CAF Elections: Ineligible Ahmad Counts on CAS for Sucour

CAF Elections: Ineligible Ahmad  Counts on CAS for Sucour

The Confederation of African Football (Caf) has ruled that just two of the five candidates for March’s presidential elections are eligible so far – with President Ahmad not among them.

The Malagasy has been ‘declared ineligible’ given his five-year Fifa ban, although his camp have slim hopes an ongoing appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) could change this.

Both former Ivory Coast football federation president Jacques Anouma and current Senegal FA president Augustin Senghor have been authorised to contest the March elections in Morocco.

Further checks are required before either Mauritania FA president Ahmed Yahya and Patrice Motsepe, the South African who owns Mamelodi Sundowns, can be added to the list of candidates.

“The committee considered that further checks are necessary before a final decision,” a Caf statement said. “To this end, a hearing of these candidates will be organised in Cairo on 28 January.”

The elections to determine who will lead Caf into the future are set to be held on 12 March in the Moroccan capital Rabat.

Even though Ahmad has been declared ineligible, a source in his camp maintains that there is a possibility the former Madagascar FA president, elected Caf president in 2017, could make the ballot after all.

After appealing to sport’s highest legal body Cas in December, there are hopes that the Switzerland-based organisation will make a provisional ruling on Ahmad’s ban by midnight on 11 January, the original deadline for Caf to announce the successful presidential candidates.

In the event that Cas rules as early as next week in his favour, which is far more a possibility than a probability, Ahmad could then appeal his exclusion from the list of presidential candidates.
It is unclear whether such an appeal would take place internally within Caf or externally at Cas once again.

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