Gor Mahia Vice Chair Sally Bolo Questions FKF’s CAF Committee Nominations Over Representation Concerns
Gor Mahia Vice Chairperson Sally Bolo has criticized the Football Kenya Federation (FKF) over its nominations to the Confederation of African Football (CAF) Standing Committees, raising concerns about gender representation, inclusivity, and diversity in football leadership.
The debate emerged after FKF announced its nominees for various CAF Standing Committees, with all the nominees being men.
The federation submitted the following names for consideration:
Timothy Nabea Mureithi – Organizing Committee and Club Licensing
Charles Njagi – Finance Committee
Ahmedqadar Dabar – Organizing Committee for Youth Football
Innocent Mutiso – Medical Committee
Hamisi Mwakoja – Committee on Development of Futsal and Beach Football
Danson Nganga – Legal Affairs Committee
Richard Teka – Organizing Committee for Women’s Football
Abdalla Yusuf – Technical and Development Committee
The nominations have sparked discussion within Kenyan football circles, particularly regarding the apparent lack of female representation in the list despite the growing role of women in football administration and development.
Responding to the nominations, Bolo said she has never subscribed to the idea of seeking opportunities through gender considerations and has built her leadership journey through merit and competitive elections.
“I have never believed in playing the gender card. Since my university days, I have contested and won elections against men purely on merit; qualifications, experience, competence, and the ability to deliver. Even my current role as Vice Chair of Gor Mahia is a product of merit, not sympathy,” she stated.
Despite her belief in meritocracy, Bolo said she was disappointed that FKF had submitted a list with little meaningful representation of women.
“It is deeply disappointing that in 2026, the Football Kenya Federation would submit an entire list of nominees to CAF Standing Committees with minimal meaningful representation of women,” she said.
She particularly questioned the nomination of a man to the CAF Organizing Committee for Women’s Football, arguing that the decision sends the wrong signal to women who have dedicated years to growing the women’s game.
“Even more concerning is the appointment of a man to the Organising Committee for Women’s Football. It raises a serious question: what message does this send to the many capable women who have dedicated their lives to growing the women’s game?” she posed.
Bolo further noted that football leadership should reflect the values enshrined in Kenya’s Constitution, including inclusivity, equality, and fair representation.
“The Kenyan Constitution is clear on the two-thirds gender principle, and leadership in football should not only speak inclusion; it must demonstrate it in practice,” she said.
Beyond gender, the Gor Mahia vice chair argued that football governance should also reflect Kenya’s regional and cultural diversity.
“FKF is not a private club; it is a public institution entrusted with serving all Kenyans and safeguarding the entire football ecosystem,” she said.
Citing Articles 10 and 232 of the Constitution, Bolo emphasized the importance of national unity, inclusiveness, equality, non-discrimination, and fair representation in public appointments.
She maintained that promoting inclusion should not be viewed as compromising merit.
“As women in football, we are not asking for favours. Regions are not asking for charity. What we are asking for is fairness, representation, and leadership that reflects the true diversity of the game we all love.”
Bolo concluded by stressing that merit and inclusivity are complementary principles that should guide football administration.
“Merit matters. But merit and inclusion are not enemies. They can, and must, coexist. FKF can do better.”
The CAF Standing Committees play a significant role in shaping football governance across Africa, overseeing areas such as competitions, youth development, women’s football, finance, legal affairs, medical services, club licensing, futsal, beach soccer, and technical development. The Kenyan nominees will now await consideration and appointment by CAF.
