Daily Trust Sunday

Bola Ahmed Tinubu: When tomorrow comes

- With Monima Daminabo email: monidams@yahoo.co.uk DAVID NGOBUA ngobuadavi­d@gmail.com 0803597583­1 (Text only)

For and about Nigeria as well as the President-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu, tomorrow May 29, 2023 remains a landmark day in history given what it represents as well as the events and circumstan­ces which are marked to play out in it. Since the day May 29, was adopted in 1999 as the country’s day for baton change in democratic governance, its significan­ce at any instance when power must change hands, has been defined not just by the mere ceremony of one potentate handing over the reins of governance to another, but more by the causative factors that engendered such exercise. That is how and why the date May 29, 2023, enjoys its special significan­ce for Nigeria, Nigerians and particular­ly Bola Ahmed Tinubu as President-elect.

When tomorrow May 29, 2023 comes in Nigeria, the Eagle Square Abuja and stadia of 28 in-season states out of 36 in the country where elections were held on March 18 2023, will come alive as the nation plays out the scheduled inaugurati­on of new administra­tions. Eight state (Anambra, Bayelsa, Edo, Ekiti, Imo, Kogi, Osun and Ondo), remain off-season states as they no more follow the general gubernator­ial electoral calendar of the country, due to litigation­s and court judgments. Just as well, some iconic names which had dominated the country’s political space in recent times like Muhammadu Buhari, Nasir El-Rufai, Nyesom Wike, Samuel Ortom and others will recede into history as once-upon-a-time

On Thursday, May 25, I received a press statement from the Communicat­ions department of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) announcing results of the Federation Cup Round of 16 matches played on Wednesday, May 24, at six centres. If not for my eagle eyes, I would have missed something very important. In the headline, I saw something strange. It was written NFF/ TINGO FEDERATION CUP: ROUND OF 16 RESULTS (MEN). I asked when did the NFF get a sponsor for the Federation Cup? Of course, this year’s competitio­n started without a sponsor so I doubt very much if I was the only one thrown into confusion.

Well, for those who don’t know, Dozy Mmobuosi, a young Nigerian billionair­e based in the United Kingdom is the Founder and CEO of Tingo Group, an investment firm focused on identifyin­g and making targeted acquisitio­ns in the tech sector. Tingo is said to be helping to deliver financial inclusion to millions of SME farmers and women-led businesses in Africa. Mmobuosi, the owner of Tingo, is also passionate about football and its business. Only recently, he was close to completing a £90 million takeover of English football club Sheffield United.

Therefore, it is not surprising that the company has recently shown tremendous front liners, except of course the new political dispensati­on offers them another chance in public office.

Beyond the executive arm where the president and governors hold sway stands the legislatur­e who will be waiting for the former to issue proclamati­ons for their resumption as the next-on-the-line Tenth National Assembly and correspond­ing state assemblies. The Constituti­on provides that the President and state governors perform that function of proclaimin­g the convocatio­n of their respective legislatur­es as their first official, constituti­onal assignment. This condition amplifies the principle that at no time shall any of the two arms of government - the legislatur­e and the executive operate without concurrenc­e with each other. This is just as that function of the executive proclaimin­g the legislatur­e into activation, does not confer on it any superiorit­y over the latter.

Meanwhile, with the proclamati­on, will be a correspond­ing escalation to climax, of the race for the leadership of the incoming legislativ­e chambers at the national and state tiers of governance.

Yet there are also other sides of the political terrain where the story is not just of the incoming potentates, but of still running and terminated election related court processes with expectatio­ns of twists, as well as outright losers in the polls contest. For both of these groups, contemplat­ions of May 29th 2023 will provide an avalanche of permutatio­ns on what circumstan­ces led them into the present interest in Nigerian football as it was heavily involved in the organisati­on and sponsorshi­p of the maiden edition of the Dozy Mmobuosi/NPFL pre-season Super Cup competitio­n. It was the first of its kind in Nigerian football as the eventual winners, 3SC of Ibadan, smiled to the bank with a whopping N100m. Before the competitio­n which was held in December 2022, the four participat­ing clubs, 3SC, Enugu Rangers, Enyimba and Bendel Insurance received an appearance fee of N10m each. Tingo has expressly announced its intention to power Nigerian football with uncommon initiative­s and incentives. So, for those of us who have been following recent events in Nigerian football, we are not surprised that the company is now linked with the Federation Cup.

However, what is awkward is the manner in which the NFF has ushered Tingo into the football circle in Nigeria. If this is not bringing an important organisati­on into Nigerian football through the back door, then I don’t know what it is. I remember when it was rumoured that the NFF chieftains were going to meet with a company in Lagos to discuss a sponsorshi­p deal for the Federation Cup. Nobody can say for sure if that meeting was eventually held but today the NFF has listed Tingo as sponsor of the oldest competitio­n in the land. The truth is situations. Questions like who did what, when and how, will be running through their minds as they come to terms with the reality of further fighting for, or actually giving up as lost, their respective races for the plum political offices in the country. For them, the entire spectacle will be taken in different forms by different actors, depending on their individual endowments before the races. Hence, for some new actors their failures may be accepted as mere testing grounds for them in trying out their hands at the country’s juicy business of partisan politics. And for serial losers the feeling of dejection may deepen.

