THISDAY

Anambra Police Games: The Day After

- Ejike Anyaduba, Abatete

The week-long police games held in Anambra State, and jointly sponsored by both the police and the state government, have come to an end. Adjudged one of the best in organizati­on by both participan­ts and spectators, the upshot was quite impressive and did not come short of any previously held. In fact, the Inspector General of the Police - the smart looking Adamu Mohammedca­lled it the best. So far the IG’s observatio­n appears inviolate as no one has contradict­ed it except one or two dissenting voices who prefer feeds from the social media to facts on ground.

Regardless, the games came with enthrallin­g satisfacti­on from start to finish. The opening ceremonies were as fascinatin­g as the closing ones. The competitor­s were determined to rake in medals while taking no prisoners. Everyone exerted themselves and strove hard to outperform one another. None staked greater claims to victory, but all pedalled to the metal. In the end, the Force Headquarte­rs, Abuja, proved a cut above the rest and carted home most of the laurels.

But that was as far as the games went. The positive effects of the hosting have continued to redound to the credit of the state. Though Anambra was the first to host the games in the southeast zone since the more than a decade of the biennial sporting activities across Nigeria, but the just concluded event was most supremely organized and rewarding.

First, the successful hosting has shown the state as capable of organizing similar events like the Nigerian University Games Associatio­n (NUGA), National Sports Festival(NSF), and as an ancillary to hosting of such mega games as the West African Games, Commonweal­th, etc., without provoking doubts. Until these games, it was thought that the only states capable of hosting such events in the east are Enugu and Imo because of their obvious advantages. But Anambra has proved that even when thrown at the deep end it will overcome.

Secondly, the state can now boast of sporting facilities hitherto unavailabl­e. It is true that the state is blessed with sports icons like Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna of the 1954 Vancouver, Canada, Commonweal­th games feat, Power Mike, Mary Onyali, Francis Obikwelu, Innocent Egbunike, Albert Onyeanwuna, Paul Egonye, among others, but most of these people did not hone their sporting skills in the state. They did elsewhere. Fortunatel­y, the narrative has changed since the games. The Alex Ekwueme Square, formerly a mere parade ground with just a pavilion, now has an Olympic-size swimming pool, basketball, handball and volleyball courts nestled in it. Ditto for other venues used for the weeklong activities.

No longer will promising athletes from the state be compelled to seek recourse to such facilities outside of the state except as a choice. It is well to remember that even as the period of the games was short it was rewarding to the extent that tourism sites in the state recorded great patronage and the economy had a shot in the arm. Curiously, while the games lasted no business activity suffered disruption as was the traffic situation.

But the greatest gain of the tournament was the confirmati­on of the state as one of the safest states in Nigeria. It put a lie to claims in some quarters that though armed robbery and abduction were drasticall­y reduced, petty crimes like mugging and a penumbra of other crimes were on the increase. Apart from the confirmati­on of the security in the state by the police authority, there was no security breach. There was no theft, no abduction, no mugging, and no violence of any kind. It was such a peaceful event that even known sceptics could not but applaud the good work.

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