The
President of Nigeria Football Federation, Amaju Pinnick, on Thursday won a
place on the CAF Executive Committee for the 2017 to 2021 cycle.
Pinnick won
32-17 to beat the President of the Football Association of Benin Republic,
Anjorin Moucharafou, to the West B Zone seat.
Pinnick’s
election makes him the third Nigerian ever to sit on the CAF Executive
Committee.
Earlier at
the elections, Madagascar’s Ahmad Ahmad had beaten incumbent Issa Hayatou of
Cameroon 34-20 to emerge new CAF President.
Both
elections were part of the elections held in the Nelson Mandela Hall of the
African Union building in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The
elections were held at the 39th CAF Ordinary General Assembly.
The
elections were witnessed by FIFA President Gianni Infantino and Secretary
General, Fatma Samoura, and were declared open by President Mulatu Teshome of
Ethiopia.
Also elected
into the CAF Exco was Fouzi Lekjaa of Morocco who thumped incumbent Mohamed
Raouraoua of Algeria 41-7 for North Zone.
Musa Bility
of Liberia defeated Amadou Diakite of Mali 26-22 for West A Zone, while Adoum
Djibrine of Chad was elected unopposed from the Central Zone.
For the Central-East
Zone which had four candidates, Suleiman Hassan Waberi of Djibouti polled 20
votes to win after Sudanese Magdi Shams El Din withdrew before the second round
of voting.
In the first
round, the incumbent El Din had got 12 votes, while Juneido Basha Tilmo of
Ethiopia got nine and Moses Magogo of Uganda got seven.
After the
Southern Zone election, Ahmad and Suketu Patel of Seychelles were replaced by
Danny Jordaan of South Africa (35 votes) and Rui Eduardo Da Costa of Angola (25
votes).
Frans Mbidi
of Namibia could not make it in spite of getting 24 votes, while Patel withdrew
from the election.
In the
election for the female slot, Isha Johansen of Sierra Leone got 35 votes to
beat Lydia Nsekera of Burundi who had 12.
In the
election of the African representative for the FIFA Council for the cycle 2017
– 2021 (Arabic, Portuguese, Spanish Category), Tarek Bouchamoui of Tunisia was
successful.
This was
after Hani Abo Rida of Egypt had withdrawn from the contest.
In the Francophone
Category, Omari Constant Selemani of DR Congo got 35 votes to beat Augustin
Sidy Diallo of Cote d’Ivoire who had 19 votes.
The
Anglophone Category election saw Kwesi Nyantakyi of Ghana polling 33 votes beat
Leodegar Tenga of Tanzania who had 20 votes.
In the Open
Category, where there were three positions to fill, Almamy Kabele Camara of
Guinea and Nsekera were elected.
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