Tag: administrators

  • Athletes bigger than administrators

    I won’t join the motley crowd pushing for Sports Minister Solomon Dalung’s exit. The Sports ministry should work with the board of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) because both groups owe it as a duty to ensure that Nigeria becomes Africa’s Mecca for soccer. We have the talents. Without the athletes there can’t be administrators. Indeed, sportsmen and women are bigger than administrators in terms of what they have to offer. What we need is the enabling environment for soccer to thrive, not an environment that is perpetually troubled by allegations of fraud, with the minister and the ministry doing the jobs of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Football is a money spinner because of its immense followership. Much of this claim can be understood, if we examine how the hosting of the 2018 World Cup from June 15 to July 16, boosted the Russian economy. The Mundial added more than $14 billion to the Russian economy, about one per cent of the country’s gross domestic product, the tournament organisers stated on Tuesday in Doha. Indeed, what countries, such as Russia, do is to appoint business-oriented people to run such projects, knowing that their pedigree in the business world is enormous to convince the big players that their cash won’t be wasted.

    Alexey Sorokin, the CEO of Russia’s World Cup Organising Committee said: ‘’The figure the report comes with is quite surprising.’’

    Sorokin told the football conference held in Qatar, host of the 2022 World Cup that his country calculated the impact the World Cup had on Russia’s GDP between 2013 and 2018 to be 952 billion roubles ($14.5 billion, 12.5 billion Euros), which was the equivalent of one per cent of the GDP.

    Sorokin went on: ‘’The tournament created up to 315,000 jobs per year and would still have an impact on the economy over the next five years.’’

    Honourable minister, this isn’t rocket science, if one considers the fact that Nigeria hosted the second biggest soccer competition organised by FIFA. The reason we haven’t hosted the Mundial rests largely with the bickering between the ministry and the NFF. Whereas, other federations do their businesses with insignificant interference from the ministry, NFF appears to be the territory most ministers must conquer to show supremacy – to the detriment of other sports. Ministers must rise beyond the NFF to compete with their counterparts in other climes. There wasn’t any conflict between the Russia sports minister, the World Cup CEO or the Russian FA boss during the Mundial. They worked seamlessly. There was mutual respect, not suspicion that one was corruptly enriching himself.

    Back to Nigeria. Dalung has the right to supervise the soccer federation as part of his job, but there are limits, which must not be exceeded, so as not to destroy the collective goal of making the beautiful game the number one sport that should bring Nigerians out of their homes to match venues. Soccer is the opium of the people, ‘’a vote catcher,’’ a unifier, a phenomenon devoid of creed or race and an employment generator (a topic for another day).

    Federations have the sole right to fund their operations. But when such ventures lead to representing Nigeria in international competitions, it is the ministry’s duty to get the government to fund the athletes’ participation.

    It is Nigeria’s anthem that is sung when the sportsmen and women mount the podium to receive their medals. It is the country’s flag that is hoisted behind them during the medals’ presentation; the pictures and visuals appear in the media. On the medals’ table and such platforms of identification is Nigeria, not NFF or Musa Kida or Solomon Ogba, for instance. Our sports ambassadors go through a lot to represent us. It is only appropriate that their entitlements should be done with dispatch, not made an issue to settle scores among administrators.

    Most of them lose their places in their teams when they come home for our matches. They are forced to work harder to win back their shirts, yet the stipends which we promise are not paid simply because someone wants to show that he is the boss. We need to remind this boss that when the players come here, their relations are hopeful that some of their needs will be met. And the players will easily settle such family requirements as bread winners, if the $5,000 is paid after the games that are won, and $2,500 for drawn ones.

    Our athletes shouldn’t be made to rely on philanthropists and sports loving governors when they require funds to prepare themselves for national assignments. Other countries have several avenues to source for funds, such as the Sports Lottery Schemes and fund-raisers where the President sits at dinner with the corporate world to show the level of commitment towards such an exercise. Blue-chip firms are given tax incentives for what they pay into the projects’ coffers. The president’s speech will spur others not at the ceremony to join the queue.

