Tag: AMERICANS

  • Poll: Majority of Americans disapprove of handling of economy

    Poll: Majority of Americans disapprove of handling of economy

    As many as 58% disapprove of U.S. President Donald Trump’s handling of the economy, dropping to its lowest level since December of 2017, according to a poll released by the AP-NORC Centre for Public Affairs Research.

    The poll, conducted on March 20-24 among 1,229 adults, found that about seven in 10 describe the state of the economy as “poor,” a level of negativity that has remained unchanged since the final weeks of Joe Biden’s presidency in December 2024, when the question was last asked.

    “Trump’s overall job approval is essentially the same as it was when he took office for the first time in 2017, though lower than Joe Biden’s at the beginning of his term,” the poll said.

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    The survey also examined Trump’s policies on migration, foreign conflicts, and trade.

    Asked about the president’s handling of immigration, 49% said they approve, while 50% disapproved.

    On the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” 54% disapprove of Trump’s approach, while 44% approve.

    His handling of “trade negotiations with other countries,” amid international criticism of tariffs, received 60% disapproval compared to 38% approval.

    On the Russia-Ukraine war, 56% said they disapprove of Trump’s stance, while 41% approve.

  • Clinton rallies Americans for Harris

    Clinton rallies Americans for Harris

    Former United States (U.S.) Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has issued a call to Americans to rally around the presumptive Democratic nominee, Kamala Harris, saying that the “time for hand-wringing is over” and the challenge now is to mobilise around her “unifying vision”.

    Read Also: APC leader warns Nigerians, says protest may have negative consequences

    Writing in the New York Times, the former secretary of state and two-time Democratic presidential candidate said she was “excited” about the prospects of Harris taking on and defeating Donald Trump in the November election.

  • 11 Americans discover Nigerian roots in New York

    11 Americans discover Nigerian roots in New York

    No fewer than 11 Americans have discovered their link to Nigeria, thanks to ancestry DNA testing.

    Several others were also discovered to have their roots linked to eight African countries, among which are Cameroon, The Gambia, Senegal, Ghana, and Niger Republic.

    The 11 Americans were discovered to have Nigerian lineages of Igbo, Hausa, Fulani, Yoruba, Yoruba-Fulani, Hausa-Fulani and Fulani-Kanuri.

    They are Maleeka Harris, Shatara Corbett, Abel Watson, Darryl Rattray, Antonia Coleman-Brown, Nicole Williams, Pablo Blanco, Estena Turner, William Conley, Keith Howard, and Gina Paige.

    The Consulate-General of Nigeria in New York became a centre of cultural revelation as the Americans converged on the Nigerian embassy.

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    The emotional ‘African Ancestry Reveal’ ceremony, according to a statement, held at the Nigeria House in New York. It highlighted the deep, historical connections between Nigeria and the African Diaspora, sparking excitement and pride among attendees.

    The statement from the information desk of the Consulate, signed by Tiamiyu Arobani, quoted the Consul-General of Nigeria in New York, Amb. Abubakar Jidda, saying the discovery of Nigerian ancestry not only bridged cultural gaps, but also celebrated the enduring bonds between Nigeria and the global African community.

    It reads: “Nigeria, with its rich tapestry of cultures and history, stands as a leader within the African continent. And we have continued to celebrate this shared heritage. So, Nigeria welcomes you. The Consulate offers various educational and cultural opportunities aimed at promoting cultural exchanges.

  • Americans lose valuables to robbers

    Three Americans have lost their travel documents, money, phones and other valuables to traffic robbers at Oshodi.

    It was gathered that the incident occurred on November 6, around 8:20pm, while the visitors were on their way to Victoria Island from the Muritala Mohammed International Airport (MMIA).

    The victims, whose names were not disclosed, were said to be working for a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) in the United States (U.S) and were in the country to attend a programme.

    The victims were issued new travel documents and returned to America.

    According to a security expert, Seyi Adetayo, who shared the ordeal of the American nationals on social media, the victims were attacked by four men, who surrounded the vehicle conveying them to Eko Hotel.

    He said: “They arrived Lagos at about 5pm and were stuck in a traffic gridlock for about three hours in Oshodi.  Their vehicle was attacked around 8:20pm around Oshodi axis.  The assailants were four in number. They surrounded the vehicle.  Immediately, the two at the back smashed the windows and yelled at them “where is the money? One of the passengers lost her laptop, wallet, cash and travel passport.  The second colleague lost her IPhone.

