CAF unveils referee and judicial reforms after AFCON final controversy

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Confederation Of African Football (CAF) has announced a new reform drive aimed at restoring trust in its referees, VAR operators and judicial bodies after the controversy that followed the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations final. The governing body said it is changing its statutes and regulations to prevent a repeat of the incidents that overshadowed the match and damaged confidence in African football governance.

A response to a damaging final

The reform push comes after a chaotic AFCON final in Rabat in January. Reuters reported that Senegal walked off in protest over a penalty decision, later returned to win 1-0 in extra time, and was then stripped of the title by CAF’s Appeal Board on forfeiture grounds. That ruling is now being challenged at the Court of Arbitration for Sport. CAF’s own statement said the matters linked to the final are now before CAS.

AFCON 2025 Final

What CAF says will change

CAF did not publish a full rulebook of the new measures in its statement, but it said the reforms will strengthen confidence in referees, VAR operators, match commissioners, the Disciplinary Board and the Appeal Board. It also said it will continue appointing leading African judges and lawyers to its judicial bodies, with independence and impartiality treated as essential.

Motsepe’s message

CAF president Patrice Motsepe said the body has taken extensive legal advice from African and international football experts so its statutes and regulations match global best practice. He also said CAF is working with FIFA on the continued training of referees, VAR operators and match commissioners, while pushing to professionalise referees and pay them better. Reuters reported that the broader aim is to improve transparency, governance and integrity after a period of heavy criticism.

Governance and credibility at the center

CAF framed the reforms as part of a wider effort to protect institutional credibility. In its statement, the confederation linked the overhaul to its zero-tolerance stance on corruption and improper behaviour, and said fair treatment of all member associations remains non-negotiable. That makes this more than a refereeing story. It is also a governance story about whether CAF can rebuild trust after one of the most disputed finals in recent memory.

Why the story matters now

The real test will come in implementation. CAF has now publicly admitted that the AFCON final fallout exposed weaknesses serious enough to demand statutory and regulatory change. The body says its focus also remains on active competitions such as the CAF Champions League and Confederation Cup, while preparing African nations for the 2026 World Cup. But the pressure point is clear: until the reforms are defined, enforced and seen to work, scrutiny over officiating and discipline in African football will remain intense. That final line is an inference from CAF’s announcement and the scale of the backlash reported by Reuters.

This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.

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