    This writer isn’t happy that corrupt people are not being made to face the wrath of the law. One’s angst is hinged on the way the minister is not interested in working with the new order at the NFF, so much so that he was absent at the last game against Libya in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State. It sends the wrong message to those entrepreneurs sitting on the fence, watching if things have normalised. We can only talk of a new dawn in sports marketing when there is a synergy among the federations, not just the NFF or the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) or the Nigeria Basketball Federation (NBBF) and the ministry headed by the minister.

    It is shameful reading media reports on Nigeria not being able to pay players’ estacodes and entitlements. It gives the impression that the government doesn’t care about sports. We know that government budgets money every fiscal year for sports. And most of the federations source for cash to run their affairs from the corporate world. The ministry should ensure the prompt release of funds for our ambassadors, even if it means informing President Muhammadu Buhari about the importance of such competitions.

    Honourable Minister sir, Aruna Quadri is a sure gold medal bet at the All Africa Games. Yet, he has not enjoyed any form of financial support from the government, even when his feats are tied to the country. Is it fair? I know that the ministry will be listing Quadri as one of her medals’ hopefuls. The minister is the first to congratulate Quadri after every achievement. What if he decides not to represent the country, when a simple task of getting him a coach has remained unattended for long.

    It is not enough to have chairmen who have the clout to convince the corporate world to fund sports. It is the government’s duty to sponsor teams representing us at major competitions. Money sourced internally by federations should be used for their operations. Our basketball girls qualified for the quarter-finals of the Women World Cup, with the minister in attendance. What that presupposes is that the government supports the sport. Is it by the minister’s presence? The men’s team are poised to attend the men’s version of the World Cup. The body’s president is expected to finance it.

    Howzat Ambode… not out!

    A friend in government is lost because his retinue changes. You can’t access him like in the past. Since Akinwunmi Ambode became the governor of Lagos State, our paths have not crossed and it is understandable. I knew it would someday and I expected him to tease me. Ambode aka Ambods, enjoys doing that. Don’t ask, please, if he takes jibes back.

    And so when former The Guardian Sports Editor Olukayode Thomas asked me to join a group at the Lagos State Government House, I planned to sneak in and out of the place. I knew there would be introductions at some point in the interactive session. I could handle it by quickly standing up for recognition but sit down faster than I got up. Deep inside me, I knew that Ambode won’t fall for the trick. He didn’t. He spotted me before the individual acknowledgement as he looked through the gathering. Good friend, Ambode will always be for me.

    The governor isn’t one who does not find a way of interacting with ‘lost’ friends. The moment Ambode walked round to greet his visitors, I knew he would throw jibes at me. All kinds of thoughts ran through my mind about what to say. Of course, the schoolboy days were gone – some 39 years ago.

    ‘’Hmmm, Ade you don dey old o; how you dey? You dey? Good to see you again,’’ Ambode whispered. I smiled. He must have been surprised I didn’t tease him. Ambode was his warm self.

    Several years ago, I saw him walking on other side of the road from his office. I remember he told me he was the Accountant-General.

    Once I recognised him, I called his cricket alias to be sure it was Ambode; he stood curious, and when he spotted me, he shouted: ‘’Ade Ojeikere!’’ He crossed over to embrace me. How did I know it was Ambode? He kept rolling the sleeves of his white shirt, typical of Ambode while walking down the street. His measured steps flashed back reminiscent of how he walked onto his crease in a cricket game in 1979.

    Thank you, Ambods and best wishes.

  • Why Nigeria is hosting maritime administrators, by NIMASA chief

    Why Nigeria is hosting maritime administrators, by NIMASA chief

    The Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) is hosting maritime administrators from 30 countries to improve its role as a global player,  its director-general, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has said.

    Peterside, in a statement by the organisation’s image maker, Isichei Osamgbi, said Nigeria would host the 3rd Conference of the Association of Heads of African Maritime Administrations (AAMA Conference) in Abuja, at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, from April 19 to 21.