    “The case was reported at Ilupeju Police Station the next day and we were informed that a lot of robbery attacks took place around that place and time. We were also told that two Britons just left the police station, they were attacked and also lost all their valuables, including their passports, bags, phones etc.

    “We were advised that pending when the Oshodi construction work would be completed, once it is 4pm we should take the international/local airport axis to Maryland and make a turn towards Ojota to connect Alapere to the third mainland.

    “They confirmed that Maryland towards Anthony to connect with the bridge is also not safe.  We are also approaching the festive period and need to be more security conscious.”

    Adetayo told The Nation that a colleague of his who works with the victims’ establishment, was the originator of the post, adding that he only shared it on social media for motorists to be conscious.

  • Envoy: Americans love buying Nigerian products

    Envoy: Americans love buying Nigerian products

    The United States (U.S) Ambassador to Nigeria, Stuart Symington, has said many Americans enjoy buying Nigerian products because of their uniqueness and creativity.

    He said there were constraints militating against Nigerian products, including the quality of the products, scale of production and the value chain, which he said deter investors and consumers from getting the products into the American market through partnership.

    According to him, capturing the domestic market for the consumer can be useful to getting through to investors and consumers in the world so long as th manufacturers keep to the standard of packaging and processing.

    Stuart spoke at the weekend in Lagos at the two-day African Foods and Products Exhibition Conference, also called Nigerian-American Business Day, organised by the Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce (NACC).

    It was with the theme: Unlocking Market Opportunities for Global Competitiveness.

    Recalling years ago when the country used to be the food basket of Africa, Symington said Nigerian producers fed West Africa until it found oil and gas and stopped producing and exporting.

    The envoy said the nation then became too dependent on oil and gas with heavy government control.

    He said: “What kind of democracy can Nigeria have if the people depend on government instead of the government depending on the people?

    “When I listen to Nigerians doing business again and networking again and producing again, I hear not only prospects of the future but also footsteps of the past and of family members: fathers and grandparents and friends who once made Nigeria a great platform for business through their handwork.

    “All have the power to change Nigeria and the world through one seed and inspiration because what is at stake is your country. We may not know the exact number of our population, but everyone knows that Nigeria is getting bigger and so is the opportunity and challenges.”

    After his tour of exhibitors’ pavilions, he described the handcrafts and food as just what the American people will want and like.

    Stuart added: “What I have seen is the next level of inspiration and creativity. I have seen hundreds of Nigerians make something of value to share with the world. These products are good and will not be in competition with anyone but the world and that is why I enjoin entrepreneurs to take advantage of the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) to stimulate success in Africa so that they can transform the world through their own resources.

    America has a goal to ensure that Nigeria succeeds and that the country grows stronger, richer, healthier productive and self-sufficient.”

    NACC President Olabintan Famutimi said the event has attracted over 100 SMEs, MSMEs and start-up business owners to exhibit their products to international buyers.

    According to him, the key focus of the event is the amplification and encouragement of investment in the non-oil sector which has been largely untapped and underdeveloped.

    “Opportunities exist locally which we need to harness and showcase globally. Nigeria is desperate for economic diversification”.

    Famutimi urged exporters to find out if their export is eligible for duty waiver; exporters should find out what they need to do to be AGOA ready and those simply into trade and commerce should seize the opportunity to grow and develop their capacity.

     

  • Why Americans are not doing business in Nigeria – US Envoy

    Why Americans are not doing business in Nigeria – US Envoy

    United States Consul General in Lagos, John Bray has said lack of access to foreign currency and inconsistency of duty payments are some of the reasons why Americans refrain from doing business in Nigeria.

    He said though Americans see the Nigerian market as massive, young and growing, but lack of transparency with government and inadequate infrastructure to support value change scare potential investors from doing business in the country.

    The US Envoy also listed the ever rising and unpredictable energy cost and security concerns for its personnel and investments as some other challenges that inhibit his country from doing business here.

    Bray, who has served as consul general in Lagos for over a year, spoke Tuesday during the Nigerian-American Chamber of Commerce (NACC) business dialogue with the theme: Improving the Ease of Doing Business in Nigeria, where he gave these as reason why Nigeria rates an “intolerably low” 169 of the 190 countries on the World Bank Index of Ease of doing Business Rating.

