Egypt’s Al-Ahly has put forward a series of demands on the African Football Confederation, setting a date and venue for the African Champions League final.

Al-Ahly’s statement outlined its demands, namely to determine the capacity of the stadium, allocate 50 per cent of tickets of all categories to the club and limit half of the seats to Egyptian team fans only, while stressing to the match officials to fully secure it and ensure the safety of the fans.

He also urged the club to provide full security insurance for all elements of the match from the mission of Al Ahli and its fans, and to comply with the provisions stipulated in the African and International Federations, which prevent the impact on the game of all players on the field.

And Al-Ahli fans receive visas to travel to Morocco in quantities that include half the capacity of the stadium, and at the same prices that the organizers will announce.

The club also emphasized that the match will be assigned to one of the most qualified referees of the continent with the help of video referees from Europe, especially since the winner of the match will represent the continent at the club world championship.

The African Football Confederation has finally announced the holding of the Champions League final between Al-Ahly of Egypt, the defending champion, and Moroccan Wydad, at the Mohammed V Stadium in Casablanca next Monday, May 30th.

For his part, Al-Ahly confirmed that he would play the final anywhere, but would appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport over CAF’s decision to host the Champions League final in Morocco for the second year in a row.

The club said that it had already submitted its legal team to court with the payment of financial fees.

Kef defended himself and said he received two files from Morocco and Senegal to host the final, then Senegal withdrew and Egypt failed.

Behavior / Donia Haddad