Bruce Mwape: Zambia FA ‘stunned’ over misconduct claims towards girls’s group head coach

Aug 04, 2023 at 12:44 PM
Bruce Mwape: Zambia FA ‘stunned’ over misconduct claims towards girls’s group head coach

Zambia’s soccer affiliation has mentioned it’s “surprised” by misconduct claims made towards girls’s group head coach Bruce Mwape.

It comes after allegations, first reported by The Guardian, that the supervisor had rubbed his arms over the chest of one of many gamers days earlier than Zambia’s Women’s World Cup win over Costa Rica.

FIFA confirmed to the newspaper that it had acquired a grievance and that it had opened an investigation.

However, The Football Association of Zambia (FAZ) mentioned in an announcement that it had not acquired a grievance from “any of the players or officials” in its World Cup delegation.

“It has therefore come as a surprise for us to hear of such alleged misconduct by the coach as reported in the said online publication,” mentioned FAZ General Secretary Reuben Kamanga.

“As a matter of reality, all of the coaching classes for the Copper Queens have been filmed by the FAZ media group and provides no such footage as envisioned by The Guardian.

Please use Chrome browser for a extra accessible video participant

FIFA blocks inquiries to Zambia soccer coach

“Additionally, a FIFA film crew attached to the Zambian team at the World Cup was present at all training sessions.”

Mr Kamanga mentioned that the FAZ “always demands unwavering ethical conduct of the players and officials on and off the field of play”.

“We therefore would not hesitate to take disciplinary measures and act on any misconduct once we are in receipt of an official complaint or when presented with evidence pertaining to an alleged incident,” he added.

A FIFA spokesperson instructed Sky News: “FIFA takes any allegation of misconduct extraordinarily critically and has a transparent course of in place for anybody in soccer who needs to report an incident.

Read extra:
1975 banned from Malaysia after singer kisses bandmate
Steps turn down gig in Dubai over ‘archaic’ LGBT laws

“We can verify {that a} grievance has been acquired in relation to the Zambian Women’s National group and that is presently being investigated.”

Mwape, who has been the top coach of Zambia’s girls’s group since May 2018, confronted allegations of sexual misconduct earlier than the World Cup.

A earlier report in The Guardian claimed Mwape was the topic of an investigation by the Zambian FA – an investigation which has been referred to FIFA and the police.

Zambian soccer affiliation president Andrew Kamanga described them as “an old story”.

Mwape beforehand denied the accusations, which he addressed earlier than Zambia’s first Women’s World Cup recreation final month.

“It has taken about a year now,” he mentioned in New Zealand.

“You are still talking about the same allegations. As far as I’m concerned, they are fake allegations.”

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

Earlier, FIFA shut down journalists’ questions concerning the sexual misconduct allegations towards Mwape.

At a query and reply session with Mwape forward of the nation’s match towards Spain, one reporter requested what impact the investigation into the allegations had on Zambia’s picture.

A media officer for the soccer organisation stopped the Spanish journalist and mentioned: “I’ll ask you to restrict the questions to the football and the tournament only, for this press conference. I’ll go to the next question.”