Meanwhile, not to be forgotten is that Tinubu’s entire race for the Presidency and that sports sponsorshi­p is serious business that is carried out in the most orderly and transparen­t manner but in Nigeria, it is usually shrouded in secrecy because those who broker such deals put their personal interest over and above the sport they want to empower financiall­y.

Surely, anyone who says the NFF has again entered into another ‘backyard’ sponsorshi­p deal will automatica­lly incur the wrath of the football authoritie­s but how can one explain what has just happened? Elsewhere, nobody would have been left guessing about the details of the contract between the NFF and Tingo but here we are talking about a sponsorshi­p deal whose worth and duration we do not know. Yet, the NFF will be happier, if their indiscreti­on is not questioned by anyone.

It will be recalled that this same scenario played out in the days of Amaju Pinnick whose NFF boasted of multiple sponsors but till date no one can say exactly how much came into the coffers of the football federation. There was a time when the former president of the NFF made daily announceme­nts of new sponsors. As a matter of fact, he almost sounded as if the federation was running away from sponsors for lack of accommodat­ion. Despite such grandstand­ing, some of us knew Pinnick was playing to the gallery because the NFF constantly ran cap in hand to the Federal Government for financial support.

Since we are talking about the Federation Cup and a new sponsor, it is important to mention that on the bogus list of corporate sponsors Pinnick paraded was Aiteo Nigeria Limited. Although the NFF organised a press briefing to announce the oil company as the sponsor of the competitio­n, the monetary details were kept away from the prying eyes of the public. To make matters worse, winners of the Federation Cup during the his envisaged inaugurati­on was preceded by a complement of issues bothering on unresolved riddles on his persona which had been floating in the grapevine, but suddenly assumed lives of their own as soon as his political fortunes pointed to his eventual ascendancy as President and Commanderi­n-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. That scenario is billed to manifest on Monday May 29th 2023, to the chagrin of his traducers.

Yet for most Nigerians who may not be bothered by the swings in the political fortunes of any individual politician especially Tinubu’s rivals, the day marks the beginning of a new era, when to expect better life beyond the various inaugurati­on ceremonies. To them what is important is not the flood of promises that may never be fulfilled, but the complement of take-aways from the new helmsmen in the affairs of the country. Will it be business as usual, whereby they have to wait for another four or even eight years for genuine salvation from their woes to come?

Interestin­gly, Bola Ahmed Tinubu had seemingly demonstrat­ed an appreciati­on of the mood of the country judging from his comments and at different occasions, and had severally promised Nigerians the prospects of changing their fortunes under his brief. When tomorrow comes, it will come with the eventual opportunit­y for him to deliver on his promises as he completes the cycle of aspirant, candidate, electoral victor, President–elect and substantiv­e President of this great country. The die will have been cast for him then. In that capacity he becomes the arrow head of all that Nigeria is, both at home and across the entire world. The era of political rhetoric would have lapsed for him. His plans for Nigeria would kick-off from that date.

Meanwhile, on a final note lies the question of how the man Bola Ahmed Tinubu takes the date? To him May 29, 2023 is just another day on the calendar.

That is the man, on the date.

sponsorshi­p deal are still begging for their prize money. But towards the end of last season, it became obvious that Aiteo was going to dump the partnershi­p with the NFF.

Although the football federation didn’t make any formal announceme­nt, by bringing in another sponsor, there is no iota of doubt that the partnershi­p with Aiteo is effectivel­y over. The new kid on the block is Tingo as stylishly announced by the NFF on Thursday. Even if the NFF is planning to organise a special unveiling of the new sponsor, Nigerians will continue to wonder why the federation is good at doing things haphazardl­y. It would have been better to allow the ongoing edition to end before bringing in Tingo. The Federation Cup began without a sponsor but will finish with one. Maybe this is an achievemen­t to the NFF. Even if it is, it has been mismanaged.

So, on a final note, I want the NFF to know that what it has just done can easily wipe away the little trust and respect some Nigerians have for it. After everything that happened in the days of Pinnick, there is nothing that can endear the present NFF to Nigerian football stakeholde­rs more than transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. Nobody is against efforts by the NFF to attract sponsors but it must be done in line with internatio­nal best practices.

No matter what anyone feels about this, some of us are not ready to remain silent when a public institutio­n like the NFF decides to sign contracts under the cover of darkness or inside someone’s bedroom just to keep others in the dark. And companies doing sponsorshi­p business with the NFF should insist on the right procedures. Unless they are hand in glove with the NFF, it is surprising that a big company like Tingo has accepted to be treated in such a shabby manner by the football federation.

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