Cecafa Secretary-General Nicholas Musonye addressing the media at his
office in Nyayo Stadium on May 12, 2014 on the forthcoming Nile Basin
Club Tournament. PHOTO | MARTIN MUKANGU |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
The Confederation of African Football (CAF) was born in East
Africa, and yet over the years the leadership of the ................................
African football body and the teams that dominate its tournaments seem to come mostly from the west and north of the continent. When did the rain start beating us?
African football body and the teams that dominate its tournaments seem to come mostly from the west and north of the continent. When did the rain start beating us?
Nation Sport writer David Kwalimwa
interviewed one of the region’s pillars in CAF, Nicholas Musonye, on
the sidelines of Afcon in the city of Bata in Equatorial Guinea on this
and the standards of football in the region.
KWALIMWA:
You are one of the few members of the CAF standing committees from East
Africa that have been invited to organize Afcon in Guinea Equatorial.
What is your take on the organisation?
MUSONYE:
First of all, I want to take this opportunity to congratulate the CAF
executive for the bold steps to convince Equatorial Guinea to host this
event.
You remember we had many difficulties last year.
Morocco
withdrew with less than three months to the tournament and the dilemma
was too huge to get a replacement in that short time.
However,
CAF president Issa Hayatou used his influence in Africa to get the
current host on board in early December. Working non-stop between
December 7 to the kick-off on January 17 was not an easy task for such a
small country.
They had to reconstruct two stadiums in
Mongomo and Ebebiyin in the interior of the country and also renovate
the stadiums in Bata and Malabo.
Massive resources
were at the disposal of the Local Organising Committee (LOC) to ensure
that everything was done to host Africa.
In this kind
of scenario you do not expect 100 per cent readiness. However, I
personally commend Equatorial Guinea for the excellent work they have
done.
You were here in 2012 when Equatorial
Guinea and Gabon co-hosted the … Afcon tournament. What is your opinion
of the people of this country.
First of all, the success of any nation or even an organisation depends on its leadership.
The
president of Equatorial Guinea, (Teodoro Obiang) Nguema Mbasogo, is a
strong man who makes firm decisions. I am a believer in strong
leadership laced with some dictatorship.
Equatorial Guinea's President Teodoro Obiang
Nguema Mbasogo (centre) and his Congolese counterpart Denis
Sassou-Nguesso (right) attend the 2015 African Cup of Nations group A
match between Equatorial Guinea and Congo at Bata Stadium in Bata on
January 17, 2015. PHOTO | CARL DE SOUZA | AFP
In
Africa, development is retarded because of too much democracy, where
people criticize everything and run to the courts. It is not the same
here. Here a decision is made from the high office and it must be
implemented.
In some countries, people would have gone
to court or to the streets to halt Afcon. But you can now see what the
tournament has done to the country — opening up two new stadiums in
Ebebiyin and Mongomo. You can also see the new superhighways across the
country — cutting through forests and rivers. Africa still needs some
form of measured dictatorship.
You were the
first group of CAF organisers to arrive in Equatorial Guinea sometime in
early January. What was the situation like?
The
first group from CAF headquarters arrived in Malabo on January 3 while
some of us co-ordinators and organisers of the event joined on January
7-8. We had to come early for obvious reasons.
First,
as I have said before, the country was only confirmed as hosts in early
December so they had no time to prepare as they had done in 2012. The
LOC was virtually not in place and many things were not in the right
position.
For instance, a lot of work was to be done
in Ebebiyin and Mongomo — these are two small cities far away from the
capital Malabo and the second largest city of Bata. People in Mongomo
and Ebebiyin had never hosted any international event.
This
was something very new to them and we had to do a lot of orientation
and literally spent most of the time in the stadium to ensure that
things are in place before kick-off. It was really difficult. But the
good thing about Equatorial Guinea is that decisions are made and anyone
who attempts to misbehave is punished.
You
have said the tournament has opened up the country in terms of
infrastructure. What exactly have you experienced since the time you
spent a month here in 2012 and now three weeks this time round?
Well,
in 2012, the country had six years to prepare as co-hosts with Gabon.
And so they had time to mobilise human and financial resources. This
time, a decision was made at once and there was no time to put all that
together.
However, between 2012 and 2015, there is a
lot that has happened in this country. The country, as you know, is
virtually a forest with many rivers to cross. Despite all this, a lot of
infrastructure has been built.
There is road
construction every day linking small towns and even neighbouring
countries like Gabon and Cameroon. Connecting Bata-Mongomo-Ebebiyin
through to Gabon and Cameroon will take you less than three hours
because the superhighways are excellent. What am saying, tournaments
like Afcon can open up a country.
Now lets talk about Kenya hosting the Africa Nations Championships (CHAN) in 2018. What is your take?
