Sports / Soccer
Issa Hayatou named acting FIFA president
08 Oct 2015 at 14:04hrs | Views
Zurich - African football leader Issa Hayatou took temporary charge of FIFA on Thursday after Sepp Blatter was "relieved of his duties" because of his 90-day suspension, the world governing body have announced.
Hayatou, 69, is president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and takes over as senior vice president of FIFA even though he has a troubled past.
"Joseph S. Blatter was relieved of all his duties as FIFA president" after the move by the FIFA ethics committee to suspend him for 90 days because he is under criminal investigation by Swiss prosecutors, FIFA said.
During the 90 day suspension, Blatter "is not allowed to represent FIFA in any capacity, act on the organisation's behalf, or communicate to media or other stakeholders as a FIFA representative," the statement added.
Hayatou, from Cameroon, heads FIFA's crucial finance committee and once stood against Blatter for the presidency, although until the recent corruption storm, he had been a close ally.
He has headed the CAF since 1988 and joined the FIFA executive in 1990.
Hayatou played a key role in Africa staging its first World Cup in 2010 in South Africa. But he has also faced controversy.
He received a reprimand from the International Olympic Committee in 2011 over allegations that he took money from the International Sport and Leisure (ISL) marketing company. ISL was a major source of FIFA funding until its collapse in 2001.
In rare comments to journalists, Hayatou has always said he has a "clear conscience" about his dealings in international sport.
Hayatou, 69, is president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), and takes over as senior vice president of FIFA even though he has a troubled past.
"Joseph S. Blatter was relieved of all his duties as FIFA president" after the move by the FIFA ethics committee to suspend him for 90 days because he is under criminal investigation by Swiss prosecutors, FIFA said.
During the 90 day suspension, Blatter "is not allowed to represent FIFA in any capacity, act on the organisation's behalf, or communicate to media or other stakeholders as a FIFA representative," the statement added.
Hayatou, from Cameroon, heads FIFA's crucial finance committee and once stood against Blatter for the presidency, although until the recent corruption storm, he had been a close ally.
He has headed the CAF since 1988 and joined the FIFA executive in 1990.
Hayatou played a key role in Africa staging its first World Cup in 2010 in South Africa. But he has also faced controversy.
He received a reprimand from the International Olympic Committee in 2011 over allegations that he took money from the International Sport and Leisure (ISL) marketing company. ISL was a major source of FIFA funding until its collapse in 2001.
In rare comments to journalists, Hayatou has always said he has a "clear conscience" about his dealings in international sport.
Source - AFP