Tag: Igali

  • Igali: The other side of a classic diplomat

    The atmosphere at the banquet hall of Sheraton Hotels Abuja, Tuesday, November 4, was striking. It reflected an admixture of the unique essentials of man’s place in history and history’s place in man.

    The occasion, Book Reading, a rewording of the normal Nigerian book presentation, saw the unveiling of ‘Perspectives on Nation-state Formation in Contemporary Africa’ and ‘Global Trends in State Formation’, two books written by Ambassador Godknows Igali, Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Power. It was supposed to be a simple event. But it turned out a big ceremony, which not only captured the deep meaning and worth of the author’s intervention in the critical issues of the contemporary world society, particularly the domestic scenarios of Nigeria and Africa, but also an elaborate and consummate celebration and testimonial of his person and work over the decades.

    The rich presence of the doyens of the diplomatic corps, the academia, traditional institutions, the professions, public and private sector, the military and security apparatchik and even politics was indicative of not only his presence in the commanding heights of these critical arenas, but his personal touch and contributions to and in them as well.

    Expectedly, such a diverse outing presented a natural habitat for interrogating the critical issues confronting Nigeria, especially with its current challenges. Of course, the books in question, stoking some of the essentials, became the guide.

    Alhaji Yayale Ahmed, former Head of Service of the Federation, as the chairman of the occasion was full of praises for the author’s vision in putting his thoughts together in this regard, stressing the importance of such efforts in finding lasting solution to Nigeria’s very dire situation, especially the current threat to its very existence as a result of persistent security crisis.

    Laced with some witty comments, which roused the audience and scintillated the atmosphere, the nation’s former number one civil servant stressed why Nigeria must not shirk the responsibility of building a new society in spite of the odds.

    Describing Igali as passionate towards the Nigerian project, he said Nigerians must realise why the unity of the country is inviolable. His words: “We can only do that if we recognise the duty of contributing our quota and giving our support to our leaders, that is the powers-that-be. So long as we do not realise the beauty and the essence of being together in this country, we will continue to deceive ourselves. The work of God is what we should accept and live as brothers’ keepers and stop deceiving ourselves as a nation. This book reading is an opportunity to rekindle our hope that all is well and all will be well for Nigeria, insha allah!”

    The unveiling of the books by elder statesman, Chief Edwin Kiagbodo Clark after a short welcome remark by the author, opened the floodgate for the reactions to flow from all corners of the hall, which was almost filled to capacity. Professor Ehiedu Iweriebor of the Department of Africana Studies, Hunter College City University, New York, and Professor Olayemi Akinwumi of the Department of History, Nasarawa State University, anchored two different sessions where eminent scholars provided the intellectual grilling of the books.

    The variance of personalities and voices regardless, a clear point was made that Nigeria could fix itself if it were able to rely on the positive side of its history and that the author had provided the template through which it could be achieved.

    As Deputy Governor of Sokoto State, Alhaji Muktar Shagari succinctly surmised: “What we are saying here today is how we can agree to live together under one nation. How can we agree that each person from the North to the South will have the same rights? As long as we believe that one group is better than the other, we can never get there. We must agree that every child no matter how disadvantaged from birth will have the same rights with even the son of the President. God put Nigeria together with 250 ethnic groups. God has a purpose. That purpose is that we should live together in peace and harmony.”

    Echoing these sentiments, Ambassador Martin Ihoeghian Uhomoibhi, recently retired Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and one of Igali’s soul-mates, said the author besides addressing domestic issues had also helped in addressing some of the misconceptions in the international realm.

    “What Ambassador Igali has done is a major contribution to the intellectual heritage of our great country. There was a time when a scholar, Hugh Trevor-Roper, at Cambridge University declared that Africa had no history; that the history of Africa was nothing but a gyration of some barbarous tribes in some picturesque and obscure corner of the globe and that the rest was darkness and that darkness was not part of history. Of course he has since fallen into disrepute. But it goes to underscore the need to record our past, because if you do not and if we are not mindful of the past we are coming from, we cannot understand the intricacies of the present and we cannot fathom out what the future will look like,” he said.

    Igali himself, stated his objective thus: “My motivation came as a result of my observation that in Africa, we worry a lot about our political problems and try to compare ourselves rather unfairly with some of the other democracies like Europe and America without realising that the historical antecedents and trajectory are not the same. As we saw in the discussions after the 30years war in Europe – 1618-1648; there was another 100years between that, they had been fighting. But the process of nations came with the treaty of Westphalia in 1648. It was negotiated. People sat down on the table to say how do we live together? You know unlike the kind of national conference we held, theirs was never held within a day or months. It took years upon years. Diplomats came and princes sat down and negotiated on how to live together and since then they have been trying to build on their democracies to fine-tune and perfect them. This is what we are doing. The President, this year, put on course the National Conference; although those books came much more before the national conference, but this kind of forum create opportunities for us.

    “We have tried to show the best case practices that we have done – Federal Character, National Youth Service Corps, Federal Government Colleges – things we have tried to do to make us realise that we are one people. So, I’m happy. We also looked at why some states collapsed like USSR and other states survived despite the political turmoil and ethnic complications.”

    Noting the unfolding trend of a new pan-Nigerianism in the country, he stressed: “If you watch, the time of my own parents, if you say you want to marry outside an ethnic group, it was an exception. In my own generation we are a little in-between. But today with our children you just marry who you like. So, almost all young people these days are not constrained by tribe. The language of tribe, tongue and so on is no more the big thing. If you ask any priest today, they will tell you that most of the marriages are across ethnic lines. So, we are becoming one community, we are becoming one country. Those cleavages are being broken. And I think it is very good for our country and over some time, you will not hear people saying I’m this ethnic group, I’m that ethnic group, you will hear people say I’m a Nigerian, the way an American will say I’m an American.”

