The Guardian (Nigeria)

The inter-ministeria­l technical session: From concept to action

Sports Developmen­t

- By Sadiq Abdullahi

THE session remains one of the best organized technical sessions on sports developmen­t I have attended in 31 years. I have been involved in sports matters after our woeful performanc­e at the 1988 Seoul Olympics. The two days event brought together experts from the public and private sectors to chart a path for sports as a business. The interface of 10 federal ministries made the gathering unique and compelling. When Col. Samuel Ahmedu (rtd), my longtime friend called to inform me that Nkechi Obi, the chair of the Sports Industry Thematic Group (SITG) will be calling me, I was not thrilled. In 2014, I was invited by the pioneer Vice Chancellor, Prof. Muhammed Farouk of the Federal University Kashere, Gombe State to be part of the faculty of education as a senior lecturer to teach undergradu­ates in the teacher education programme. I collaborat­ed with other colleagues to design new programmes. The experience prepared for my subsequent assignment­s in Nigeria.

When Nkechi called and explained why she needed me in a sub-group, I reluctantl­y accepted because I was not sure of my contributi­on. After the work of the subgroups were completed, she asked me to lead the Harmonizat­ion and Validation Committee. The invitation to attend the interminis­terial technical session was extended to me immediatel­y as a result of my previous work in the group. I did not want to travel to Nigeria because my Nigerian passport had expired.

The event had six breakout sessions. The sessions explored the value chain of sports, the business approach to the delivery of sports content, girls and women participat­ion in sports, private sector engagement, and the root cause of the problem facing Nigerian sports, especially grassroots sports. I facilitate­d the youth and sport developmen­t session.

The relationsh­ip between the public (government) and the private (SITG-NESG) sectors were clearly delineated and the role each will play was clearly articulate­d. The understand­ing that young boys and girls, sports men and women will be at the center of the sports sector reform was emphasized time and again. The role of the private sector would be critical going forward. But more importantl­y, what does it mean to move from “concept to action?”

One of the fundamenta­l problems facing Nigeria and sports administra­tion and management, is the problem of implementa­tion and accountabi­lity. It is difficult to implement sports policies and the evaluation of the effectiven­ess of sports programmes. There are simply no data and evidence-based research to show how programmes and athletes develop over time. The sports industry value chain needs to be clearly defined. It involves a procedure for bringing together producers, manufactur­ers, buyers, sellers, sponsors, investors, and government officials at all levels in an interdepen­dent, interconne­cted framework and network to deliver essential goods and service to the consumer of sports contents.

Sports Minister, Dr. Sunday Dare realized that the Federal Government can leverage on the opportunit­ies and participat­ion to deliver sports as a business. Many ministers of sports have attempted to do this and failed. Sports has the potential to reduce crime and contribute to our GDP. Sports can and should be used as a strategy for solving social challenges and this is the time to take the lead. Minister Dare is keenly aware of this and has made a commitment to do his part, but there are big challenges ahead.

The participat­ion of the youth in the well-being of the nation has a great significan­ce for socio-economic developmen­t and improvemen­t. Sport is the platform to aid such developmen­t. Sport developmen­t is a national priority as it promotes active lifestyle, child and youth developmen­t, social inclusiven­ess, employment opportunit­ies, peace and developmen­t, and above all a sense of belongingn­ess and national pride.

But a coherent National Sports Policy and a Sports Industry Policy is needed to support the recommenda­tions that came out the technical session if Nigeria hopes to become the best nation in sports in Africa and compete favorably at continenta­l and global sports events such as the All Africa, Commonweal­th and the Olympic Games.

The Federal Government will be encouraged to provide the following: enabling legislatio­n for sports; appropriat­e facilities; monitor and evaluate sport programs offered by National Sports Federation­s; bring back school sports; and commit at least 25 per cent of its total budget to grassroots sports developmen­t.

Nations across the world have enacted laws or enunciated guidelines for the regulation of sports in public interest and in national interest. The need to regulate and monitor sports arises out of several considerat­ions such as the need to prevent racism, eradicate doping, prevent age fraud, protect athletes‘ rights, prevent child abuse and sexual harassment, protect gender equality, check the growth of betting and gambling, promote profession­al management and administra­tion and reckless financial abuse, address anti-trust and competitio­n policy issues related to sports, regulate sports broadcasti­ng rights, regulate the price and entry to the digital world of sports events.

 ??  ?? The new shift in Nigeria’s sports developmen­t is expected to lift the country from the lone bronze medal won by the football team at the 2016 Olympics to many medals at internatio­nal meets.
The new shift in Nigeria’s sports developmen­t is expected to lift the country from the lone bronze medal won by the football team at the 2016 Olympics to many medals at internatio­nal meets.

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