Email

Milla launches bid to kick out Cameroon federation

Former Cameroon soccer player Roger Milla dances at the corner flag after meeting young Kenyan players in the capital Nairobi, May 10, 2010. REUTERS/Noor Khamis

By Tansa Musa

YAOUNDE (Reuters) – Former Cameroon striker Roger Milla has set up a committee

to press for the axing of the country’s football federation and the return of captain Samuel Eto’o to the national

squad.

Former Cameroon soccer player Roger

Milla dances at the corner flag after meeting young Kenyan players in the capital Nairobi, May 10, 2010. REUTERS/Noor

Khamis

Milla is worried Cameroon, who failed to qualify for this year’s African

Nations Cup, may also miss out on the next edition of the tournament.

“We have to put back our football on the rails,

good footing because what we are going through with the current management team is unbelievable,” Milla told reporters on

Thursday following the launch of a committee to “redress” Cameroon football known by its French acronym COCIREFCA (Comite

Citoyen pour le Redressement du Football Camerounais).

“Nobody seems worried as we move from failure to failure. This

must end and things must move forward. The current FECAFOOT management team has to go, (president) Iya Mohamed and his men

must make way. Cameroon football can no longer be run by kidnappers,” Milla said.

The committee has been set up by a

group of former players who want a bigger say in federation affairs. Milla has long had run-ins with football authorities in

Cameroon but enjoys a special status because of his goal-scoring exploits in helping the country to reach the 1990 World Cup

quarter-finals.

Eto’o is suspended after leading a strike by the national team over unpaid money. This led the

cancellation of a scheduled friendly international in Algeria in November.

Related posts

International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Netanyahu and Hamas officials

Trump’s criminal conviction won’t stop him from getting security clearance as president

What Ukraine can now do with longer-range US missiles − and how that could affect the course of the war