    The Envoy however lauded the Federal Government Recovery and Growth Plan initiative as a one-stop shop whose success will be determined by executing its plan and a common resolve and commitment of government and civil societies to work together in new and innovative ways.

    “I can promise the US Government will be Nigeria’s biggest cheerleader and we will be available with ideas, programmes, and media connections to strengthen Nigeria’s economy.

    “We at the Lagos Consulate and Embassy in Abuja know of these challenges and tend to sit on the positive side of this pendulum. We know that the challenges are small and Nigeria has the talent, resources and ability to fix all these problems I have mentioned.

    “Have actionable ideas and know that you don’t need to solve the problems all at once, but start with something manageable,” he added.

    On his part, NACC President Olabintan Famutimi noted that as a bilateral chamber, it is ever ready to mobilise investments from the US to Nigeria and attract prospective investors and enable Nigeria attain her potentials in the comity of nations.

    He however commended government for establishing the Enabling Business Environment Council geared towards improving Nigeria’s poor ranking on the global ease of doing business index and the upgrade of the Corporate Affairs Commission online portal to ensure document upload capabilities.

    On inconsistency in government policies, Famutimi said: “Onerous regulations, multiple taxes and unfriendly government officials can divert the energies of entrepreneurs from developing businesses.”

    He also said government has not demonstrated integrity and has been most notorious in failing to pay its debt and honouring contractual obligations.

    President of the Nigerian Stock Exchange, Mr Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, who gave the keynote address, lamented the retrogressive ranking of Nigeria’s index from 94th position in 2006 to 169.

    Reeling out various factors responsible for the decline in service delivery, he noted that Nigerians services are not service oriented but, bureaucratic ineffective and inaccessible.

    The Stock Exchange boss said though there is a 20 percent improvement in tax payments and a 4 percent increase in electricity supply, trading across borders and other aspects of the economy is regressively poor.

    He called for a massive paradigm shift and a change in the attitude and capability of those at the gates and public servants as a necessary means of changing Nigeria’s ease of doing business ranking.

    Giving an insight into the thrust of government policy behind the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC) model, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Industry, Trade and Investment, Jumoke Oduwole called for strong political will of leaders; interministerial collaboration and the cooperation of Millennium Development Agencies.

     

  • Americans are in for a surprise

    Americans are in for a surprise

    AT the risk of being more catholic than the Pope, it makes sense to warn the United States to watch their president-elect more closely than they intend to do if their society is not to be upended and its power abridged. Just like Ekiti State cut its nose to spite its face by voting the constantly agitated and unprepared Ayo Fayose into office as governor, and Nigerians also damned their genuine fears to vote Muhammadu Buhari, the militician who by antecedents and disposition nurses a permanent grudge against democracy.

    Of course, Americans on the whole know what lies ahead of them, even if they voted as if they were ignorant of the ripple effects of that wildly capricious vote. If that were not so, they would not have voted for Hillary Clinton by more than three million votes over that of Donald Trump. They know, and have reiterated it in poll after poll, that Mr Trump is fundamentally and temperamentally incapable of ruling a complex and powerful country like the U.S. But as everyone knows, anger, if given free rein, sometimes trumps common sense. Now, Americans will have to lie on their bed as they made it.

    Before voting him in, Americans seemed resigned to enduring Mr Trump’s abrasiveness, coarseness, ribaldry, poor judgement, and ignorance about how the world’s power dynamics work. But it is doubtful whether they ever imagined their president-elect could so unabashedly discountenance intelligence briefings from their highly-rated secret service. Now, they seem horrified that by dismissing intelligence reports on Russian-inspired hacking of the American system, Mr Trump might be taking his iconoclasm inordinately too far.

    What Americans don’t know, this column and many others fear, is that the president-elect is not just being iconoclastic or unorthodox. The fact is that Mr Trump is almost wholly devoid of an understanding of the world system, especially the counterpoise the Russians constitute to America’s global dominance. For decades, Americans had elected presidents who, never needing any help, were fundamentally and wholly suspicious of Russia. Now, for the first time in recent memory, they have elected someone into office who is fundamentally and almost unerringly pro-Russia. Mr Trump is also as anti-China, without any calibration, as he is pro-Russia without any remorse.

