PARIS, France
Issa Hayatou, the long-time leader of African soccer who was made interim president of FIFA during its corruption crisis in 2015, died on Thursday. He was 77.
FIFA president Gianni
Infantino said in an Instagram post: “Saddened to hear of the passing of former
CAF president, former FIFA president and interim, FIFA vice-president and FIFA
Council member Issa Hayatou. A passionate sports fan, he dedicated his life to
sports administration. On behalf of FIFA, condolences go to his family,
friends, former colleagues and all who knew him. Rest in peace.”
Hayatou also was a member of
the International Olympic Committee for 15 years, through 2016, and remained an
honorary member.
He died in Paris while the
city hosted the Olympics.
Though a national champion
runner in track and field, it was in soccer that Hayatou rose to power and
influence from his native Cameroon.
He was elected to lead the
Confederation of African Football in 1988 and within four years was a vice
president of the world soccer body FIFA.
In 2002, during a period of
deep financial and political turmoil at FIFA, Hayatou challenged then-president
Sepp Blatter in an election he would lose heavily despite support for him in
Europe. The 139-56 result showed Hayatou had lost votes from his African
colleagues.
Blatter still led FIFA in 2015
when federal investigations in the United States and Switzerland of alleged
corruption in international soccer swept a generation of leaders from North and
South America out of office, and eventually Blatter himself.
Hayatou took over from his
one-time rival as an interim president for four months, to steer FIFA toward
anti-corruption reforms and an election that put Infantino in office.
In 2017, Hayatou’s 29-year
reign as the head of CAF was ended in an election he lost to Ahmad Ahmad of
Madagascar, who had been supported by Infantino.
Hayatou then faced an
investigation by FIFA’s ethics committee, and in 2021 was banned
from soccer for one year for alleged breach of “duty of loyalty” in a
commercial rights deal at CAF.
In a separate case, he was
reprimanded by the IOC ethics commission in 2011 for having taken a cash
payment from a Swiss marketing agency, ISL, in 1995 when it sold World Cup
broadcasting rights for FIFA.
Hayatou was born into a
distinguished Cameroon family, and his brother Sadou was prime minister of the
national government in 1991-92
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