
Audio By Carbonatix
South African Patrice Motsepe, one of Africa's richest men, has announced his intention to become the next president of the Confederation of African Football (Caf).
The chairman of 2016 African club champions Mamelodi Sundowns becomes the third person to bid for the role, after incumbent Ahmad and Jacques Anouma of Ivory Coast.
Motsepe is Africa's tenth richest man, according to Forbes magazine which estimates his wealth at $2.4 billion.
"Caf must improve its global standing," said South Africa FA president Danny Jordaan. "He is the most appropriate person we could offer for the leadership of Caf. We do not want any compromise on governance or ethics in football."
Motsepe, who is in quarantine at home after contracting Covid-19 according to Jordaan, was not present at Monday's press conference in Johannesburg to announce his bid, with Jordaan - flanked by South Africa's Sports Minister Nathi Mthethwa - doing so instead.
In a related development, one expected challenger - Amaju Pinnick of Nigeria - has decided against standing for the Caf presidency and given his backing to Motsepe instead.
The South African is the second candidate to announce in less than 48 hours, after Anouma - a former member of Fifa's Executive Committee (now Fifa Council) between 2007 and 2015 - was formally backed by the Ivorian federation on Saturday evening.
Reigning president Ahmad, meanwhile, submitted his candidacy in October but his ability to contest March's elections is in doubt given he is set to face a ban from football after being found to have breached various Fifa's ethic codes, BBC Sport Africa understands.
The 60-year-old from Madagascar, who was questioned by French anti-corruption authorities last year without being charged, has previously denied any wrongdoing.
Motsepe's bid, which comes ahead of Thursday's deadline for candidates to formally register their interest, breaks the traditional contestants for the Caf presidency, which has been restricted to high-ranking members of African football's ruling body in the past.

Motsepe is able to contest the position since he fulfils the requirements of having been involved in football for the past five years, with the South African having led Pretoria-based Sundowns since 2004, and has received the backing of his own federation.
Having made his fortune in mining after starting out as a lawyer, Motsepe - whose wife is the elder sister of South African President Cyril Ramaphosa - is already receiving support from across Africa, with Botswana, Nigeria and Sierra Leone among those to have already publicly backed him.
"He has more superior qualities than me," Pinnick told BBC Sport Africa. "It's not about me, it's about African football. If you have someone with superior qualities, you have to learn from him and queue behind him and wait for your time."
"The key to successful governance starts from the point where the right person or persons are put in the right positions for the right reasons," said Sierra Leone FA president Isha Johansen. "African football and the African continent needs to be on the global platform for the right reasons."
Botswana, Nigeria and Sierra Leone were among the eight countries - with Anouma's Ivory Coast another - that refused to give their backing to Ahmad last month when 46 other African FA presidents called on the Malagasy to contest a second term.
With countries only able to nominate one candidate for Caf's Executive Committee, including the presidency, Motsepe's bid means South Africa FA president Danny Jordaan can no longer apply for the Fifa Council role that he has long coveted.
"It's a deferred ambition," Jordaan told BBC Sport Africa on Monday.
Caf's elections are set to take place in Morocco next March.
Latest Stories
-
‘We want to win World Cup for him’ – Portugal carry Diogo Jota’s memory
1 minute -
Spain beat Austria for first World Cup knockout win since 2010
7 minutes -
World Cup boom falters as US hospitality jobs fall in June
10 minutes -
GH¢34.5bn paid out in cocoa purchases as COCOBOD injects more cash
17 minutes -
COCOBOD releases GH¢2.6m to LBCs to settle cocoa farmers
21 minutes -
‘I spent $6,000 on a World Cup trip but was left stranded at the gate’
28 minutes -
Google must pay €4.1bn fine for using Android to ‘block’ rivals
35 minutes -
Singapore seizes $42m mansion over Nvidia chip smuggling
44 minutes -
Ex-G4S guard jailed in UK over £117,200 bank fraud after four-year stay in Ghana
1 hour -
‘Stop the propaganda and release GARID funds to save lives’ – Oppong Nkrumah to gov’t
1 hour -
Supreme Court at 150: Prof. Bondzi-Simpson traces evolution of Ghana’s judiciary from colonial era to constitutional democracy
2 hours -
Gov’t has spent more on flood control under GARID in 2 years than NPP did in 5 – Atta Issah
2 hours -
Prof. Bondzi-Simpson calls for deeper reflection on 150 years of Ghana’s judicial evolution
2 hours -
MUSIGA sympathises with flood victims, urges Ghanaians to stay safe
2 hours -
AMA declares one-month free refuse collection exercise in Accra
3 hours