Author: Moses Magogo

  • FUFA President Magogo: On the Proposed National Sports Bill

    FUFA President Magogo: On the Proposed National Sports Bill

    Dear fellow countrymen,

    It is an honour and privilege for me to be spearheading the process of creating a modern-day sports law in Uganda.

    Sport over the years has transformed from being a mere recreational and social activity to a socio-economic transformation game changer.

    President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni showing his football skills during a visit to State House by the Uganda U-17 team football team

    In addition to the inherent health and social values of sport, modern sport has become a;

    1. Major employer of youths (educated and uneducated)
    2. Tax revenue base
    3. Huge advertising platform for countries and brands
    4. Forex earner
    5. Mobilization tool for communities
    6. Tourist activity
    7. Patriotic and unifier activity for countries
    Yassin Nasser flying his car before he won the Trac Africa Rally Championship in South Africa to settle for 2nd place on the Continent (2021 Africa Rally Championship) overall last weekend. Uganda is endowed with massive talent. Rally Competitions in Uganda have attracted massive turn ups for both local and international events. Such events promote the image of the Country.
    A section of Acholi Province fans at the Pece War Memorial Stadium in Gulu during the 2019 FUFA Drum semi-finals against Bugisu. Sport is an efficient fans mobilization venture
    Ronald Otile in action: Uganda Golf Union organises competitions that attract local and international participants. Such competitions tell good and different stories about Uganda’s image
    Athletics has delivered at International level with great medals at the World Championships, Olympic Games and Commonwealth Games.

    Currently the International Sports economy is over 600bn USD rated ahead of the aviation industry and Uganda is not partaking yet we have demonstrated that we are abundantly endowed with raw untapped sporting talent.

    Rugby has made strides in Uganda right from schools, through clubs and with national teams at International level.

    The Challenges

    The Uganda Sports Subsector has previously been regulated by a law that was enacted in 1964 thus “The National Council of Sports Act, Cap. 48”. This law has since become obsolete and cannot regulate Modern-day Sport.

    Many commonwealth countries that had a similar sports law have since enacted new laws.

    The Parliamentarians recently hosted the Common Wealth Baton

    The limitations caused by the lack of the proper legal regime has not helped to harness the potential of Uganda Sports Resource into a productive industry.

    Cricket Cranes- Uganda National Team has posted excellent results on the international scene

    The Justification:

    The 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Uganda (Amended) requires the state to promote recreation and sports for the citizens of Uganda as stated in the National Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy (XVII).

    Furthermore, Uganda is a member of the United Nations and the African Union where resolutions have been passed declaring;

    1. Sport as a means to promote health, education, development and peace
    2. The independence of Sport and the Olympic Charter
    3. Sport as an enabler for socio-economic transformation of societies
    Boxing gives budding talent an opportunity to practice before entering the ring for competitive action. The sport has raised Uganda’s flag high at international events.
    FUFA President and Budiope East MP Hon. Magogo Moses Hashim, MP Budiope East sought leave to move a sports motion on 30th November 2021

    The African Union recognizes Sport as an element of culture and a major contributor in human development and strengthening national cohesion and rapprochement of people.

    In order to;

    1. Fulfill the constitutional obligation of the government to the citizens
    2. Implement the international organizations’ resolutions,
    3. Unlock the sleeping potential of Ugandan Sports to the world
    4. Provide socio-economic opportunities to the youths
    FUFA President Eng. Moses Magogo interacts with fans after a national team game in Abu Dhabi. Football has unlocked the sleeping potential of Ugandan Sports to the world
    Basketball is played in Uganda across all levels. Tapping talent needs massive funding and good infrastructure

    The state has three (3) major roles to play thus;

    1. Funding the identification, development, preparation, presentation and rewarding of sports teams and athletes representing Uganda in international sports competitions.
    • Provision of the prerequisite sporting infrastructure
    • Legislation of modern laws and policies to support sports activities and persons
    Uganda National U-20 Team (Hippos) that scooped silver in the AFCON U-20 championship in Mauritania. The Hippos gallantly represented the country
    Team Uganda’s Joan Nabuto dives for the ball during the game against Egypt at White Sand beach in Entebbe

    In order to provide the resources for activities and of infrastructure and for funding, it is imperative to have the prerequisite regulatory framework

    It is the constitutional obligation of the Parliament of Uganda to make laws that create an environment for achieving these objectives.