    The meeting will be hosted in conjunction with International Maritime Organisation (IMO).

    It will bring together major maritime administrators and leading stakeholders in Africa to discuss ways of improving the maritime sector on the continent.

    The statement reads: “The IMO delegation of five will be led by Mr. Kitack Lim, the Secretary General of IMO, which is a United Nations specialised agency that regulates shipping globally.

    “The hosting of this conference in Nigeria is in line with the economic diversification agenda of the President Muhammadu Buhari led administration, and the repositioning agenda of the present Management to make Nigerian maritime industry a leading light in Africa and the global maritime sector.”

    Peterside said it would open new opportunities for unemployed youths, as well as unlock the potentials in the maritime sector.

    The statement went on: “This is just as the conference could serve as a platform towards Nigeria’s re-election into the IMO Council seat later in November this year,” the statement added.

    “The benefits of hosting the conference cannot be over emphasised, it will equally avail stakeholders in the Nigerian maritime industry an opportunity to rub minds with their counterparts across Africa and the globe, and further chart a way forward for the African maritime sector. It will effectively signal the arrival of the country in the global maritime arena as a respectable global voice.”

  • Administrators seek more funds for varsities

    The Association of Nigerian University Professional Administrators (ANUPA) has called on the Federal Government to allocate “the needed” fund to address the problem of human capital and infrastructural deficit in Nigerian universities.

    It noted that the deficit in manpower and infrastructure in the country’s ivory towers was due to the failure of the government to implement its agreements with various university unions.

    The association made this demand in a five-point communiqué issued at its annual conference/general meeting at the University of Lagos Main Auditorium.

    It said: “The association observes the continuing decay in the university system in terms of human capital and infrastructural development as a result of non-implementation of the several policies and agreements entered into by the various university unions with the Federal Government. The association, therefore, calls on the Federal Government to as a matter of urgency, release the much needed fund and implement the appropriate policies for the overall development and upgrade of the university system.”

    The body also urged the government and universities’ managements to double their efforts in ensuring constant electricity supply in universities to aid both academic and administrative activities.

    The group also wants government and university managements to ameliorate the effects of economic recession on the civil servants, find lasting solutions to the security challenges in the country and improve security on campuses.

    Addressing delegates at the meeting, the University of Lagos (UNILAG) Vice-Chancellor, Prof Rahamon Bello, emphasised the important roles of administrators in the university system. He urged them to join hands to improve the system.

    “As administrators, you are the engine room of the university system and as such, when you gather like this, you must be given the necessary prominence because without you, the university system cannot function. I am happy to know that you have gathered here to find ways of improving the ways to boost the upliftment of the university system in Nigeria.

    “Whatever we do here, we should recall that we all have to join hands to ensure that we uplift the university system in Nigeria to the height that we all wish it gets to. We should not allow the socio-negativity in our society to influence our administrative life,” he advised.

    To pilot the affairs of the association for the next two years, new executive members were elected. They are: T.I Igwe (President), Mr Bisong Robert (first Vice President), Mr Bashir Abubakar (second Vice President), Mr. Sarafadeen Adebisi (General-Secretary), Mr Tony Njoku (Financial Secretary) and Mrs Talatu Kuri (Treasurer).

    Others are: Tunde Ade – Olunusi (Public Relations Officer), Mr Nath Toyaan (Editor-in-Chief), Hana Awa (Legal Officer), Okey Ikegbunam (Ex- Officio), and Faith Emmanuel (Assistant Secretary).

     

  • VC urges varsity administrators to tackle unemployment

    The Vice-Chancellor (VC) of the Adekunle Ajasin University in Akungba-Akoko (AAUA), Ondo State, Prof Igbekele Ajibefun, has urged university administrators to focus on entrepreneurship and skill acquisition programmes to enable the nation fight unemployment.

    Ajibefun made the call while declaring open the maiden Faculty of Education International Conference held at the Nelson Mandela Hall on Tuesday.

