[CAF Leaks] : Prélude ! #CAFLeaks

  • Article très bien ecrit vraiment bravo pour ce niveau de détail de l'information avec des documents et surtout avec aucune faute d'orthographe enfin si juste une :P:


    En réalité le limogeage de l’égyptien, dont la famille a longtemps participé aux instances de la CAF est liée au soupçon qu’a la président sur la fuite des informations vers le magazine algérien. Amr Fahmy a de son côté constitué un dossier important sur de la corruption présumée du président de la confédération qu’il a envoyé à la FIFA et notamment sur le dossier de gestions des droits TV. C’est ce sujet que nous aborderons dans le prochain article.


    Liée-> lié

    Sur de -> sur

  • Tu as vu liée mais tu n'as pas vu la président ..pffff. :-)



  • A retweeter sans modération. :)

  • Si @ fatma_samoura est autorisé à diriger @ CAF _Online , je démissionnerai du football” “ Ahmad doit quitter le football maintenant!”, Le président de la fédération guinéenne, Manuel Lopes Nascimento, à @ BBCAfrica @ BBCSport .



  • Francis Gaitho (@Kenyafootball), les rapports d'audit de la CAF font état de 24 MILLIONS DE DOLLARS manquant/dérobés des caisses de la CAF !!!!

    Son Tweet : https://twitter.com/kenyafootball?lang=fr

    BREAKING:

    @CAF_Online

    officials Ahmad Ahmad, Fouzi Lekjaa, Hany Abourida and Constant Omari have embezzled a whopping $24 million, according to a confidential audit conducted by

    @PwC

    L'article cité :

    #CAFPwCAuditReport : HOW AHMAD’S INNER CIRCLE BINGED ON $24 MILLION CAF CASH

    Finally, the audit commissioned by FIFA SG and General Delegate to CAF, FATMA Samoura during her 6-month tenure is out. The details are as damning as they are shocking (though not entirely unexpected).

    The leaked document, circulating in a very tight group of people, shows unprecedented levels of looting of the CAF reserves by a soulless CAF Exco inner circle, cash that was left behind by foresight and planning of former CAF President Issa Hayatou.

    According to sources who have seen the document, the CAF inner circle gorged themselves off this cash shamelessly without a thought of how to go about covering their tracks.

    FIFA forensic audit has discovered a $24 million hole in the books of accounts, which can neither be justified nor supported.

    Instead, the inner circle of the CAF Exco went about destroying all supporting documents that could tie them directly to the funds loss, blissfully unaware that records can easily be reconstructed by thorough forensic auditors.

    This is the price that African football must pay for the election of intellectual dwarves to such high office.

    How did the CAF General Assembly and the rest of the Exco allow this looting to take place on their watch, you may be wondering? Well, CAF President Ahmad kept them all busy by doling out an annual stipend of $20,000 for each FA President, sent to their private bank accounts.

    Whereas it may be prudent to point out that several FA Presidents objected to receiving this money for its implications and real reason for its disbursal, a majority lapped it up greedily with nary a second thought to its appropriateness or legality.


    L'audit médico-légal de la FIFA a découvert un trou de 24 millions de dollars dans les livres de comptes, qui ne peut être ni justifié ni soutenu.



    ....


    https://fifacolonialism.com/ca…d-on-24-million-caf-cash/



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  • EQPZcytXUAAuM7I?format=jpg&name=4096x4096


    The New York Times balance des missiles terribles sur la CAF.


    Audit Finds Suspicious Financial Dealings in African Soccer


    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/0…an-soccer-corruption.html



    Audit Finds Suspicious Financial Dealings in African Soccer


    An investigation into the Confederation of African Football uncovered information suggesting that tens of millions of dollars had been misappropriated.

    merlin_158100675_e6079d3a-8fd9-42dd-83a2-d671e33ca886-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale

    Gianni Infantino, the FIFA president, with Ahmad Ahmad, president of the Confederation of African Football, at a soccer conference in Cairo in July.

    Gianni Infantino, the FIFA president, with Ahmad Ahmad, president of the Confederation of African Football, at a soccer conference in Cairo in July.Credit...Hassan Ammar/Associated Press


    By Tariq Panja


    Feb. 8, 2020, 10:49 a.m. ET

    An audit of the governing body for soccer in Africa has uncovered millions of dollars of financial irregularities, a development that threatens to bring down its leadership after more than a year of turmoil at the troubled organization.