    Excited Karamoja fans share a light moment during the FUFA Drum (Inter-provinces) tournament. Sport has the might to unify all the people across the varying cultures. This can also be used a tourism venture

    Objectives of the Bill

    The National Sports Bill is also intended to address the challenges that are holding back the potential of Ugandan Sport in the world domain and harness the opportunities available

    The objectives of this National Sports Bill include;

    1. To recognise, register and incorporate of the National Sports Organisations and Community Sports Clubs
    • To solidify the governance, management, development, promotion and protection of amateur, recreational and professional sports
    • To codify the obligations of the State under international sports governing statutes
    • To among other vices, prevent match fixing, corruption, illegal manipulation and illegal betting in sports. The sports organisations have no resources, expertise and tools to investigate and bring to book such sophisticated offenders
    • To encourage and promote drug-free sports;
    The National Sports Bill is to encourage and promote drug-free sports
    • To protect the commercial rights emanating from sports events and competitions. The beneficiaries (player and sports bodies) of these rights are not protected as individuals benefit in the trade
    • To provide a national sport dispute resolution and arbitration mechanism allowable by international sports governing statutes
    • To provide, maintain and protect sports infrastructure for national and international sports competitions
    • To install free, fair and transparent system of rewarding National Associations, Teams and individual persons for international sports excellence
    1. To provide for related matters.
    Uganda Cranes left back Isaac Muleme, currently based in Czech Republic is among the professionals who live and earn off the sport

    Why now?

    It is a unanimous call by the public to create a modern-day sports law and at the beginning of the 10th Parliament, the Physical Activity and Sports (PAS) Bill was one of the listed intended laws to be enacted and 5 years later the law has not been enacted

    There has been the explanation given of the lack of the Sports Policy onto which to base to draft the bill but this was overtaken by events when on the 25th September 2013, Cabinet resolved as indicated in minute 333 (CT 2013) that the Physical and Sports Activity Bill be presented to parliament for consideration with stipulated principles.

    The Private Members’ Bill is intended to be presented within the same principles as resolved by cabinet.

    FUFA President Eng.Moses Magogo Hassim

    Way Forward:

    The National Sports Bill is intended to be presented to Parliament for consideration as an action to:

    1. Repeal “The 1964 National Council of Sports Act, Cap. 48”
    • Replace it with “The 2022 National Sports Act” once the bill is assented to into law.

    This is going to be a long process but the first step has been taken when the Parliament of Uganda granted me leave of the house to introduce a private member’s bill entitled “the national sports bill”. Next shall be the first, second and third reading of the Bill.

    Along the way, there shall be obtaining the certificate of financial implications, engagement with the committee of Parliament on Education & Sports and there will be bench-marking and wide consultations with the various stakeholders and the general public in the formulation of this law.

    It is only until HE the President assents to the bill that the proposed National Sports Law will come into force.

    My assurance to the sports fraternity and general public is that it is a huge task but one I am passionate to undertake.

    While undertaking this task, I will evoke my experience as a multidiscipline athlete, vastly experienced international sports administrator and a FIFA Trained Football management and administration instructor.

    In my opinion, it is the right moment and the opportunity is now when I also serve as a Member of Parliament entitled to raise a Private Member’ Bill.

    This is a generation call that we must all support.

    Hon. Magogo Moses Hassim

    President of the Federation of Uganda Football Associations (FUFA)

    Member of the Confederation of African Football (CAF)Executive Committee

    Member of Parliament-Budiope East

  • FUFA PRESIDENT: Leadership comes from God

    FUFA PRESIDENT: Leadership comes from God

    Indeed, leadership comes from God. I glorify the Almighty Allah for the wisdom bestowed upon H.E. The President in the appointment of the Cabinet.

    This is also to congratulate the various able Ugandans that have been appointed.

    With such a team selection, I have no doubt that the Captain (H.E. The President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni) of the team has the tactical and technical diversity to deliver a secured future for our country. 

    As a Member of Parliament and as a Ugandan, it is my role to support as required.

    I pledge to serve and together we can make our country a better place to live.

