CAF Awards 2015 - Player of the Year - Nominees

Three names on shortlist.

15 Dec 2015
2015 FIFA CLUB WORLD CUP - CONGO DR - Quarter-Final - TP Mazembe lose against Japan

TP Mazembe lose Club World Cup quarterfinal in Japan.

14 Dec 2015
U-23 AFRICA CUP 2015 - FINAL - RESULT

Nigeria crowned U-23s champions as South Africa take final Rio spot.

13 Dec 2015
STARS IN EUROPE - IVORY COAST - CLUB - Toure wins BBC African award 2015

Yaya Toure wins BBC African Footballer of the Year award 2015.

12 Dec 2015
AFROFOOTBALL ON PINTEREST

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11 Dec 2015
STARS IN EUROPE - SOUTH AFRICA - CLUB - Ngcongca benefitting from being abroad

Ngcongca urges other South Africans to play abroad.

10 Dec 2015
U-23 AFRICA CUP 2015 - SEMI-FINALS - RESULT

Nigeria & Algeria earn Olympic spots.

9 Dec 2015
NATIONAL TEAM - GAMBIA - COACH - Raoul Savoy sacked

Raoul Savoy sacked as coach of The Gambia's national team.

6 Dec 2015
U-23 AFRICA CUP 2015 - GROUP B - 3RD MATCHES - result

Algeria and Nigeria through to semi-finals.

5 Dec 2015
Cecafa Cup 2015 - Final - Uganda beat Rwanda

Uganda beat Rwanda 1:0 to win the 2015 Cecafa Cup.

5 Dec 2015

FEATURED - CAF sets three-term limit on presidency

The Confederation of African Football president will be limited to three terms in office from next year's election in March 2017.

Junior Binyam, CAF’s media spokesman, confirmed to BBC Sport that the new ruling was approved at Thursday's Extraordinary General Assembly.

It is a major change for the governing body, whose incumbent president Issa Hayatou has been in power for 28 years.

The limit will also apply to the members of CAF’s Executive Committee.
In February, football's world governing body Fifa limited its presidency to three terms in office as it aimed to recover from a corruption crisis.

Binyam told BBC Sport: "The main reason of this amendment of CAF statutes was to align them with Fifa ones. But more reforms and amendment can be expected."

In 2015 CAF voted to change the statutes which previously stopped officials serving past the age of 70, which paved the way for Hayatou, who turned 70 in August, to stand in the next presidential election.

The latest change to the statues means Hayatou could extend his tenure by a maximum of 12 years - each term is four years - when he would be aged 82.

He has yet to announce if he will contest the election.

However, he appears to be in a strong position to remain his post following the rejection on Thursday of Djibouti Football Federation's proposal to end the rule that restricts potential candidates for the Caf presidency only to members of its 15-man executive committee.

That rule was introduced just four years ago and critics have argued it allows Hayatou to continue unopposed and also to handpick his successor when the time comes.

 

 

29 Sep 2016
(BBC Sport UK)

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