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Posted on 11:59am Monday 3rd Jun 2013 South African officials are investigating claims ex-Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and his family stashed $1bn (£600m) in assets in the country. Libya has reportedly called for help in repatriating diamonds, gold and cash. The assets were being held by four banks and security companies in South Africa, reports quoting Libyan investigators say. Some estimates suggest that Gaddafi's total foreign assets could be worth as much as $80bn. Gaddafi was captured and killed as he tried to flee his home town of Sirte during Libya's political uprising in October 2011. Any assets belonging to him or his family are firmly considered by many Libyans as state-owned property that should be returned. "There was a group that approached Treasury claiming to represent the Libyan government and we are in the process of verifying their claims about assets that are in South Africa," a spokesman for South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan was quoted as saying by South Africa's Sunday Times newspaper. Libyan embassy official Salah Marghani said that officials had "been appointed to investigate and secure assets in Africa on behalf of the people of Libya". The newspaper printed extracts of letters from Libya's justice and finance ministers to their South African counterparts asking for help finding assets linked to Gaddafi, which might "have been illegally possessed, obtained, looted, deposited or hidden in South Africa". It said Libyan investigators had met Mr Gordhan and President Jacob Zuma to discuss locating and returning the money. Posted on 11:58am Monday 3rd Jun 2013 Burundi FA president Lydia Nsekera has been elected as the first woman to Fifa's powerful executive committee in the governing body's 109-year history.
Nsekera, 46, will serve a four-year term on the committee after winning the vote at the Fifa congress in Mauritius.
She collected 95 of the 203 votes ahead of Australian Moya Dodd and Sonia Bien-Aime, of Turks and Caicos Islands.
Nsekera said: "I will inspire women to believe they can lead and I will support women in member associations."
Nsekera, who last year became the first woman to be co-opted to the executive committee, has been head of the Burundi FA since 2004 and was a member of Fifa's organising committee for the 2008 and 2012 Olympic football tournaments.
A member of the International Olympic Committee, she is also on the independent governance committee set up in 2011 to tackle corruption within Fifa.
Nsekera told BBC Sport: "I am very happy to be the first woman elected. It is important for Africa, it is important for Burundi, it is important for women.
"In the executive committee, we work as a team, but personally I will carry on working in order to have more women as coaches in grassroots football.
"I will push for more women to be elected and ask parents to let their daughters play football."
Dodd, who secured 70 votes, and Bien-Aime, who won 38, will both serve a one-year term as co-opted members.
And former Australia international Dodd says the election is a landmark moment for the game.
"It's a historic day for football and a great day for women," Dodd said.
"Football is the sport everybody loves; no-one should be excluded. And we should not only protect the game, but also fight against discrimination outside of football."
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