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.
Other
members include businessman Kofi Amoah and the president of the Ghana League
Clubs Association Cudjoe Fianoo, according to a government statement on
Wednesday.
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 $11 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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