    The most pressing danger America will face in the years ahead is how to ensure that Mr Trump does not do irreparable damage to their country’s prestige and power, almost to the point of permanently weakening the U.S. Americans know Mr Trump cannot be redeemed. What they cannot guess at this point is just how far ahead enemies of America will outpace them in the years to come, and how much their friends and allies will be alienated, thereby inadvertently ceding control to all manner of state and regional adventurers.

  • African Basketball League: Two Americans join Lagos Warriors

    African Basketball League: Two Americans join Lagos Warriors

    To boost its chances of doing well in the inaugural African Basketball League (ABL), which is expected to begin next month, Lagos Warriors’ have signed two American players who arrived Nigeria yesterday.

    The players – Tony Freeland and Melvin Goins II – touched down at the Murtala Mohammed Airport into the waiting arms of the team’s delegation led by Joseph Apu. Others who were at the airport to receive the new signings are head coach of the team, Joseph Nomigo and team manager, Bimbo Mash.

    Apu said the arrival of the players would bring competition into the team, as players battle for places in the starting line-up. He also said the arrival of the Americans would create a healthy rivalry among the players and encourage them to be at the highest level always. He stated that the team would become stronger and compete for honours in the ABL.

    The players are expected to make their debut on March 9 when Warriors take on Stallions at the Landmark Centre in Lagos. Apu stated that the game was postponed to allow the new players settle down, while one or two other games might take place early next month in different centres in the continent.

    Freeland, a 6’7 forward is expected to bring bite to the Warriors attack, while Goins 5’11 will operate from the point guard position.

    Other teams that would be involved in the privately-run league are Lagos Islanders, Stallions, Lagos City Chiefs, Dakar Rapids (Senegal) Abidjan Ramblers ( Cote D’Ivoire) and Izobe Basketball Club from Libreville, Gabon.

    At the launch of the league, Ugo Udezue, CEO of the African Sports Entertainment, emphasised that the ABL was set up primarily for the purpose of improving socio-economic development of the African continent via Tourism and Sports.

    The former professional basketball star said much hard work had gone into making the ABL a huge success right from its first season and that he was confident the dream tied to the project would be realised soon.

    Ugo said: “Yes, we are the investors in ABL, but the credit does not belong to us. We are a private entity, but profits are not our motivation. If it was just about profits I won’t be in the project.

    “If it was profit we don’t have to pay players the way we are going to because the market value doesn’t dictate hat we do. Yes we have worked hard to put together this opportunity but the credit goes to the cities that we will represent like Lagos State, Abidjan, Libreville, Dakar. Our purpose is larger than ourselves; our purpose is not for today but to lay the groundwork in sports for our future generations. ‘’

    Ugo added that the goal of the ABL was to create jobs and build an ecosystem that benefits the African environment.

  • The Americans are changing our world

    The revolution is here but it will only be televised…at least for now. We had hoped that when the revolution comes we would all be on the street looking for a brighter day. Instead, we sit on to watch with gloom as the revolution unfolds on our TV and mobile phone screens. This was not the revolution we dreamed. This revolution would not consult with us. This revolution that has started in America would continue to unfold and we know that it would not be long before it casts its shadow over us.

    This month has been a very busy one for the American-born revolution and although there are many events to choose from, which can highlight the ominous nature of this revolution, I would cite just one – the U.S Supreme Court’s ruling legalising gay marriage all across America delivered on June 26, 2015.

    Gay marriage ruling is ‘a victory for America’. It’s a well-known fact that Judges who preside over proceedings in the apex court of any country are heads of governments as well. It is, perhaps, even a well-known fact that these Judges are neither subordinate to nor inferior to their colleagues in the legislative and executive arms of government. What may be a relatively unknown fact is that although only Americans alone recognise the ‘wisdom’ and decisions of the Judges of the apex court in the U.S as law, these decisions are often noted, cited and even respected by many other national courts in the world and with the efflux of time they soon become absorbed into the general corpus of regional and international law and standards.

