FIFA from 1992 to 2017. He unsuccessfully ran for FIFA president in 2002, with the backing of the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA). His nomination by UEFA to replace Sepp Blatter as head of FIFA demonstrated his interpersonal skills as a leader.

    Read Also: BREAKING: Ex-CAF president Issa Hayatou dies a day before 78th birthday

    Hayatou later became acting president of FIFA, in 2015, following the removal of Blatter as a result of a corruption case. It was a short stint. He left the position five months later, in 2016, when Infantino was elected to head FIFA.

    He was at the centre of some scandals, which he survived. In the 1990s, he was alleged to have received bribes totalling about $20,000, in a case regarding the awarding of contracts for the sale of television rights to the World Cup.  He denied any wrongdoing, saying that the money went to CAF.

    Hayatou also faced an allegation that he and a fellow CAF official had received $1.5m in bribes from Qatar in 2010 to secure support for its ultimately successful bid for the 2022 World Cup. He denied the accusation. He also attracted controversy concerning the signing of a deal worth $1b with French media rights company Lagardere in 2015.

    In 2021, FIFA banned him for a year for breaching its code of ethics. But the Court of Arbitration for Sport overturned the sanction, finding no justification for FIFA’s penalty. In the end, he was unscathed.

    He was a member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) from 2001, and an honorary member from 2017. 

    A recipient of an honorary degree from Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomosho, Oyo State, Nigeria, in 2007, he will be remembered for vigorously promoting the interests of African football, and leaving it better than he met it.

  • Motsepe to grace Hayatou’s funeral 

    Motsepe to grace Hayatou’s funeral 

    The Confederation of African  Football (CAF) President Dr Patrice Motsepe is expected at the funeral of the former CAF President, Issa Hayatou holding today, August 16.

    The late President Issa Hayatou will be buried in Garoua, Cameroon.

    Read Also:Motsepe hits Botswana for Forbes U- 30 Summit

    President Motsepe will be joined by FECAFOOT President Samuel Eto’o, CAF Vice-Presidents, a number of CAF Member Association Presidents and the CAF General Secretary, Véron Mosengo-Omba.

    President Issa Hayatou led CAF from 1988 to 2017 and passed on last week.

  • BREAKING: Ex-CAF president Issa Hayatou dies a day before 78th birthday

    BREAKING: Ex-CAF president Issa Hayatou dies a day before 78th birthday

    A former President of the Confederation of African Football, Issa Hayatou, is dead

    He reportedly died in Paris on Thursday, August 8, 2024, a day before his 78th birthday.

    Hayatou’s death was made known by the FIFA President, Gianni Infantino, in a post on his Instagram stories.

    Infantino wrote, “Saddened to hear of the passing of former CAF President, former FIFA President and interim, FIFA Vice President and FIFA Council member, Issa Hayatou.

    Read Also; Protests: Police recover 15 pump action rifles, arrest 23 in Niger

    “As a passionate sports fan and IOC member, he dedicated his life to sports administration and on behalf of FIFA, and condolences go to his family, friends, former colleagues and all who knew him. Rest in peace.”

    Hayatou battled protracted sickness before his death less than 24 hours before his 78th birthday, according to Cameroonian media.

    He served as the president of CAF for 29 years, leading the organisation from 1988 until his unexpected ouster in 2017. 

  • CAF President, Ahmad steps down as Madagascar Senate Leader

    CAF President, Ahmad steps down as Madagascar Senate Leader

    Newly elected Confederation of African Football (CAF) President Ahmad Ahmad has stepped down as Vice-President of the Madagascar Senate.

    Ahmad, who is also the Madagascar Football Federation (MFF) boss, tendered his resignation on Monday at 4.45 p.m local time to vacate the office he had occupied since February 2016.

    The 57-year-old former AC Sotema FC Coach was later received officially by the members of the MFF and Muslim community at the Carlton hotel in Antananarivo, where he addressed the gathering.

