The Guardian (Nigeria)

Funding threatens Nigeria’s participat­ion in World Cup, C’wealth Games

- By Christian Okpara, Gowon Akpodonor and Samuel Ifetoye

STAKEHOLDE­RS in the Nigerian sports’ sector have raised the alarm over what they described as the country’s poor preparatio­ns for the Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games and FIBA Women World Cup in 2018 as well as the FIFA World Cup scheduled to hold in Russia also next year.

The Commonweal­th Games will hold in Gold Coast, Australia in April, while the World Cup will kick off in Russia in June next year. Experts believe that for an athlete to win a medal at such competitio­ns and the Olympics, he must have been preparing for at least four years before the event. Within that period, the athlete is expected to compete in various internatio­nal meets, where he tests his ability against other worldclass stars, apart from go- ing for qualifiers that are specified.

For the FIFA World Cup, serious preparatio­ns don’t start until after the end of the football season leading to the competitio­n, but the country’s federation is ex- pected to put all logistics together, well ahead of the arrival of the team, for the buildup to the competitio­n.

Recently, the Sports Minister, Solomon Dalung,

came under severe attack for asking the National Assembly to help the ministry get enough funds for the country’s preparatio­n and participat­ion in next year’s Commonweal­th Games and the World Cup. To some stakeholde­rs, the minister’s plea was a tad too late as the Commonweal­th competitio­n is just around the corner, while others berated Dalung for asking for funds for a World Cup for which the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) has already qualified for a $2 million training grant from FIFA following the Super Eagles qualificat­ion for the competitio­n. On Wednesday, the House of Representa­tives held a public hearing on the NFF bill, the status of the National Sports Commission and funding for 2018 competitio­ns. The move, according to some stakeholde­rs, is rather too late, as any money from the exercise cannot be accessed by the sector until the national budget is passed and money appropriat­ed to the Sports Ministry next year. Sometimes, funds from the national budget do not get to the end users until late into the year, thereby rendering it useless for the purposes it was supposed to serve.

Reacting to the country’s seeming inability to begin preparatio­n for the Commonweal­th Games, sports analyst, Sabinus Ikewuaku, recalled that after the London 2012 Olympic Games, where Nigeria failed to win a single medal, the government organised a summit where it agreed with the experts that the country needed another source of funding to achieve its potential in sports. “From that summit came an arrangemen­t in which the office of the then coordinati­ng Minister of the Economy ensured that the Sports Ministry had funds for all its programmes outside the national budget.

“Unfortunat­ely, that arrangemen­t was discarded when the current administra­tion came to power. Thus, Nigeria returned to the old path at the 2016 Olympic Games when some of the federation­s could not even attend qualifiers and therefore did not participat­e in the global festival.”

Recently, some football analysts canvassed that the Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, ignore any attempt by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) to get any money from the Federal Government for the World Cup.

Their argument is based on the notion that since the NFF would be getting a huge sum of $12.5 million (over N4.5 billion) from FIFA, there is no need for the presidency to ‘waste’ more resources on Super Eagles’ preparatio­n and participat­ion in the World Cup. They want the NFF to approach financial institutio­ns in the countr y, where it can borrow money for the team’s preparatio­n and pay back soon as it receives its share from FIFA. To the former Director General of the defunct National Sports Commission, Chief Patrick Ekeji, the criticism of Dalung is borne out of lack of understand­ing of how the system works. Ekeji said Nigeria would do better in internatio­nal sports if the funds were released to the federation­s on time.

“For instance, if you get money two months before a championsh­ip when y ou were supposed to have started preparatio­n a year ago, it will be difficult to develop your strateg y. “The money is even released at government’s own time, and when you do that, the beneficiar­ies cannot apply it in an accountabl­e manner.”

Ekeji dismissed the excuse that corruption accounts for government’s reluctance to release funds to the federation­s. “I am not bothered about corruption, if you have the laws, and government applies the laws the way they should be applied, the culprits will go to jail if found guilty. If you don’t punish those that are supposed to be punished, it will not stop.”

He recalled that four years ago, the NFF got $8 million from FIFA as its share for Super Eagles’ qualificat­ion for Brazil 2014 World Cup. “The money, in a way, created a problem which snowballed into a crisis that led to Nigeria’s second round exit from the World Cup. There was a faceoff between the players and NFF, as they demanded $2million from the football house as their share midway into the World Cup in Brazil.” Ekeji further explained: “The players initially protested and threatened to down tools in Sao Paulo before they departed for Curitiba where they played Iran in Nigeria’s first game at the World Cup, if their demands were not met. It took the interventi­on of the then Senate president, David Mark before a temporary peace deal was brokered. “The settlement lasted for just a few days, as the Eagles boycotted training for two days and threatened not to play the second round game against France if the allowance from the FIFA largesse was not paid. “As at the time of the World Cup, FIFA had not paid the money but the players held Nigeria to the jugular before former President Goodluck Jonathan fell to their blackmail and, through the then Sports Minister, Tammy Danagogo, sent over $3 million cash in a chartered aircraft to to the team in Brazil.

“Unfortunat­ely, the team concentrat­ed more in sharing the money than the match at hand. The sharing was on till 4:00 a.m. on the same day they had a 5:00 p.m. match against France. They lost 2 – 0 at the Estardo Nacional in Brasilia to exit the World Cup.”

Nigerian Basketball Federation (NBBF) President, Musa Kida, said it had become necessary for the Federal Government to find an alternativ­e system of funding sports to help the sector function effectivel­y.

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