FIFA bans African official

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August 11, 2018
File Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter. An investigation found Mohammed Bin Hammam, a FIFA presidential candidate challenging Blatter in 2011, paid Kalusha Bwalya, an African football official US$50,000 (almost J$7 million) in 2009 and US$30,000 (J$4 million) in 2011 to vote in his favour.
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ZURICH (AP):

FIFA has banned African official Kalusha Bwalya for two years over a payment from disgraced former Asian football leader Mohammed bin Hammam.

An investigation found that Bin Hammam paid Bwalya US$50,000 (almost J$7 million) in 2009 and US$30,000 (J$4 million) in 2011 as the Qatari sought to challenge Sepp Blatter for the FIFA presidency. Bin Hammam pulled out of the 2011 contest when vote-buying allegations emerged.

The FIFA ethics committee has now found Bwalya guilty of breaching the ethics code for accepting gifts and violating confidentiality rules while he was president of the football federation of Zambian. As well as a two-year ban, the 1988 African player of the year has been fined $100,000 Swiss francs (US$100,000 or J$14 million).

Bwalya was re-elected in March 2017 to the Confederation of African Football's executive committee but pulled out of the vote for a place on the FIFA Council. At the time, Bwalya cited the need to focus on his role in Africa, but FIFA had opened an investigation into Bwalya the previous month.