Former CAF President, Issa Hayatou Dies A Day To 78th Birthday

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Former President of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), Issa Hayatou, is dead. He was 77, barely 24 hours to his 78th birthday anniversary on August 9. He was CAF President for 29 years before leaving office a few years ago.

The Cameroonian was the longest-serving president of the CAF for 29 years from 1988 until his surprise ouster in 2017.

He also served as acting FIFA president from 2015-2016 after Sepp Blatter was suspended by world football’s governing body. Hayatou, whose brother was prime minister of Cameroon, was a lifelong sports administrator. He was an International Olympic Committee member from 2001-2016, after which he became an honoary member.

Hayatou was disciplined by the IOC over his role in an alleged bribery scandal at FIFA. He was issued with a reprimand after BBC Panorama claimed he received about $20,000 from the now-defunct sports marketing company ISL in 1995. Hayatou denied any corruption and said the money was a gift for his confederation. His tenure at the helm of African football saw the game on the continent make strides, although Hayatou was often accused of being dictatorial and slow to introduce innovative change. Hayatou challenged Blatter for the FIFA presidency in 2002, but lost heavily as many African countries deserted him in the vote against the Swiss.

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