
Italy’s Crisis And Lessons For Nigerian Football
For Italy, it is a monumental DISASTER. The country’s Minister of Sports publicly called for the resignation of the President of the country’s football federation. The President resigned accordingly! It is the honourable thing to do!
The interpretation is simple: even the government of advanced football cultures ‘interfere’ in football matters without attracting any FIFA sanctions.
This sounds like music coming out of Nigeria. The country has also failed painfully to qualify for two consecutive World Cups.
Nigerian Football Governance Under Scrutiny
Going forward, the blind-fold should now be taken from the eyes of Nigerians.
Already, the Chairman of the National Sports Commission (Nigeria’s Minister of Sports) did not call for anybody’s resignation despite the shame, but has created a soft landing for the NFF with the offer of a well-trodden harmless path: he ‘advised’ the NFF to carry out some reforms and to amend offensive and retrogressive articles in their current constitution before conducting the next elections that are coming up later in the year.
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I hear some reforms have been immediately carried out, even though they are not far-reaching enough and are disguised to still produce the same old results.
Ignored Reforms And Constitutional Concerns In Nigerian Football
It is important to recall that when the last President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, late President Muhammadu Buhari, advised the NFF board to amend the constitution some three years ago, the board simply disregarded the directive, conducted their elections, and damned the consequence. They have remained in office till now basking in the failure of Nigerian football governance and the stalling of the game’s growth at many domestic levels.
Legal Move To Halt NFF Elections
It is against this background that I am nursing the plan to go to the Nigerian Civil Courts, to temporarily halt the planned elections into the Executive Committee of the Nigeria Football Federation, NFF, and have the courts examine the laws, the rules and regulations and the pending court cases around Nigerian football, taking into cognizance the history, documents, and the complaints by aggrieved stakeholders on the processes being proposed to be used to elect the new board of the NFF.
Nigerian Football Constitution And Global Compliance
The constitution of any national federation is not cast in stone. Every country sets up their own processes in accordance to their laws, their constitution, geography, political arrangements, and culture. The important thing is that whatever constitution they come up with must not offend the fundamental principles (mostly technical) of running and organising the game, globally.
So, the NFF must operate with a constitution that represents Nigeria’s best interests and laws without contravening FIFA or CAF laws.
Historical Errors And Their Impact On Nigerian Football
Very simply, my intention is to challenge the present constitution, show its inequity, how it deviates from historic antecedents and well-established traditions, the current illegalities, the unfairness, unreasonable funding, and how a faulty system has been ignorantly normalized in the mid-1990s and have now run Nigerian football development aground.
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I have no axe to grind with any individual members of the current board. Many of them are my friends. They all have good intentions for Nigerian football. Unfortunately, some narrow interests as well as ignorance of the past becloud the genesis, the history and original vision and spirit of the Nigeria Football Association that promoted development that should have been sustained. These were truncated when a sole Administrator, without a proper grounding in Nigeria’s football history, took over the rein of Nigeria’s football and introduced measures to take care of some unwanted particular developments in the system. After succeeding in his mission, he then allowed that process to become the norm.
Faulty Electoral System In Nigerian Football
With a high turnover of administrators at the highest levels and the lure of the money now present in the arrangement, that system cannot revert back to the correct past, the adopted ‘error’ has sustained and became the new norm, and has halted Nigeria’s football growth since then.
That system harbors a faulty electoral system that has worsened with time and has been perfected for manipulation whenever needed. The elections are now public, outrageously more expensive, more political, more convoluted, more offensive to Nigerian laws and interests, and are holding back genuine development.
Structural Inequalities And Electoral Irregularities
The present football structure from the elections now harbors illegalities and promotes practices that are annoying to disenfranchised members, and retrogressive in their impact.
What have been concocted as electoral process, so far, do not tick all the essential boxes, do not include all constituencies and members, do not justify the unequal, lopsided representation of constituencies at the congress, fuel the disguised political influence through venue-selection, as well as the eligibility conditions that favour particular contestants.
