Nigeria Withdraws Eagles’ Ban, Escapes FIFA Axe
Written by This Day Wednesday, 07 July 2010
SharePresident Goodluck Jonathan has reversed his
decision banning Nigeria from participating in all Federation of
International Football Association (FIFA) organized competitions in the
next two years.
In the wake of the reversal of the ban, FIFA is no
longer likely to suspend Nigeria since the reason for such an action no
longer exists, though the world football governing body would formally
meet on Nigeria today.
The lifting of the Eagles’ ban was the
outcome of a meeting between President Jonathan and Nigerian Football
Federation (NFF) following the sacking of three top officials of NFF.
A statement by Presidential Spokesperson Ima Niboro
said the decision to lift the ban was consequent upon appeals by
well-meaning Nigerians and assurances given by NFF that it would put
its house in order.
Niboro said: “Based on these assurances and the
appeals of well-meaning Nigerians, including former leaders, President
Jonathan has decided to review the earlier two-year ban on the country
from all international football competitions.”
According to him,
“This review would enable other categories of Nigerian players
participate in global football competitions, while a new senior
national team is being developed.”
He said the President at the meeting also directed
the Sports Minister Alhaji Isa Bio to call a meeting of all relevant
stakeholders to resuscitate football academies and other talent
spotting outlets to produce a new crop of footballers and other
sportsmen for the country.
Niboro also said NFF had tendered
unreserved apology to the President and Nigerian people on the dismal
performance of the Super Eagles at the World Cup.
The NFF, he added, also informed the President of
its decision to “disband the team and address the numerous shortcomings
evident in the management of football in Nigeria .”
He said the
federation assured the President of its commitment to “evolving an
enduring football development programme and grow a new senior national
team that will bring glory, rather than consistent embarrassment to
Nigeria on the world stage.”
To achieve this, NFF, he stated,
informed the President that it has as a first step proceeded to put its
house in order by removing the former leadership and replacing it with
an interim leadership.
President Jonathan last Thursday banned Nigerian
teams from participating in all FIFA organised competitions for the
next two years. The government also announced the dissolution of the
NFF board.
The withdrawal of the country from international
competitions immediately drew the ire of FIFA, which threatened to ban
Nigeria for violating its statute that discourages government
interference in the administration of football.
The Federal Government was given up to 6pm yesterday
to rescind the decision while a member of FIFA executive, Dr. Amos
Adamu, was dispatched to Abuja on a mediation shuttle to stave off the
banning of Nigeria.
But NFF on Sunday took a pre-emptive action and
announced the sack of three of its board members – the President, Sani
Lulu, Vice-President, Amanze Uchegbulam and Head, Technical Committee,
Taiwo Ogunjobi.
That sack is awaiting ratification of the NFF congress.
THISDAY had gathered that the Federal Government met
with FIFA in Zurich, Switzerland, and at the ongoing World Cup in South
Africa to impress upon it, the need to clean up the mess in NFF that
retarded the development of the nation’s football teams.
But the
newspaper learnt that FIFA executives rebuffed all entreaties from
Nigeria, which argued that pervading corruption and the subversion of
the statute setting up NFF needed urgent intervention.
FIFA was said to have told Nigerian officials that
its action would amount to interference. The government also appraised
FIFA with an unacceptable situation whereby NFF officials had fretted
most of the states FA officials, who are expected to be delegates to
its election while July 12, a day after the end of the World Cup was
fixed as the deadline for the submission of application for the
elections.
Meanwhile, FIFA President Sepp Blatter has confirmed that
the football governing body would be meeting today to deliberate on the
Nigerian situation.
However, Blatter, who disclosed this at the Sandton
Con-vention Centre, Johannesburg, during the joint media event by FIFA
and France Football, made this position known before word filtered out
of Nigeria that the Federal Government had rescinded its decision to
withdraw the national team and set up an interim management committee
for NFF.
Blatter was responding to questions on what action the
football body would be taking against Nigeria ahead of the original 5pm
yesterday deadline given the Federal Government.
But responding, the FIFA boss explained that the
organisation had extended the deadline by 24 hours and would now be
meeting today to take a definitive action against the country.
Apparently,
FIFA decided on the stay of execution following briefing it had
received from Adamu who had been dispatched to Nigeria to meet
government officials to see if an amicable solution could be worked out.
However, on Sunday night, some NFF Board members had
taken the bull by the horn by removing its principal officers including
its President.
The members not only apologised to the government, but also appealed for a reversal of the President’s action.





