2015 AFRICA CUP - SENEGAL - SADIO MANE INCLUDED IN SQUAD

Senegal coach Alain Giresse has included Sadio Mane in his final squad for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations despite his calf injury.

11 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - CAMEROON - FINKE STICKS WITH CORE GROUP

Cameroon coach Volker Finke has kept faith with the players he used in the qualifiers in his final 23-man squad for the Africa Cup of Nations.

10 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - CONGO - LE ROY FINALISES SQUAD

Congo coach Claude LeRoy has finalised his squad for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations after cutting three players from the provisional list.

10 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - TUNISIA - MIKARI & TOUZGHAR CUT FROM SQUAD

Striker Yoann Touzghar and defender Yassine Mikari have not made it into Tunisia's final squad for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations.

10 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - EQUATORIAL GUINEA - SQUAD ANNOUNCED

Africa Cup of Nations hosts Equatorial Guinea have included 14 players who were born in Spain in their final 23-man squad for the tournament.

9 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - ZAMBIA - KALABA TO LEAD NATIONAL TEAM

Zambia coach Honour Janza has given the captain's armband to Rainford Kalaba after naming his 23-man squad for the Africa Cup of Nations.

8 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - GHANA - NO BOATENG OR MUNTARI IN SQUAD

Ghana's new coach Avram Grant has named his first Black Stars' squad with an initial list of 31 players for January's Africa Cup of Nations finals.

8 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - CAMEROON - SONG MISSES OUT ON SQUAD AND QUITS DUTY

Cameroon and West Ham midfielder Alex Song has retired from international football after his exclusion from his country's Africa Cup of Nations squad.

7 Jan 2015
2015 AFRICA CUP - ALGERIA - ABEID AND BELKALEM OUT OF SQUAD

Algeria have confirmed that their Newcastle midfielder Mehdi Abeid and Trabzonspor defender Essaid Belkalem have been ruled out of the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations because of injury.

6 Jan 2015

FIFA - Liberia's FA boss to stand for presidency

The waiting about who will be the first African to announce that they want to become the next president of football's world governing body Fifa is over.

Liberian Football Association President Musa Bility has thrown his hat into the ring, displaying his usual ease with standing up for what he believes in.

His reasons for running for the top job are largely driven by his desire that Africa should take its place in the global football conversation.

"If Africa does not put up a candidate, it says a lot about us," he told BBC Sport. "It shows a sense of mediocrity and that our only relevance is to vote and make leaders. 

I think that is not right."

Africa's 54 Fifa members makes it the world's largest voting bloc, but there are concerns that Europe is trying to change the way decisions are made, which could dilute Africa's power.

Earlier this month, Germany's FA president Wolfgang Niersbach, who took a seat on the Fifa executive committee last month, said he wants to see changes to the current one country, one vote system.

Africa has a lot of influence in Fifa because of its 54 members.

Mr Niersbach wants "a certain amount of weighted voting based on the size and relevance of the sporting associations", meaning that more powerful countries such as Germany would end up with more influence than smaller nations such as Lesotho, Swaziland or Guam.

This has caused consternation within African football.

The continent has long been aware of the pivotal role that it holds in the global game by virtue of its voting size, and it does not want to let it go.

 

FIFA MEMBERS PER REGION 

Africa - 54
Europe - 53
Asia/Australia - 46
North and Central America - 35
Oceania - 11
South America - 10


Mr Bility wants to smooth things over and says that with "antagonism very high" the world "needs a unifier".

He wants to listen to the "genuine concerns" of the European nations about things like corruption without ceding control to them.
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Mr Bility thinks that poorer nations should be getting more money to support football devlopment

On another issue, Mr Bility thinks the poorer nations are still not getting enough from the much-lauded Goal Project, which awards member associations $250,000 (£157,000) every year, and the Financial Assistance Programme (FAP) which gives out one-off payments of $400,000.

"I want to redefine our partnerships to see how those partnerships will directly benefit member associations.

Africa and Asia particularly have been left behind. 

The Goal Project and the FAP are not enough."

Such a stated aim may well attract interest from Asia and Africa but it is not clear if it will be enough to get him the Fifa presidency.

It is admittedly a long shot but in Mr Bility's mind it is an effort worth taking for the continent's reputation.

 

 

19 Jun 2015
(BBC Africa sport by Piers Edward)

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