    The U.S Supreme Court seldom speaks but when it does, it speaks with a force so powerful that it can reverse or change the course of the entire U.S nation and possibly the whole world. This is exactly what it did on June 26, 2015 when it legalised same-sex marriages all across the U.S. This decision affirmed the popular consensus among Americans that all love is love and that gay sex is the new cool and that same-sex couples are welcome in the U.S. As I write this, marriage licences are being issued to same-sex couples all across the U.S and I can hear the shouts of jubilation on the streets of Illinois. This is very disturbing, indeed.

    Disturbing, because we know that what is accepted and practiced in the U.S must be accepted and practiced everywhere in the world. The U.S would stop short at nothing but seeing the practice of gay sex become accepted and protected by all countries in the world. The U.S will use its diplomats, dollars and drones to coerce other nations into compliance. Before you brand me homophobic, ponder this: If homosexuality is freely and openly practiced in a community it would not be long before every member in that community indulges in it. Sympathisers of gay rights argue that some people are born gay and that since gay sex is an individual’s private affair, the society has no moral basis to interfere in the affairs of gay people. This argument is faulty on the ground that sexual orientation stems not from a person’s gene but from a person’s will. Permit me to say that it is a plain fact that all men are born gay. We are all born with innate desires and lusts which, if we are willing, we can express in an innumerable number of ways. Since the beginning of time, societies realised this and abhorred it and they prohibited and even suppressed it. In the past, inter-racial marriages were disallowed world over, but see how many inter-racial unions there has been since it became legalised. The same can be said of osu marriages. And equally the same can be said of same-sex marriages.

    Now, starting with the Americans, the world is beginning to permit and recognise same-sex marriages. Soon enough, every known moral and legal boundary that cages man’s wild libido would be abolished. Picture living in a city where everyman lies with other men and goats. So, even as we sit and watch with gloom as the revolution unfolds on our screens, my feet are sandal-strapped and ready for takeoff!

  • Georgia on my map

    Georgia on my map

    (An evening with the Green Eagles)

    Atlanta!!! What a beautiful name , and a beautiful city to match! You must give it to the Americans, whatever other misgivings. They have a knack for coming up with cities of breathtaking beauty, with names infused with brilliant and magical symbolism. Atlanta, Memphis, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Phoenix, Los Angeles, New Orleans—which presupposes an old Orleans, and many more. It takes some breathless confidence in one’s manifest destiny as God’s anointed nation to take these old world names and infuse them with new world possibilities.

    The Americans thought they were founding the world anew; a new nation with shinning possibilities which will serve as a beacon for others; a great new human citadel on the hills which would be impossible to ignore and unwise to trifle with. It did not occur to them that the foundation of this new world was laid on the brutal expropriation and summary annihilation of some older civilisations. The native Indians themselves had probably pillaged some earlier and older civilisations. This is a classic example of creative destruction which the world will learn to forgive and forget in order to move on.

    So, when the cultural hubris of founding a new world works for America, it works spectacularly well, creating beauty out of the ugliness of man’s inhumanity to man and glittering monuments out of the back-breaking labour of the formally and informally enslaved. In the western world, you do not need to be formally enslaved to be a slave, as the white underclass are finding out. All that is required is to be on the wrong side of the economic orrery, which is the case for ninety nine percent of the populace.

    When cultural hubris becomes political hubris, it leads to the apocalypse of Vietnam and the Dante’s inferno of contemporary Iraq. It did not occur to America that the Vietnamese are a proud, doughty and hardy race who would not brook being politically dictated to by a young brash country. They had been doing their own thing for almost a millennium before America came to be. The lessons were never learnt.

    It was noted by George Santayana, the fabled Spanish philosopher, that those who refuse to learn from history are condemned to repeat the past. When America was invading Iraq to remove Saddam Hussein, the old chicken rustler from Tikrit, they were told that it was not easy to change the mindset of a people formed over a thousand years overnight. Democracy cannot be externally imposed. It can only be internally induced through a slow transformation of mindset, attitude and institutional impedimenta. Trillions of dollar after, the result is the apocalyptic mess and roiling carnage of contemporary Iraq and the liquidation of American fiscal liquidity.

    Almost two thousand years earlier, the captured and enslaved Israeli tribe had captured the tragic dilemma for humanity and posterity in a moving elegy and on the same confluence of Tigris and Euphrates rivers:

    By the rivers of Babylon

    Where we sat down

    And then we wailed

    When we remember Zion

    For the wicked carried us away in captivity

    And required from us a song

    How can we sing King Alpha’s song in a strange land?

