CAF announces reforms in Africa Cup statutes
Still dealing with the fallout from a contentious Africa Cup of Nations final, African soccer’s governing body has announced a raft of โchanges and improvementsโ to its statutes and regulations.
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The structural, legal and administrative reforms will help the Confederation of African Football regain trust in its impartiality and ensure that the scenes from the final in January are never repeated, CAF president Patrice Motsepe said after a meeting of its executive committee in Cairo on Sunday.
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โI can stand here and say we’ve got the best referees, they are independent, they’re impartial. But if the ordinary football spectators on the continent and elsewhere think they are not so impartial, it’s not good for African football,โ Motsepe said.
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โWe have to move away also from the perception that somehow our problems in Africa and our weaknesses in Africa are greater, bigger, more embarrassing, more extreme than the problems that happen in other parts of the world,โ Motsepe said.
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The South African businessman said CAF was working with FIFA to provide training for referees and VAR operators, and that it was imperative to pay them well to ensure integrity.
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General secretary steps down
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Earlier, Vรฉron Mosengo-Omba announced he was stepping down after five years as CAF general secretary โto devote myself to more personal projectsโ. The Swiss-Congolese official is a university friend of FIFA president Gianni Infantino and followed him from UEFA to FIFA in 2016. Mosengo-Omba left FIFA to take over as CAF general secretary in 2021.
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CAF announced in January 2025 that the Swiss Public Prosecutor’s Office had decided to stop investigations against Mosengo-Omba โas they found no facts or legal basis to initiate legal proceedingsโ after he faced allegations of financial wrongdoing.
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โNow that I have been able to dispel the suspicions that some people have gone to great lengths to cast on me, I can retire with peace of mind and without constraint, leaving the CAF more prosperous than ever,โ Mosengo-Omba said Sunday.
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Motsepe confirmed that the Women’s Africa Cup of Nations will go ahead in Morocco as initially planned. The tournament had been scheduled to take place in the kingdom from March 17 to April 3, but was pushed back at short notice to July 25 to August 16. โThere were circumstances that we had not foreseen,โ Motsepe said after being pressed for the reasons for the postponement.
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Africa Cup to have 28 teams
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Motsepe said he will visit Kenya in May to see how preparations are going for the men’s 2027 Africa Cup, which Kenya is due to co-host with Tanzania and Uganda. He dismissed suggestions the โPamojaโ tournament could be moved to another country. Motsepe also announced the expansion of the Africa Cup to include 28 teams, up from 24 at the 2025 edition. Motsepe already announced in December that the Africa Cup will be held every four years from 2028.
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Also read: Africa Cup of Nations: Senegal files complaint with CAS