    The three-day, with the theme: Promoting entrepreneurship opportunities for sustainable development in the 21st Century, brought together experts from various institutions to discuss unemployment and its solutions.

    The VC identified peoples’ unending search for white-collar job and their neglect of vocational education as causes of unemployment, saying the conventional education emphasised paper qualification at the expense of skills.

    He said: “Early in the 21st Century, we discovered this anomaly and we made efforts to set the records straight, through the incorporation of entrepreneurship in the curriculum and making emphasis on vocational education. We called for government’s supports by releasing funds to start it.”

    The VC said AAUA had inculcated entrepreneurship in its curriculum and set up Centre for Entrepreneurship Development to focus on teaching on self-reliance in partnership with private firms.

    “There can be no doubt that, in a nation where more than 60 per cent of its youths are jobless and some are criminally-inclined, the best contribution that any organisation or an individual can offer is to make entrepreneurial skills and training available to the unemployed youths to enable them achieve personal empowerment and self-development,” he added.

    Earlier in his address, the Dean of the faculty, Prof Sunday Amuseghan, said the initiative was part of the commitment of the faculty to vision and mission of the university. He praised the management for giving support for the conference.

    In their separate keynote presentations, Prof Richard Cooper of Temple University in Philadelphia, Unite States, Prof Olufemi Bamiro, former VC of University of Ibadan (UI), and Prof Ibukun Williams, Director, AAUA Leadership Institute for Public Policy and Sustainable Development, outlined a number of recommendations for the promotion of entrepreneurship opportunities in the country.

  • Ogun, administrators affirm commitment to pension administration

    Ogun, administrators affirm commitment to pension administration

    The Ogun State Government has told Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) handling the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) of Local Governments and State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) workers  to rise up to their responsibility and build an harmonious relationship with their clients.

    The Permanent Secretary, Bureau of Local Government Pensions, Mr. Ayotunde Kolawole, gave this vice at a meeting between the Bureau and representatives of all PFAs covering the State at the Bureau’s office in Abeokuta, the state capital.

    Kolawole told the PFAs to always be available and accessible to serving employees and retirees, saying this could only be possible if the PFAs have adequate personnel with functional offices in the state capital as provided for in the relevant section of the Pension Reform Law.

    He said as part of the Bureau’s monitoring and supervisory roles, it would begin to pay unscheduled visits to the PFAs offices to ascertain the level of compliance of this section of the Law by the PFAs.

    The present administration, he said, was committed to making life after service more enjoyable for retirees, urging the PFAs to collaborate with the state government in order to achieve the set goals.

  • VC task varsity administrators on innovation

    VC task varsity administrators on innovation

    The Vice-Chancellor, Federal University Lokoja, Prof Abdulmumini Rafindadi, has highlighted the significance of good administrators in the university system.

    Extolling their role in the system, Rafindadi described them as the backbone for the survival of university education.

    Rafindadi, who made the submission in an address delivered at the inauguration of the local chapter of Association of Nigerian University Administrators, at Adankolo, Kogi State, called for their commitment, and urged them to always spare a thought for human capacity building and innovativeness.

    His words: “Just as the teaching staff constantly update themselves and search for excellence, so the professional administrators in the university should seek, through training and re-training to keep up with the global best practices. Therefore, with the inauguration of the ANUPA, Federal University Lokoja branch, it is my utmost belief that our administrators in this university are moving in the right direction.

    “The roles of professional administrators in universities cannot be overlooked. Their duties are essentially for the smooth running and development of the institution.

    “For the university administrators to continue to excel and be relevant in years ahead, there is need for concerted effort of all stakeholders to, as a matter of importance, deliberately begin innovation in their service delivery in such a manner that their relative relevance becomes sine qua non for the survival of the system. This can only be attained through a deliberate plan.”

    National President, ANUPA Mr. Samuel Mwansat, praised Rafindadi for his commitment towards establishment of ANUPA at FUL.