Caf ExCo Gives Fifa Final Say On Ahmad Election Eligibility

The Executive Committee of the Confederation of African Football (Caf) has chosen to set aside the recommendation by its own Governance Committee to restore Ahmad as a presidential candidate, saying Fifa should have the final say.

On Friday, Caf's Governance Committee determined that the 61-year-old was now eligible to stand in next month's elections after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) temporarily lifted his five-year Fifa ban last week.

 
"The candidate Ahmad is declared eligible for the post of Caf presidency," the Governance Committee stated on 5 February.

At a heated meeting of the Executive Committee (ExCo) in Cameroon on Saturday, Caf's board effectively decided to ignore the independent Governance Committee's advice and rely on football's governing body itself.

At one point, Caf president Ahmad - attending his first official event since being banned in November - left the room while his candidacy was discussed.

During the meeting, he also rejected the possibility of postponing the elections, to be held in Morocco, because of the ongoing uncertainty.

Whoever becomes Caf president on 12 March will automatically assume a role as the vice-president of Fifa, whose Review Committee vets candidates.

When the body met last month, it barred Ahmad from contesting the elections given the ban he had received for several breaches of Fifa's ethics code.

The decision came shortly before CAS - sport's highest legal body - provisionally ruled, on 29 January, to temporarily suspend Ahmad's Fifa ban "due to a risk of irreparable harm for Mr Ahmad if the disciplinary sanction is maintained during the period prior to the Caf elections".

Ahmad wants to be the elections' fifth participant, with Jacques Anouma (Ivory Coast), Patrice Motsepe (South Africa), Augustin Senghor (Senegal) and Ahmed Yahya (Mauritania) all having already been approved.

In Fifa's hands

Ahmad's camp approached Fifa earlier this week to ask that its Review Committee overturn its earlier decision to bar him from the elections.

Fifa, which was asked to have the final say on vetting candidates by Caf's Emergency Committee last month, has yet to respond to the requests.

On 9 January, shortly after Caf's Governance Committee approved Anouma and Senghor but said both Mostepe and Yahya needed 'further checks', Caf's Emergency Committee said Fifa should oversee the vetting process.

Following Saturday's meeting in Yaounde, the ExCo has now given its backing to that decision of the Emergency Committee, a small body made up of at least the president, one vice-president and two other ExCo members.

When asked earlier this week about the CAS ruling that reinstated Ahmad as president, Fifa merely commented that it "has taken note of the CAS decision".

Switzerland-based CAS says it will hear the appeal in full on 2 March, with a decision issued before the Caf presidential elections on 12 March.

This effective suspension of the Fifa ruling will be in place 'until the day that the final Cas award is issued' whereupon Ahmad will either be able to bid for another four-year term or be out of the race completely.

Saturday's ExCo meeting took place in Cameroon ahead of Yaounde staging the final of the African Nations Championship, popularly known as the CHAN, on Sunday 7 February.