    Hon. Obua Dennis Hamson (Minister of State for Sports)

    In a special way, I am excited and I further congratulate Maama Jannet Kataha Museveni (Minister of Education and Sports), Counsel Kiwanuka Kiryowa (Attorney General) and Hon Obua Dennis Hamson (Minister of State for Sports) for their respective appointment.

    Counsel Kiwanuka Kiryowa (Attorney General)

    I have never been sure that the cause of sport will be addressed like the way I am now.

    Hon. Magogo Moses Hassim

    FUFA President

    MP Budiope East

    Buyende District_*

  • List of Travelling Fans to Morocco

    Click here to find the list of Fans travelling on the chartered Flight to Morocco to Support the Uganda Cranes.

    List of Fans

  • The Way Forward

    The Way Forward

    There has been attempt by many analysts, scholars, academicians and commentators to diagnose the problems engulfing sport in this country or should I say football to be specific. I am sure everyone has heard enough of that. In the process we have discovered hard realities and I will attempt to revisit a few as I contemplate the way forward.

    Government Legislation

    For the last 49 years, Uganda has lived without an enabled sports law. The 1964 NCS Act required the minister of sports to draw regulations for the operationalization of the act and these have never been drawn. Uganda remains an island as all former British colonies that had a similar law like Tanzania (1976), Ghana (2011) and Kenya (2012) have since amended their colonial sports laws to suit the times. The current act is now obsolete as sport has since changed from recreational and amateur to professional. The way forward is enacting a new law after thorough consultations and employing experienced and professional sports law experts

    Club Structures

    League football which is a fundamental to football development was built on a sand foundation. There was no organic formulation of football clubs. It was the league then clubs instead of the other way round. The short cut of using institutions such as coffee, Nile etc as football clubs exposed this structure. Only Express and SC Villa were built as football clubs that can sustain the pressure of the modern game. The recent upheavals have exposed the clubs more as the veil was lifted only to find skeletons of their former might. There were no known owners, no constitutions, no quality personnel and no direction and consequently multiple decisions were being made by everybody. The way forward is rebuilding football clubs. Fans belongingness, geography, demographical classifications ought to come out to shape the identity and culture of clubs. The various FIFA/CAF/FUFA education programmes and club licensing agenda should provide a solution to this problem

    The Federation

    FUFA has always been the white chicken and various changes of faces have not taken this notion and belief away. Perennial failure to qualify for the finals of AFCON and WC is observed end itself and as incompetence and the head hunting begins. It has also been proven that irrespective of National Team Success and fans turn ups thereat, the other football competitions have suffered. FUFA has not been fair to itself by keeping so much information away from the public. A way forward is a comprehensive strategy, dedicated work force, and competence ahead of patronage. FUFA should take lead to mend fences as football needs everyone but those sitting on the other side should be willing to pick the olive branch as well.

    The Media

    Never in the history of the game has the media ever been torn apart like now. Editors, writers, presenters and officials of the Uganda Sports Press Association have taken ultimate positions to use their pens, keyboards and mouths to shoot for the side they sympathize with. It has been proven that irrespective of the propaganda machinery, facts will remain facts and lies will remain lies. The way forward is to pick up the pieces of the aftermath of the war and take on professional ethics. The current USPA executive has an option of what kind of legacy they will leave behind. One of 2 leagues of journalists or one that learns from past mistakes and takes the direction of teaching and enforcing ethics and integrity

    The Sponsors

    Corporate Companies desire to transmit their brand messages to masses using football. Despite the storm, MTN, Nile Breweries and NIC kept with the National team while Bell and Super Sport did not announce quitting. This shows that football has the ability to attract even more sponsorships. It is a lesson to all that sponsors are better to pay and receive their buy than meddling into the football politics using the monies as bait. Only football under FUFA, CAF and FIFA can provide the value for money to sponsors while enhancing development of the game. Football has its peculiar regulations and only when they are observed can we have sustained relationships. As a way forward, let the sponsors come out to finance the league recognised by FUFA, CAF and FIFA. This will realign everyone.

