Amaju Pinnick and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) were pivotal in
the change of guard witnessed in the leadership of CAF in March 2017
Upstaging
the then emperor of African football, Issa Hayatou, was never going to
be a child’s play; with the Cameroonian enjoying a 29-year spell largely
unchallenged at the top.
Getting Mr Hayatou off the way required
nerve and tenacity and that was what the NFF through its president, Mr
Pinnick, helped galvanize, which led to the landmark victory that
installed the new order in CAF.
With the emergence of Ahmad Ahmad
as the new CAF President, it was only normal to reward his allies with
key positions to help in effecting the changes professed during the
polls.
Mr Pinnick was thus appointed the 1st Vice President of CAF.
However,
barely halfway through its first tenure in office, the CAF leadership
developed a strained relationship with one of its closest allies in the
NFF.
The intense politicking and perceived betrayal culminated in
a ‘palace coup’ that saw Mr Pinnick lose out in the CAF hierarchy
during the Executive congress held at the recent Africa Cup of Nations
in Egypt.
While Mr Pinnick’s ouster was the climax of what has
been a frosty relation lately, findings by PREMIUM TIMES show that the
NFF already had issues with its African body over a letter written to it
by an investigative panel from Nigeria.
The Presidential Letter
The
letter, obtained exclusively by PREMIUM TIMES, emanated from the NFF
secretariat. It was signed by the General Secretary, Mohammed Sanusi,
and was addressed to the CAF Secretariat.
The NFF said it was
taken aback by the actions of CAF in responding to a query from
Nigeria’s Special Presidential Investigation Panel on Recovery of
Government Property (SPIP).
“First and foremost, the Nigeria
Football Federation is surprised that as your affiliate, the
Confederation Africaine de Football (CAF) would receive a letter with
regards to an investigation into its activities from an agency in
Nigeria, and CAF would proceed to reply such a letter without seeking
some clarification/explanations from the NFF,” the NFF letter to CAF
reads.
“We are in possession of a letter from the Special
Presidential Investigation Panel on Recovery of Government Property
(SPIP), dated 10th June 2019, and signed by its chairman, Chief Okoi
Obono Obla, seeking information from CAF as part of its ‘investigation
into the 2014 FIFA World Cup payment made to the Nigeria Football
Federation. We are also in receipt of CAF’s response, dated 30th June
2019, and signed by the General Secretary, Mouad Hajji.”
According
to the NFF, they were not aware of any investigation by this SPIP
regarding the transaction under reference and the SPIP has never
requested any clarifications from them with respect to such.
The
federation also said that at no time did they ever claim or document
anywhere in their financial record to have paid money to the
Confederation of African Football to attend the CAF Congress held in
Cairo, Egypt on April 7, 2015 as it is being claimed by SPIP.
“The
only records the NFF has regarding any financial dealings with CAF are
the records of the inflow NFF received from CAF at various times which
are duly reported, audited and recorded in NFF Annual Audited Account
prepared by PriceWaterHouseCoopers (PwC),” the NFF scribe said in his
letter to the Africa football body.
In its explanation, the NFF
frowned at the narration by the SPIP suggesting that monies were paid
directly to CAF to attend its congress but the federation admitted that
$565,471.00 from its Domiciliary Account was for well-spelled out
purposes.
“Indeed, the NFF had on 2nd April 2015, withdrew the
total sum of $565,471.00 from its Domiciliary Account being payments for
5Nr distinct activities including estacode payments to NFF delegation
(3Nr Persons) traveling to the CAF Congress in Egypt via payment voucher
number DOM/PV/44 which now carry the narration “Payments for CAF
Congress in Egypt and Others,” another part of the letter written by the
NFF secretary to CAF read.
It continued: “The amount of N60, 000
(Sixty Thousand Naira Only) and $19,269 (Nineteen Thousand and Two
Hundred and Sixty-Nine American Dollars Only), (item 1 on the Payment
voucher/retirement document) were the ONLY sums expended on the CAF
Congress, and this was NOT paid to CAF, but constituted local transport
(N60, 000) and estacode allowances ($19,269) for the NFF delegation (3Nr
PERSONS) that travelled to Egypt for the Congress in 2015.
“However,
the bank records’ narration only captured payments for “CAF Congress in
Egypt and Others” as the narration for the payments, for the fact that
the CAF Congress estacode was item number 1 on the Payments vouchers
among the 5 items being paid for.”
The NFF said this
clarification would have been made and the issues explained had the CAF
Secretariat brought the letter from the SPIP to their attention.
NFF defers to FIFA
While
also providing other breakdowns of their financial expenses, the NFF
faulted CAF for erring in the laid down procedure stipulated by world
football governing body FIFA in its code of ethics
“More than the
above and the foregoing notwithstanding, we would have expected first
and foremost, that the CAF Secretariat would have drawn the attention of
the SPIP to the FIFA Code of Ethics that stipulates without any
ambiguity which institution has the prerogative to
audit/investigate/inquire about monies paid to Member Associations of
FIFA by FIFA. That institution, of course, is exclusively FIFA, and no
other agency/ministry/panel or by whatever name constituted,” the NFF
noted in its letter to CAF
It urged CAF to take all precautions,
including carrying along its legal and other relevant departments, when
receiving letters such as that from the SPIP.
Separate Corruption Probe
Separate
from the SPIP investigation, leaders of the NFF, including Mr Pinnick,
are being prosecuted for corruption by the anti-graft agency, EFCC.
Mr
Pinnick and four others, namely: the NFF Secretary, Sunusi Mohammed;
the 1st Vice-President, Seyi Akinwumi; the 2nd Vice-President, Shehu
Dikko and an executive member, Yusuff Fresh, are being prosecuted for
diverting $8.4 million from the NFF account in 2014.
While Mr
Pinnick and his team continue yo face their corruption probe in Nigeria,
FIFA has temporarily taken over the running of CAF over other
corruption allegations involving Mr Ahmad and other officials.
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