Football
Fifa ban risk won’t stop big broom
Gideon Maundu | NATION Youth Affairs and Sports Minister Paul Otuoma (right) talks to journalists at the Mombasa Beach Hotel after he opened a three-day workshop for the Sports Stadia Management Board on Wednesday.
Posted Wednesday, September 1 2010 at 22:00
In Summary
- Ministry to ensure crooked football managers are removed from office, reclaim grabbed stadia plots and put up facilities across the country as Sports Bill set to be tabled in 30 days
Even at the risk of an International Federation of Association Football (Fifa) ban, the government is determined to bring sanity in local football once and for all, the Sports minister has said.
Paul Otuoma said on Wednesday the national football team, Harambee Stars, has stagnated for many years because of management wrangles and such a ban will be a blessing in disguise as it will give Kenya time to put its house in order.
Otuoma said his ministry is in the process of streamlining football leadership to ensure unscrupulous managers in the sport are removed from office.
“It is unfortunate that whenever these crooked officials want money from the government the government is good but whenever the government wants to straighten sports management they claim it is interfering with management. We cannot continue working like that,” Otuoma said.
The eagerly awaited Sports Bill will be an entry point in the good governance of local football if passed, he said, adding that it will be tabled in Parliament within 30 days.
“Wrangles in the football association are caused by corrupt leaders who run the association like a club,” he told the official opening of a Sports Stadia Management Board retreat at Mombasa Beach Hotel.
The government will rehabilitate sports facilities across the country, Otuoma said, adding that his ministry is working with that of Lands to reclaim grabbed stadia plots.
Sports Permanent Secretary James Waweru said well maintained sports facilities have the potential of promoting tourism.
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