    But tonight, Wednesday, 5th of March, in the year of our lord, 2014, an arctic freeze had overtaken normally warm and cosy Atlanta. Everybody was dressed like a Siberian wayfarer, and this in early March. Incredible. A glum and icy reserve had taken over the normally jaunty populace. This was not the Atlanta one was used to. A denizen of its more familiar haunts and of the old and imperious state of Georgia itself, Snooper was returning after a ten year leave of absence. Ray Charles, the old crooner of the magical metropolis, would have stirred in his grave, bewildered by the frosty formality.

    The great and good thing about America is that it is a land of ceaseless self-invention. You leave a city for one year and upon your return, you are lost in the maze of new developments and glittering new suburbs. Within a decade, Atlanta had undergone an amazing transformation. Tonight, one was beginning to feel like good old Rip van Winkle who had come back from the dead. Could this magical emporium be the new Atlantis? And then panic began to give way to certainty and certitude as the mind locked into the central highway with the sign to Macon and Birmingham in Alabama.

    You now had a measure of the old geography. To the South East of Atlanta and about three hours journey by road or an hour by air lay the beautiful historic city of Savannah in all its Gothic gorgeousness. Like a beautiful treasure, Savannah is frozen in time, a classic example of a living city as one vast alluring museum. It was said that General William Tecumseh Sherman was so enthralled by the surreal charms of the city that he refrained from putting it to sword. He had offered it instead as an 1864 Christmas present to Abe Lincoln.

    It is not just the weather and urbana that are changing in America. Everything else appears to be changing as well. The Capone Capitalism by which America was able to impose its will and might on the rest of the world appears to have run its course. Some other Capone nations are appearing on the hazy horizons. Good old Babylon and the old Western nemesis of Afghanistan have upended the American apple cart. There is time for everything.

    Consequently and even more dangerously, democracy itself appears to be losing its shine and gloss. While China with its state capitalism, its audacious and cheerfully authoritarian system, routinely lifts more people out of poverty and the debt trap into a rapidly expanding middle class, the Obama reform has virtually collapsed under the weight of an institutional gridlock and democratic deadlock. Developing nations are not unlikely to notice the dangerous developments from America.

    The Chinese, like some of their fabled generals of literary lore, appear content with watching America slowly dissolve under the weight of its own historic contradictions without firing a single shot. The Russians are not so sanguine or strategically savvy. Under Tsar Vladmir Putin, it is unlikely that the west has heard the last from Russia. The old Russian bear is not dead after all. It has only recovered from its catatonic stupor. While America is wringing its hand about what to do in Ukraine, its response oscillating between studied equivocation and downright confusion, Putin is relentlessly raising the stakes. Russian hyper-nationalism is proving far more dangerous than communist radicalism.

    Lest we forget why we were actually in Atlanta, it was to watch the Green Eagles play their Mexican counterparts. Soccer is unarguably the single most unifying factor for Nigeria and Nigerians. As it ever so happens with the nation itself, most Nigerians who follow the Green Eagles are gluttons for punishment often enduring disastrous defeats or dismal self-destruction on the field of play. Four years earlier after watching the Green Eagles in Durban plunge to the very nadir of their fortunes in a remarkably inept display which saw to their ouster from the World Cup, yours sincerely had vowed never to have anything to do with the national team again.

    But hope springs eternally from the Nigerian heart. Besides, there is no killing the eagles. They have ratcheted up some fine and impressive performances under the able generalship of Stephen Keshi. They have emerged from the depths of despair and destruction to give some outstanding displays. For Snooper, what did it was the moment Mba’s winning goal crashed through the Ivorian defence on the team’s way to winning the last African championship. It was a marvelous outing. The eagles of yore were back.

    By a remarkable coincidence, Atlanta was also the scene of the Eagles greatest triumph till date when they won the soccer gold medal at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. Snooper had been watching the classic game against Brazil with his son in faraway in England. It was past midnight when Brazil suddenly went three goals up to Nigeria’s lone goal. With an angry scowl, the boy headed for bed claiming that he was tired of further punishment.