    The board of the governing body, the Confederation of African Football, or C.A.F., agreed last year to an independent review of its operations amid accusations of financial wrongdoing made by a group of former senior executives at the Cairo-based organization. Its president, Ahmad Ahmad, is also the subject of an ethics inquiry by soccer’s global governing body, FIFA, and by the authorities in France.

    A 55-page report by the accountancy firm PWC, hired to audit the confederation, paints an ugly picture that is likely to lead to demands for swift action against the confederation’s leadership. The auditors found problems across the board, including with the dispensation of millions of dollars of soccer development funds sent to the African soccer body by FIFA.

    The report also cited payments for gifts and, in at least one instance, for organizing a funeral.

    “I have been left shocked and dismayed, though my fears have now been vindicated,” said Musa Bility, a former head of soccer in Liberia who had called for the audit in May before he was banned by FIFA for misappropriating soccer funds, allegations that he has denied.

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    The report provided yet another reminder of the challenges for good governance facing global soccer, which was rocked in 2015 when the United States filed a sweeping indictment that laid out in vivid detail accusations of decades of corruption and wrongdoing by some of the sport’s most senior administrators.

    The executive summary of the PWC report, which was obtained by The New York Times, outlines a slew of troubling information. The report’s authors wrote that, “Potential elements of mismanagement and possible abuse of power were found in key areas of finance and operations of C.A.F.”

    The report said that FIFA had remitted a total of $51 million to the African governing body from 2015 to 2018 and that since then, about $24 million of that amount had been disbursed by African soccer officials. In reviewing 40 payments totaling $10 million, auditors found that just five of the payments, adding up to $1.6 million, had sufficient documentation to confirm what the money would be spent on. The rest lacked information that in some cases made it impossible to identify the beneficiaries of the funds.

    The auditors wrote that they were stymied in doing their work in many cases because the records “are unreliable and not trustworthy due to several manual adjustments.”

    FIFA has so far declined to comment.

    The revelations come a week after FIFA announced that a mission led by its secretary general, Fatma Samoura, intended to restore order at African soccer’s governing body, had been completed and that the administrator would be returning to its headquarters in Zurich.


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    “FIFA is happy that the joint effort made with C.A.F. was done and delivered within the initial proposed time frame and reiterates its commitment to be at the disposal of African football to assist in the process of raising its level to the top of the world,” FIFA said at the time.

    Mr. Ahmad, the C.A.F. president, did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. He is already facing an uncertain future amid an ethics investigation that started last year over claims of financial mismanagement and accusations of sexual harassment. He has denied any wrongdoing.

    He was also questioned by French financial crimes prosecutors in Paris last summer over a payment to an equipment company based there that is linked to one of his close friends. That investigation was continuing.

    The details of those payments also appear in the audit report. Flows of money connected to transactions between C.A.F. and bank accounts in the Gulf linked to the owner of the French company Tactical Steel were deemed by PWC to be “highly suspicious” and “may potentially indicate a kickback arrangement between parties involved or a case of tax evasion through offshore payments.” Tactical Steel has denied any wrongdoing.

    The new revelations come at a crucial time for FIFA and for its president, Gianni Infantino, who has devoted much of the past year to C.A.F., one of soccer’s six regional governing bodies. This past week in Morocco, Mr. Infantino outlined an action plan for Africa at a gathering of the continent’s soccer leaders.

    “We have to develop African solutions to African problems,” Mr. Infantino said, detailing initiatives that included a $1 billion fund to develop the sport on the continent.

    But it now seems clear that the past will have to be dealt with before FIFA can move forward with any major changes at the African confederation.

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    The details revealed in the audit are likely to lead to a flurry of new cases for FIFA’s ethics department, which has yet to deal with a number of longstanding investigations, including the one into Mr. Ahmad.

    The ethics complaint at FIFA accuses him of misusing hundreds of thousands of dollars of federation money to make $20,000 payments into the private bank accounts of some African soccer leaders, to purchase a fleet of cars for his use in Madagascar and to enter into questionable contractual agreements, including the one with Tactical Steel.

    Mr. Ahmad has blamed the case on disgruntled former employees.

    This month, FIFA and C.A.F. announced a joint action plan to take significant power away from the African organization’s board, which is composed of soccer leaders from across the continent. The audit revealed that many of those same officials had received thousands of dollars in cash payments without a justifiable business case.

    Soccer Corruption and Scandals


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