The President of the Federation of International Football Associations
(FIFA), Joseph Sepp Blatter (left) and the President of Confederation of
African Football (CAF), Issa Hayatou (right) attend the 37th CAF
Ordinary General Assembly on April 7, 2015 in the Egyptian capital
Cairo. PHOTO | KHALED DESOUKI |
AFP
CAIRO
The president of the
Confederation of African Football (Caf) Issa Hayatou on Tuesday affirmed
Africa's support for outgoing Fifa president Sepp Blatter, who at 79
years, is seeking a fifth term in office.
Blatter,
whose leadership has been plagued by scandal, has headed Fifa since
1998, and is now competing against three rivals for the top world
football job — Jordanian Prince Ali bin Al Hussein, Dutchman Michel van
Praag and former Portugal star Luis Figo.
"His action
in favour of Africa speaks for him. To us, he is still the man of the
situation," Cameroonian Hayatou said at the start of CAF's two-day
general assembly in Cairo attended by Blatter.
Blatter
brought the World Cup to Africa for the first time in 2010 and Fifa's
financial support has helped keep many African national federations
afloat.
It would be a shock if Blatter failed to garner all 54 African votes in the May 29 election in Zurich.
Hayatou,
68, recalled that the executive committee of CAF had in September
"initiated a motion of support for the candidature" of Blatter that
resulted in "an exhortation made to all 54 member federations of CAF to
guarantee their votes to him when the time comes."
"Dear
Sepp, Africa is comfortable having you, she stays with you!," Hayatou
said, according to an official English translation of his speech made in
French.
ATTENDED THE MEETING
Blatter's three rivals also attended the two-day Caf meeting as observers.
The
four candidates had no right to speak at the meeting, but Blatter was
invited to address the gathering as Fifa president where he highlighted
the world football body's work in Africa.
"Together we have built football in Africa," said Blatter. "We FIFA have invested about $760 million in Africa."
Blatter's
rival Van Praag called for more transparency in the functioning of FIFA
when he spoke to AFP on the sidelines of the meeting.
Fifa
"needs openness, no one knows what actually happens behind curtains in
FIFA, and how decisions are taken", the Dutch football chief said in
English.
Van Praag said that Fifa also needed more democracy and accountability.
"I
believe that the football federations should know to the last penny
where the money is spent and how it is spent, and now this is not the
case," he added.
The Caf meeting will also choose a
host country for the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations, and make the qualifying
draw for that competition.
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