    Conclusion

    Everyone has been hurt and there are lessons that have been learnt. The game is for us all. Let everyone contribute to the game. There are many areas beyond FUFA to contribute to the game. Let institutions get ahead of individuals, let us accept to learn where we lack, let us live together even when we disagree. Let us stop playing “kifiriza” (destroyer role) for the generation after us. Let us abandon our extreme war and ego positions for the beautiful game. We can all be accommodated. Those who continue to sound the war drums are the enemies of the game and they will get fewer and fewer as reality settles in. Let us all condemn any protagonists hereafter. It is our game, it is our country

    The author is;

    Eng Moses Magogo

    FUFA VP-Administration

  • The Uganda Cranes Brand

    Uganda Cranes is the undisputed leading sporting and national brand that breaks the barriers of ethnicity, religion, socio-economic class, political, age and gender. The celebrations, joy and happiness that I witnessed on Saturday after Uganda Cranes beating Angola cannot be caused by just 90 minutes of anything else in this country but football.

    As FUFA the body that prepares the national football team, we work in extremely adverse environment to compete and overcome well facilitated opposition. There will always be opposition forces in Uganda against any sitting Federation, there will be no financial support from government, there will be taxation on the meagre revenue, there will be no facilities to blossom development and talent identification, there will be demand to watch football at the lowest of fees or free of charge for certain thousandokwis of people, FUFA will have to pick national team players from amateur clubs and FUFA will have to pay for government services like police, ambulances and the stadium in order to prepare and present the national football team that is the undisputed and only remaining pride of the true nationals.

    Despite the circumstances, the current management at FUFA has managed to take on the best on the continent and Mandela National Stadium is a dreaded site to visit by any African football opposition. The Uganda Cranes has grown in bounds to become the most popular brand with kids, women, foreigners living in Uganda, the elite, the celebrities and the corporate world who hitherto did know or wish to identify with the Uganda Cranes. Look at the Uganda Cranes replica jersey litter all over Uganda and the diaspora! Not even the players have been spared by the Uganda Cranes bug. Tonny Mawejje said that when he looked at the crowds still believing in the team, he had one option to give his all and this culminated into the 90th minute winner. “How could we disappoint such a passionate crowd again? I surged forward” said Mawejje after the game

    The current management of FUFA, who are the unsung heroes in victory and the punching bag in times of bad results, has persevered personal abuses, misalignment, distortion of facts, disappointment of near misses, lack of appreciation by authorities and sections of the media. We have however kept riding on the passion to deliver, unanimous approval from the FUFA constituent Members, MTN, Nile Breweries, NIC, FIFA, CAF and sections of the public that will always support the Uganda Cranes despite the tides

    As the dust of the Uganda Cranes world cup home game victories fast settles down, you will not fail to hear a few permanently disgruntled Ugandans raising the ghost of FUFA and its legality. Where was the legality when we need a goal from Okwi and Mawejje to cause such jubilation? It is unfortunate but this happens only in this part of the world where some nationals are not happy when their nation wins.

    The more disturbing trend, is the fixed list of individual media persons who were personal beneficiaries of the USL setup that have taken up arms using their privilege of mass communication tools of the media houses to poison the public. It does not matter to some of these gentlemen whether this breaks apart the painfully built brand of the Uganda Cranes for as long as the persons behind the Uganda Cranes success story leave the stage. They will always bring up failure to qualify for big tournaments as total failure riding on the back of the emotions of the fans watering down the brand that the Cranes have become. In football success cannot be based on 100% results of the day otherwise how come the biggest clubs in the world are still supported despite mediocre performance over the years?

    The gentlemen who did not give the Uganda Cranes any chance before the back to back games are the same masters predicting how Uganda Cranes cannot overcome Senegal. They are public and proud. How are we going to build the will and steel of the players when such comments are being traded? It is not about beating Senegal but look at the new look cranes with more young players whom these same pessimists did not give chance after the retirement of Ibrahim Sekajja, David Obua and Nestroy Kizito. Look at how these “experts” of oral football dismissed Micho!

    As FUFA, we shall take on Senegal fighting for a place in the final 10 of Africa and we believe in our team and we believe in our nation but we shall not lose focus on the main agenda of the 2015 and thereafter AFCON qualifications. This new-look Uganda cranes team is more for the future than now and beating Senegal in September is just part of the game plan. It is up to Senegal to prove they still belong to the best in Africa. We are calling it “Uganda Cranes Project-Work in Progress”

  • FUFA Electoral Portal

    The 2012 FUFA Statutes

    The FUFA Electoral Code

    The FUFA Electoral and Electoral Appeals Committee

    The List of FUFA General Assembly Delegates

    The FUFA Executive Committee Elections Guidelines

    Nomination Forms for the FUFA Excom Elections

  • FUFA Elections Registers

    Click here for the Registers as compiled and approved by the FUFA EC

  • Voters Register

    The Voters’ Register

     

    FIFA and CAF officials were in Uganda last year to monitor the progress in formulating the new statutes that have led to the ongoing elections.