Seeking Legal Interpretation For Nigerian Football Reforms
My intention is to pass the articles in the constitution through the test-tube of the Nigerian laws, plus the socio-cultural, political and geographic interests of the country. All of these whilst ensuring that the rules and regulations of FIFA are not offended.
Also Read: The Onigbinde That I Knew — A Humble Tribute By Odegbami
After 3 decades of observing this anomaly in Nigerian football, I believe, the impasse can only be settled either at the National Assembly, or in the civil courts. Since I am not a member of the National Assembly, and I don’t know a member that understands the complexities well enough to champion the cause, the only option left is to seek interpretation and justice in the Nigerian Civil Courts.
Call For Comprehensive Football Reforms
That’s why I am heading there if the system does not respect the directive of the National Sports Commission for complete reforms (not a part of it for starters as is being suggested now by some people).
It is better to resolve it fully, once and for all, or to stop the process until it is done. What should not happen is to conduct these next elections under the same old regulations and constitution that will produce the same old results that have not helped Nigerian football to grow and develop in three decades.
A New Governance Model For Nigerian Football
What Nigeria needs now is a simple governance structure (Executive Committee), elected by only relevant, registered members of the NFF on an equal representation basis, through an easy, simple, inexpensive, open process. The election must be held in the Headquarters of the Federation in the Federal Capital City to eliminate external influence and reduce tendency for corrupt practices. This new process must produce a lean board of quality leadership and members that can take Nigerian football to the highest levels in the world in the next few years.



4 Comments
Thank you so much our great legend.
It should be taken to the civil court.
True and long lasting positive change calls for a desperate measures.
This is another wasting of time heading nowhere, the Harrison Jaja case it’s still there with 1 or so other case(s) against nff for over 10 years, what has been the outcome ?
The best way of bringing sanity to Nigeria football is for the federal government to stop sponsoring football, scrap the nsc, stop the monthly subvention grant to nff, ask state governments to stop financing all pro football clubs and let Rangers, 3SC, Bendel insurance, Eyimba, Kano pillars etc all go private, if fans/or individuals cannot buy them and make them functional as private clubs, then so be it , let them be disbanded and be past history, they will not be the first in our football clubs history.
After all there is Remo stars, Kun Khalfa, MMF, Sporting, Barau etc, that are privately run FCs.
The government running these so called clubs is an avenue for money mismanagement at the expense of taxpayers.
Those NFF crooks are hanging there at all cost because there is free money to steal even though they are still salaried by government.
Let the sports ministry become a department or merge to the cultural ministry and government should focus on infrastructural development and maintenance of sports facilities, while also get involved in schools sport like headmasters cup, principals cup, provost/ vice chancellors cup and grassroots football as it was in the 70s, 80s.
Once there is no more government budget on football for pro clubs, all these criminals will disappear.
As long as government is financing nigeria football, these crooks will be hanging around. They know how to manipulate the system with ease.
Giwa/Amaju, Jaja/nff are typical court cases that ended nowhere and/or still pending.
Nigeria football is a global brand and if those in charge cannot make it profitable, let them go.
Just sack all of them.
Gusau, Eguavoen, Sanusi, and the rest of the current board of NFF Onigbese.
Any reforms with these same guys still at the helm is useless. If they will not do the needful and resign, then acrimonious sacking is the next step.
It is atrocious sha that we will be begging incompetent people to resign and not come for second term.
It is unheard of.
Court cases will only delay or elongate the current stupid tenure.
What if the judge says let status quo remain? Those jejunes will remain after September.
I get your point that the current football laws (that unnamed sole administrator that did them should receive a medal for stupidity) would bring in a new set of nincompoops (if the current ones finally reason to bow out) but holistic changes can’t really come from people who benefit from the system.
I read in the news that Traore, Burkinabe leader, now says democracy is hogwash since he’s tasted the perks of power.
Many African leaders don’t know when to stop running their organizations aground because of blind ambitions.
Like Kim wrote, FG should stop funding football and we will see speedy changes in football governance.
Try the courts though, even though I don’t trust many of the judges still and crooked lawyers.
Nigerian football needs saving. If not, this same story will occur in 2030.
The heavens will still not fall sha.