
FIFA PRESIDENT, Sepp Blatter has said taking the World Cup to Africa was a moral obligation, and looking ahead to the 2010 finals in South Africa.
"For FIFA and the whole world, taking the World Cup to Africa is practically a moral obligation to African football and to the African people," he told the African Union Summi, according to a statement issued by FIFA.
Blatter, who heads world soccer's governing body, and his Confederation of African Football (CAF) counterpart, FIFA Vice President, Issa Hayatou, addressed African Heads of State and Government at the eighth Summit in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa
Blatter's speech focused on the 2010 World Cup, which will be the first to be held on the African continent, and the "Win in Africa with Africa" initiative.
He appealed to African Governments and the international community to get behind the development of Africa.
Blatter proposed football as the vehicle for educational, social and health initiatives and as a tool in the fight against discrimination so as to reinforce national unity.
Hayatou paid homage to all those who have fought for African football in the past 50 years to secure it a place it deserves.
The African Union also confirmed the launch of the International Year of African Football to coincide with this year's 50th anniversary of CAF's Foundation in 1957.
-ReutersFIFA PRESIDENT, Sepp Blatter has said taking the World Cup to Africa was a moral obligation, and looking ahead to the 2010 finals in South Africa.
"For FIFA and the whole world, taking the World Cup to Africa is practically a moral obligation to African football and to the African people," he told the African Union Summi, according to a statement issued by FIFA.
Blatter, who heads world soccer's governing body, and his Confederation of African Football (CAF) counterpart, FIFA Vice President, Issa Hayatou, addressed African Heads of State and Government at the eighth Summit in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa
Blatter's speech focused on the 2010 World Cup, which will be the first to be held on the African continent, and the "Win in Africa with Africa" initiative.
He appealed to African Governments and the international community to get behind the development of Africa.
Blatter proposed football as the vehicle for educational, social and health initiatives and as a tool in the fight against discrimination so as to reinforce national unity.
Hayatou paid homage to all those who have fought for African football in the past 50 years to secure it a place it deserves.
The African Union also confirmed the launch of the International Year of African Football to coincide with this year's 50th anniversary of CAF's Foundation in 1957.
-Reuters


BoG's $260 million building: It was Ato Forson who first proposed 'sell-and-leas...
'We have to do soul-searching' — Mahama orders nationwide flood assessment
Court orders woman beater to pay GHS5,000 compensation to midwife at Tema Commun...
Over 12,000 women living with obstetric fistula in Ghana — Asokwa MP
Mahama secures 1,840 farm equipment deal from Belarus
Titus Glover slams Mahama’s flood report directive, calls it “waste of energy an...
We have increased posting of doctors from 12 to 100 to underserved regions in 20...
'You had the effrontery to call me struggling lawyer, you won't come back to pow...
Belarus manufacturers to storm Ghana next week after President's visit
Government to offer tax incentives for factories located outside Accra