    2nd Division League Club Officials (Big League Clubs)

    3rd  Division League Club Officials (Regional League Clubs)

    4th Division League Club Officials

    5th Division League Club Officials

  • This generation should engage government to create a fully fledged Professional Sports Industry

     The last time I wrote, it was my opinion as to why since 1978, Uganda has not qualified to the finals of AFCON. We have changed personnel from Administrators to players to coaches to ministers and this has not fixed the problem. Why are we still bent at calling for names and heads when naturally change will occur by vote, age, expiry of terms and contracts and God forbid death?

    Many critics have gone for their wishes instead of the merits of my opinion. I said, there are problems sports should fix but there are bigger issues that affect results that sports cannot fix and everyone is burying his head over these glaring issues. The issues of infrastructure, funding, taxation, policy and law are urgently required to transform this industry.

    I am taking a personal crusade to enlighten the masses on the unthought-of areas and not that I am not aware that as the sports industry there is a lot internally we need to address For example, why are people bent to qualification as the ultimate to football development? My belief is that qualification is just a sign of development but not development itself. The day we run a professional sports industry in Uganda, qualification and medals at world meets will be a given. However even if we qualified now with the status quo, there is no guarantee we shall qualify again Instead of bickering, we should task Government to look at Sports as more of an industry than a recreational activity.

    When the industry engages the Parliament, the Executive and the Judiciary, it should be about creating a sector to employ the youth. We need to raise issues of curving out a new sector or industry that will engage young people. Unfortunately, when sports people engage government, it is about who is the right party to run the league, the federation should go; we need tickets for an international meet etc. These are very myopic issues that government may and usually does not respond to.

    We need to educate government of the benefits of a vibrant sports industry to government and to the people of Uganda.

    With a vibrant sports industry, the youth shall be fully engaged in useful energy consuming activities instead of being taken advantage of by politicians in demonstrations that will never benefit the youth themselves. Government should be reminded of the effect of youth and more so redundant ones like what happened in Arab world. With these energy consumption activities, the youth will be drawn away from crime, drugs abuse (outlawed in sports), and HIV.

    With a fully sporting nation, many people will be engaged and certainly the national health budget shall be cut. We shall have able bodied and a fit population to support the economy and expenditure on certain diseases will be reduced.

    There are many opportunities that will arise. The sporting clubs, the media, the facilities, the corporate sponsors, industries, the sports equipment business sector, etc will not only employ young Ugandans but will also increase on the tax base for government. There is a likely massive investment by the private sector in the industry after the government kick-in efforts.

    The youth in sports clubs will undertake informal education to up bring useful citizens. Sports is about regulations, discipline and education and many who may not have gotten the opportunity to see a blackboard may break the vicious cycle of poverty in their family lines.

    With numerous athletes that the professional sports industry shall produce, Uganda will boast of professionals who will earn forex from other economies and spend it in our economy. The likes of JJ Okocha, and Kanu (who saw very few blackboards) have massive investments of hospitals and banks not only to provide employment but also a bigger tax base and a service to the nation. All they did was playing football

    There is not going to be a better methodology to preach patriotism in this country other than using sports. Whenever the national football team converges at Namboole, it has nothing to do with religion, tribe or political affiliation. When Kiproitich won the Olympic Gold Medal after 40 years, no one wanted to know which tribe or religion he is. It was the national anthem that was sung for the whole World. I was surprised while in Tunisia for a shop attendant to ask where I come from and he did not know about Uganda until another person in the shop talked of, Akii Bua, SC Villa with Club Africaine, Inzikuru and Kiproitich. It was all about sports. Instead of paying millions of dollars to advertise on CNN about the tourism sector in Uganda, Sports will do. Kenya is known for the long distance runners but this has also boosted its tourism sector

    We therefore need to remind (not request) government that we are Ugandans, who pay taxes and need services from government and we need to educate government on the above and more benefits of a vibrant sports industry

    My opinion goes further to call upon all serious sports minds to a forum to unselfishly brainstorm on strategies of how we can engage government on more meaningful developmental issues that the sports industry cannot do. We are organized, we can get a forum and government will deliver. Name calling should be abandoned for the previous generation. Can you join the revolution?

