CAF president Patrice Motsepe has called for unity as the fallout from the 2025 AFCON final continues to shake African football. The dispute between Senegal and Morocco has moved far beyond one match result. It now sits at the center of a wider debate about refereeing, governance, and trust inside CAF.
Why the controversy still burns
The crisis grew out of the AFCON final between Senegal and Morocco. Senegal were initially recognized as champions after a 1-0 extra-time win, but the CAF Appeal Board later stripped them of the title and awarded it to Morocco. Senegal’s government then demanded an investigation into corruption at CAF, while the case moved to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
CAF had already signaled how serious it viewed the disorder around the final. In January, the confederation condemned what it called unacceptable behavior by some players and officials during the match in Rabat and said it would review all footage before referring the matter to the relevant bodies.
What Motsepe is saying now
Motsepe’s latest message is clear. He called for unity among CAF’s 54 member associations and said no country would receive special treatment. He also said he would welcome any investigation into corruption claims, arguing that CAF had nothing to hide.
That matters because his comments are not just defensive. They are also an attempt to calm a dispute that now threatens CAF’s credibility. Motsepe has framed the coming CAS ruling as a possible turning point. Other recent reporting says he believes the decision could help African football move past the crisis and restore confidence in the organisation’s processes.
CAF’s response is now bigger than one final
CAF has already admitted that the final exposed structural weaknesses. Reports have it on March 29 that the confederation plans to revise its statutes and regulations after the fiasco. Motsepe said the overhaul should help restore confidence in referees, VAR officials, and CAF’s judicial bodies, even though he did not give full details of the reforms.
CAF is trying to show that it understands the damage and plans to respond with rule changes, governance fixes, and closer work with FIFA on standards for officials.
Why this remains a live debate story
The issue is still alive because the legal and political fight is not over. The matter is now before CAS, which means the final verdict still sits outside CAF’s own system. Until that ruling arrives, every public statement from Motsepe or either federation keeps the argument moving.
This is not about what happened on the pitch anymore. It is about what people are saying, what institutions are defending, and whether CAF can steady itself before the CAS ruling lands. Motsepe wants unity. African football is still waiting for closure.
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