Dakar, l'escale de la dernière chance: Patrice Motsepe au révélateur sénégalais ( Par Papa Ibrahima Diassé)
The skies of African football are heavy with a storm that smiles alone cannot dispel. Landing in Dakar amidst a legal tempest, Patrice Motsepe, president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), is not simply paying homage to a footballing nation. He is there to carry out a political survival operation. With CAF bodies accused of orchestrating a veritable regulatory "heist" against Senegal, this trip, which resembles a surrender, raises questions: Is Motsepe there to deliver justice or to buy silence?
The counter-fire strategy: Why Dakar before Rabat?
In the diplomatic arithmetic of the CAF, the order of stopovers is a message in itself. By choosing Dakar before Rabat, Motsepe is clumsily attempting to reverse the narrative that portrays him as a hostage to Moroccan influence. In the lexicon of crisis communication, this is a strategy of prioritizing the source of the fire. Extinguishing the fire at its origin. But this haste, while the case is still pending before the courts, reveals another hidden agenda. How can such a visit be justified when the law has not yet had its final say?
The guilty silence on the CAS decisions
The CAF's decision not to comment on future rulings from the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) is an admission by an institution that has lost its ethical compass. This silence is not neutrality; it is a strategy of evasion. By remaining silent, the CAF hopes that the CAS will serve as a scapegoat, allowing it to wash its hands of an injustice for which it is the original architect.
An internal earthquake: When the appeals board cracks
This is a historic and devastating blow to Patrice Motsepe's credibility: the Vice-President of the Appeals Jury himself denounced the sentence handed down against Senegal. This internal rift proves the deep-seated problem. When dissent originates from within the legal system, it's no longer just a rumor among supporters; it's an institutional collapse. Motsepe thus arrives in Dakar with his legitimacy in tatters, challenged even within his own ranks.
The fear of criminal prosecution: The shadow of corruption
The CAF President's haste is also due to a shift in tone at the highest levels of the Senegalese government. The announcement of a complaint for "alleged corruption" has transformed a sporting dispute into an international legal threat. Motsepe fears a domino effect. His presence in Dakar could conceal an attempt at behind-the-scenes mediation regarding this complaint and, more importantly, the release of the Senegalese supporters detained in Morocco.
The role of the State: Refusing the compromise of shame
Faced with what public opinion is now calling the "jury robbery," the Senegalese state must maintain an absolute balance. Receiving the guest is a matter of republican courtesy, beyond that, a sign of Teranga, a truly Senegalese hallmark; but accepting his narrative in this tense context would be historical complicity. Senegal doesn't need charity: its victory at the AFCON was brilliantly achieved on the field, in front of the entire world. No backroom deal can validate or invalidate it. The demand for truth! The discourse in front of Motsepe must be unambiguous. Senegal must demand a structural reform of the CAF bodies and its appeals juries, whose opacity fuels suspicion.
In short, Patrice Motsepe is playing his last card in Dakar. He's looking for a moral alibi to save his position as head of CAF. But Senegal, a country of law and football, must not be complicit in its own downfall. Sports diplomacy has its reasons, but they must never trample on the dignity of a champion nation. In Dakar, Motsepe will not find a country on its knees, but a nation waiting for the law, not politics, to prevail according to the truth on the ground, not in the offices.
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