Kenya
is able to host CHAN. I have been to 14 Afcons since 1988 when I was a
reporter. In 1988 in Morocco, the tournament was hosted in only two
cities. So was 1990 (Algeria) and 1992 in Senegal.
However,
after the teams were increased to 16, a higher number of venues was
needed. This also increased costs. I was in Burkinal Faso in 1998 where
people were accommodated in hostels, in Mali in 2002, in unfinished
apartments.
Kenya is one of the biggest economies in
Africa and they are capable of hosting any event. I know Kenya’s only
concern will be stadiums. But a solution can be found.
The
government of President Uhuru Kenyatta has a grandiose plan to
construct big stadiums in each county. That is a very brilliant idea.
But for CHAN, Kenya does not need 40,000-seater stadiums. We can
renovate Nyayo and Kasarani and make some alterations on the structures
to meet the international standards.
Secondly, Kisumu
already has artificial turf. The only thing that is needed there is to
put up a good VIP tribune, four dressing rooms/toilets, a media centre,
offices and seats and make it just a 15,000-seater stadium.
Mombasa/Machakos
would be easier alternatives. Machakos Governor AlfredMutua and Joho
(Mombasa) can, with central government support, pull up something
faster. The most important thing for Machakos and Mombasa would be
seats, toilets, dressing rooms, media centre and some few offices and
VIP pavilion.
For Machakos and Mombasa 8,000-10,000-seater capacity would be fine.
Kenya
has no problems with hotels while at least 12 training grounds spread
across host cities can be sorted out without any problem. The most
important thing will be the government commitment to fund direct event
expenses such tickets, accommodation, allowances and other logistical
issues. And then, of course, a big chunk of expenses would have to be
considered for security.
What about manpower?
Kenya
has the best qualified manpower in Africa and in every sector. The
middle class in Kenya, who are the drivers of our economy, are one of
the best in the continent and are eager to work and deliver. There
should no problem with that.
Twenty five years ago, we
delivered a successful All African Games. We have organised successful
high-level athletics championships, and football being the biggest sport
in the country cannot fail to succeed. This again will depend on the
government’s commitment.
In 1996, Kenya was picked to host Afcon. Then one year to the event, KFF pulled out. Do you think this can happen again?
This
can only happen if the government is not committed. But I don’t think
so. Things have changed. CAF will make several visits to Kenya to
ascertain a number of issues and work with the FA and other
stakeholders. So Kenya must give a positive first impression when the
CAF delegation visits.
You have been a member
of the CAF standing committee as well as general co-ordinator and media
officer in CAF and Fifa since 2002. What are the main challenges you
face when organising Afcon/CHAN?
The main
challenge we face is when a host nation is not committed on some issues
and more especially when the government is not fully involved.
I
have always maintained that you can not run sports without the
government. The government is the biggest sponsor and the custodian of
everything. With the state apparatus on your side, you are guaranteed of
goodwill and corporate sponsorship.
You have
been the secretary-general of Cecafa since 2000. What happened last year
that you were off radar and the regional Challenge Cup failed to take
place for the first time since you took over?
We
had to keep cool for a while for people to re-examine themselves and
understand that it is not easy to organize these events. Now people in
our region know that they need Cecafa and we shall organize it this
year, although (the) CAF and Fifa calendar is tight.
President Paul Kagame (left) and the Cecafa
secretary-general Nicholas Musonye give a medal to an El Merriekh player
after the Sudanese club won the 2014 Cecafa Kagame Cup at Amahoro
National Stadium, Kigali, in August last year. PHOTO | CYRIL NDEGEYA |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
The
Cecafa (East and Central Africa) region has failed to qualify again for
the Africa Cup of Nations. What is the problem with your region?
We
at Cecafa do our best to organise competitions for our zone. But it is
upon national associations to up their game in preparing their teams.
WAFU, COSAFA, etc., do the same and their teams qualify. Ask the
national associations, their programmes for their national teams. That
should serve as an answer to your question.
Uganda
has come close to qualifying for the Africa Cup of Nations but have
always failed at the last minute. What is your stake on this?
Well,
I feel sad for Uganda because it is one of the most solid teams in our
zone. Remember also, Uganda in their debut in the Afcon in 1978 reached
the final, losing to hosts Ghana in a match played over two days.
Uganda's
campaign in both Afcon and the World Cup has always remained a puzzle
and enigmatic. Twice they have come close to the World Cup, and four
times they have failed in Afcon on the last day.
I
appreciate Uganda's efforts to revive youth football. This has seen the
country produce many good players that dot the entire region. In Kenya
alone, Uganda can raise a national team that can compete effectively in
any international competition.
I would like to see
other members in the region put much emphasis on youth football because
that is the future of the national team.
I appreciate your time, Nic.
You are welcome.
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