    In one of the most remarkable upsets and incredible come-back in footballing history, the eagles went on to beat Brazil and to outclass Argentina in the final . Eighteen years later, and at the same venue of the Eagles greatest triumph, one was hoping for another outstanding performance against another notable Latin American footballing nation. The atmosphere was electrifying.

    Strangely enough, the massive din from a million Mexican vuvuzela reminds one of the end of the Aztec empire when a handful of Spanish adventurers put the ancient civilisation to sword. It could have been part of the military strategy of the Aztec warriors, but many believed that the din could only have come from the offended Gods of the Aztec people. This evening, it is the Aztec hordes that seemed to have invaded America. It was as if Mexico itself has emptied into the massive Georgia dome in Atlanta and spilled over to adjoining areas. It was an endless column of men, women, the young and the old, all draped in green.

    The Green Eagles refused to be fazed by the overwhelming numerical superiority of the Mexican supporters. Even at the nadir of their fortunes, something could always be said for the superb confidence and militant self-belief of these boys. It is a self-belief that often tips into overconfidence and sheer irresponsibility. But they seemed to have reined this in for now.

    After some opening cautious probes from both sides, it was obvious that the match was evenly poised in terms of physique and flair. The Mexicans have had some outstanding successes with their junior teams, and some of these boys are now beginning to come through and into their own. Ranked nineteenth in the world soccer pecking order as against Nigeria’s forty seventh, the Mexican whizz kids could be forgiven for initially thinking that this was going to be a routine work out against inferior opponents.

    In the event, it was the Eagles that first took the battle to their opponents, but the Mexicans immediately responded. This culminated in a series of misses on both sides. Judging by the dramatic manner in which the vuvuzela went quiet, it was clear the Mexican crowd were not expecting the kind of robust response and daring incursions from an African team. But towards the end of the first half, the Mexican team increased pressure on the Eagles and the goalkeeper was forced to make a series of brilliant saves.

    For most of the second half, the match stalemated into a technical affair with some good chances fluffed by both teams. The Mexicans in particular did not appear to have much appetite for adventurous forays, preferring to catch the Eagles on the offensive rebound. At the end of 90 minutes, there was nothing to separate the two teams. Although the match ended in a goalless draw, it was by no means dreary and unexciting.

    Yes, Stephen Keshi seems to have the nucleus of a very good team. This was not the dismal eagles one watched in Durban, South Africa almost four years ago. Some of the new eagles, particularly Leon Balogun, held their own. But a lot of work still needs to be done. Legendary failings persist. The strikers still seem to lack the killer instincts of all predators. Rather than calm marksmanship in front of goals, there were too many blind and wild shootings.

    Mikel Obi had a good game, but he is too much of a defensive ball-holding midfielder to function as a creative playmaker. The Eagles still need that visionary libero and game-changer who can impose his will on the midfield even as he determines the tempo and pace of the match with perfectly weighted passes. Let the eagles’ officials watch this match again. The forward often had to drop deep to collect the ball while making their way forward. It points to the absence of the master midfielder. It is our prayer that Keshi finds this supremely gifted Nigerian before June.

    On and off the pitch, what cannot be taken away from Nigerians is a natural flair for the dramatic. You cannot beat Nigeria when it comes to what is known as chutzpah. The classic instance of chutzpah is the case of the young fellow who killed his parents but then went on to ask the court to be lenient with him on the grounds that he was an orphan. On Wednesday morning in Atlanta, Snooper made discreet inquiries about the Minister of Sports, Bolaji Abdullahi, an old pen-pusher on the back page of This Day. The Nigerian official chuckled and then grunted: “Sir, he has just been fired!!!.”

    Your mind immediately raced to WAWA, the colonial acronym of frustration about the impossible ways of Africans. WAWA means West Africa Wins Again. You cannot win Nigeria, as they will say in pidgin English. But this sudden political execution notwithstanding, Nigerian officialdom was at its most impressive and productive in Atlanta thanks to the likes of Demola Olajire, Ayodeji Tinubu, Chris Green, Musa Ahmadu the Secretary of NFF and Honorable Godfrey Gaiya, the Chairman of the House Committee on Sports.

    With his understated old world charms and civility, Aminu Maigari, the Chairman of NFF, stands a very good chance of leading the Nigerian Football Federation to greater glory. It has been a beautiful night in Atlanta. Georgia will be on the mind for a long time to come.