    Ahmad was last Thursday overwhelmingly voted as president of CAF, garnering 34 to 20 votes, to bring to a humiliating halt Issa Hayatou’s 29-year rule.

    Hayatou was seeking a record eight straight terms in office. The Cameroonian was first elected to head the largest member of FIFA, the world’s football governing body, in March 1988.

    Ahmad, a two-time government minister, is also expected to vacate his position as the MFF president, as required by the CAF rules.

    This could happen anytime soon with MFF’s first vice-president Soda Andriamiasasoa expected to take over the reins on an interim basis pending elections.

     

  • Saraki congratulates new CAF President, Ahmad

    Saraki congratulates new CAF President, Ahmad

    The Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, on Thursday congratulated the newly-elected President of African Football Confederation (CAF), Madagascar’s Ahmad Ahmad.

    Saraki said in Abuja that Ahmad as a consummate technocrat would help to usher in an era of innovation and positive change in the affairs of CAF.

    “Ahmad’s victory is testament to his determination to positively alter the 29-year status quo in CAF,” Saraki said in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr Yusuph Olaniyonu.

    “His predecessor, Issa Hayatou had served the organisation well; now, we look forward to the new leadership to usher in an era of change and effectiveness to raise the standard of African football across all levels.”

    Saraki also urged Football Associations (FA) across the continent to rally support for the new CAF president to deliver on his electioneering promises for the good of African football.

    “This is a new beginning and we cannot afford to make the mistakes of the past.

    “African football has been yearning for a new direction and now that this opportunity to inject fresh blood into the management of CAF has been realised, it is time for stakeholders to extend the frontiers and fortunes of African football at the global level,” Saraki said.

    He commended the outgoing President of CAF, Issa Hayatou, for his services and contributions to the development of football in Africa in his 29-year headship of the body.

  • Hayatou referred to prosecutors over abuse of office

    Hayatou referred to prosecutors over abuse of office

    Confederation of African Football president, Issa Hayatou, has been referred to Egyptian prosecutors for investigation for allegedly abusing his position.

    At issue is a deal awarding the broadcast rights to several African football tournaments to a media company, Lagardere Sports, the BBC reports.

    According to the Egyptian Competition Authority, Hayatou is suspected of not opening up the tender to free and fair competition as required by Egyptian law.

    CAF is based in Cairo so the authorities said it must follow their laws.

    The African football’s governing body had no comment to make, while Hayatou could not be reached.

    The 70-year-old is currently in Abuja, Nigeria, ahead of Thursday’s CAF annual awards.

    Hayatou was elected as CAF president in 1998 and is serving his seventh term in office.

    Lagardere is not the subject of the referral, but claimed the allegation is wholly unfounded.

  • CAF Club Licensing Seminar: Enyimba, Pillars to represent Nigeria

    CAF Club Licensing Seminar: Enyimba, Pillars to represent Nigeria

    By Uchenna Ajah

     

    Enyimba International and Kano Pillars FC will represent Nigeria in the forthcoming Confederation Africaine de Football (CAF) organized seminar on club licensing and professionalism in football billed for 30-31 January 2014 in Cape Town, South Africa. Thirty-seven (37) clubs drawn across the continent will be in attendance.

    According to the organisers, the two-day seminar will seek to equip participants with the requisite knowledge and information about club licensing and the tenets of the fast-growing professionalism in football.

    Topics slated to be discussed at the seminar include: Competitions and Club Licensing: Role of CAF, Federations, Leagues and Clubs, Professional Development of Clubs: Managerial and Finance, Infrastructural Development of Clubs and Stadia as well as Youth policy.

    Others include TV Rights, Broadcasting and Production of matches in Africa, Marketing of Competitions and Sponsorship for clubs, Club Licensing System in other Confederations (UEFA, AFC) and Legal issues concerning Clubs and Status of Players.

    The seminar will be supervised by CAF President, Issa Hayatou, with support from members of the CAF Executive Committee and Danny Jordaan, President of South Africa Football Associations (SAFA) in this historic event.