Sports
Ghana great to help run football after bribery scandal
FIFA deputy General secretary Jerome Champagne (left), looks on as football player Abedi Pele of Ghana draws Congo during the draw for the African countries of the preliminary round of the 2006 World Cup in Germany. u00e2u20acu201d AFP pic

ACCRA, June 14 — Former Ghana captain Abedi Pele has been appointed to help run football in the country in the wake of a corruption scandal that saw the government dissolve the sport’s governing body.

Pele, a three-time African footballer of the year who played most of his club football in Europe, was named in a five-member interim committee to manage the sport.

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Other members include businessman Kofi Amoah and the president of the Ghana League Clubs Association Cudjoe Fianoo, according to a government statement yesterday.

Another member is Osei Kofi, who played for Ghana in the 1960s and is now a church minister.

The High Court of Ghana on Tuesday granted a request from attorney general Gloria Akuffo to suspend the Ghana Football Association and its officials.

That followed the broadcast of a documentary in which the head of the GFA, Kwesi Nyantakyi, was accused of requesting US$11 million (RM44 million) from reporters posing as investors to secure government contracts.

Nyantakyi, who was a senior member of the sport’s world governing body Fifa and regional equivalent the Confederation of African Football, has since stepped down.

Information minister Mustapha Abdul-Hamid said last week the documentary had highlighted "widespread fraud, corruption and bribery” at the GFA.

Urgent action was needed to "sanitise” football administration, he added. — AFP

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