    Moses Magogo

    FUFA Vice President

  • Misguided Missiles Will not Deliver Ugandan Football to Canaan

    Let me take this opportunity to add my voice to the millions who have already opinionated about the state and future of Ugandan Football.

    We need to look at our society more holistically if we are to make a scientific analysis and obtain real solutions. What is the state of the nation in all areas of life? Sport gets most stick for crimes of the society and the generation yet it is a subset. This is because sport has international competitions to compare with other countries and when the results do not come by, we look for solutions from sports instead of the society.

    Imagine if we had an Africa Cup of Nations in Education, Roads, Poverty, Governance, Health, etc would Uganda rank among the top 16 African states? Why do we then think it is in football where we must belong to the top 16 in Africa by right yet Sport in this country is nth (where n is a large number) priority order of the national interests if the national budget allocation is anything to go by?

    Whenever the homosexuality and drugs abuse debates come up about Ugandan football, critics are bent at looking for answers from football yet it is a society challenge. If we make wrong diagnostics, definitely we shall make wrong prescriptions and the patient will die.

    My take is that football challenges have solutions that can be looked for from football but there are the key ones football cannot solve. Society challenges can only be solved by Ugandans (Government).

    As football, we need government in the area of infrastructure, law and funding.

    Football has no capacity to create the infrastructure platform required for sustained football development yet instead government has presided over the demolition of what existed. There was a Boma ground in every town in Uganda but they have since been sold off, Kampala City Council had 65 gazetted grounds but only 2 are now left, we had Nakivubo, Bugembe, Pece and Mbale on international standard then but not even Namboole now is. What has happened to Lugogo, Mulago, Nsambya where the Omondi’s and Musisi’s came from? Can AFCON qualifications really come from these circumstances? How can Mulindwa, Bobby and Andy Mwesigwa solve this puzzle? Aren’t we misguided to look for solutions from these personnel?

    Look at the law. Uganda Sport is still regulated by the 1964 National Council of Sports Act, Nakivubo by the 1953 Act while Namboole and other sports grounds have no national law governing them. When 2 lawyers cause a stampede in the football industry and government cannot find a ground to put them in order is another glaring problem of the inept law. We want to qualify for AFCON but risk an international ban by activities of these lawyers that also affect the elite league funding that should produce the players for the Cranes but Government cannot stamp its authority on these individuals citing the law. How can Mulindwa, Bobby and Andy Mwesigwa solve this puzzle? Aren’t we misguided to look for solutions from these personnel?

    Since 1978, we have changed football personnel from coaches, players and administrators and 34 years later we still think changing personnel is the solution? I think we need to look at other areas because the personnel will change by call of nature. Players get old, administrators will be voted out, coaches’ contracts will expire. I have been inspired by last travel with the Cranes to Liberia and my oblongata had to be put to use. We now win almost all home games irrespective of the might of the opposition but we have won only once in 12 years away from home and the reason we have not qualified. The only time we won away in 12 years, FUFA received funding from State House (Not Government and consequently not as policy but good gesture of HE the President). On that occasion, FUFA Camped away in Senegal, connected players direct to Dakar from their bases, sent advance party to Guinea Bissau and motivated the players beyond usual. I am backed by statistics to conclude that inadequate funding has been the reason we lose away games. It is only in Uganda where the Football Association funds the national team 100%, pays the head coach, pays taxes on its meager income, pay customs taxes for donated materials for courses for development of the game and pays for government services like security at football matches. With this order of event, how can Mulindwa, Bobby and Andy Mwesigwa solve this puzzle? Aren’t we misguided to look for solutions from these personnel?

    The thirst since 1978 for being at the finals has diverted every mind to use qualification as an eternal measure of success. Rwanda, Sudan, Kenya, Ethiopia and Tanzania have played at the Nations Cup more recently than Uganda but still have nothing to show for that.

    It is high time we get focused and make the right diagnostics and the right prescriptions for the patient to heal.

    Eng, Moses Magogo

    FUFA VP-Administration

    FIFA Football Management & Administration Instructor

    Telecom Engineer by Training