    However, the pulsating vibes of a dream new Nigeria, the robust exchanges, the endless accolades, and the general enthusiasm, which hallmarked the event seems to run on the same track with the aggregating takeaway that Igali belongs to the enviable roll call of men and women daily burning the midnight candle to find solutions to the country’s problems rather than using their positions to create or exacerbate them.

    Just as Yayale posited, Igali’s activities in his current post is an ample testimony of this rabid passion to mend the crooked ways and fill the craters along the way of building a viable, beautiful Nigeria. Quite apt.

    In what seems a confirmation of President Goodluck Jonathan’s ability for finding the best men for each job, Igali was posted to the Ministry of Power almost at the same time with the helmsman, Prof. Chinedu Nebo to tackle the problems confronting one of Nigeria’s most critical sectors. The perfect alchemy that resulted from the blend of the rich experience of Nebo as a first-class engineer, a teacher and university administrator and Igali, the quintessential diplomat, civil servant and scholar, for instance dealt with, as effortlessly as a hot knife on butter, the labour issues that created a chaotic and almost comatose situation, which had threatened to stymie the privatisation process and essentially led to the seamless progression of the power sector to its current status of a robust, virile and humongous phenomenon, through which the hope of the envisaged socio-economic transformation of the country is becoming real by the day.

    No doubt, Igali’s example in ceaselessly trying to find solutions to the nation’s problems, as attested at that event, aggregates to Nebo’s depiction of a cathedral builder – one who builds not just for earning a living, but building for the society. Nigerians must be cathedral builders.

     

    •Igboanugo writes from Abuja  

  • Nigeria ‘ll gain more from wrestling’s return to Olympics —Igali

    Nigeria ‘ll gain more from wrestling’s return to Olympics —Igali

    Hon. Daniel Igali needs no introduction when it comes to sports in Nigeria. The Nigeria Wrestling Federation president was among the five delegates of the International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles (Fila) that made presentation to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) that voted in favour of reinstating Wrestling in its games for the 2020 and 2024 Olympics. In this chat with SportingLife’ AKEEM LAWAL shortly after returning from the World Wrestling Championship in Hungary,the Olympic gold medalist reveals  what Nigeria tends to gain from the IOC decision, his plans for the federation amongst other issues. Excerpts: 

    Welcome back from the World Wrestling Championship in Hungary to start with, why was Nigeria not represented at the championship?

    I just returned from Budapest on Sunday where I went to watch the World

    Championships. Unfortunately our team could not make it, we were to present three athletes, Iheanacho Ifeoma at 67kg, Blessing Oburududu at 63 kg and Adekuroye Odunayo at 51kg, but we did not get visas. We did apply slightly over two weeks before the tournament and did not get visas. So it’s something I do plan to get to the root of because while I was in Budapest, I saw Congo, Guinea Bissau, Senegal, Cameroun, all of them were there. So why Nigeria should not get visas to attend this kind of championship worries me greatly especially since I’m the president of the federation now.

    Why it also bother me is because when people ask me what my biggest regret has ever been in sports, or my saddest moment in sports, I tell them it was in 1992 when I was supposed to go to an Olympic qualifier in Senegal. I had already made weight but I was dropped here at the Muritala Mohammed Airport because there was no money.

    In this case we even had funds to go but we couldn’t get visas. So I can appreciation and understand how the athletes feel. For me, it’s about the athletes and one of the things I’ve always looked at especially for the coming Olympics is that most of the athletes who will represent us should go for about three world championships. Then we can begin to rate and rank them and eventually know where we can place them in 2016.

    So for them not to have been able to go to this championship, for me it’s very troubling. While I know it was never going to happen is because we should start every process at least six weeks before, but irrespective of that, I still want to get to the root of this to know exactly why the athletes were refused visas.

    You said the federation applied early, does the refusal has anything to do with political issues, or is it that they fear Nigeria attending some of these competitions?

    I think we also have to keep our house in order and that is one of the things we really have to checkmate because all fairness to the NOC president, he was very involved in this process. In fact he even moved to Abuja and stayed there for about three days to intercede and get in touch with the embassy, it was the Slovakian Embassy that was responsible because we don’t have an Hungarian Embassy here. He also recounted to me the problem he had before, where they were supposed to go to a championship and they didn’t have visas and he even involved the minister of foreign affairs and when the ambassador was called, the ambassador told them they just issued visas to about five people a week earlier going to the same competition. That is why I want to really get to the bottom of this because we hit a brick wall. My brother, Dr Godknows Igali who is a former ambassador and permanent secretary of power at the federal level also wrote letters to the ambassador who spent his personal time. So we were very sure that we were going to get visas, but somehow we were rebutted. I need to really know what may have happened so that I can also checkmate it from my end for next time.

    What is in the federation’s calendar for athletes in the little part left this year?

    Next month we have a competition in Egypt the ‘Mustapha International’ and we intend to send about three or four athletes to that Championship. Then we also have a competition in Rio de Jenero in the last week of November, we are going to send a decent team there. We also have the Commonwealth Championships from December 5 to 9 in Johannesburg and you know we have the Commonwealth Games next year. So my plan is to send a full team to Commonwealth Championship because by then we’ll have a gage at how well we can do at the Commonwealth Games. We also have a junior festival (National Sports Festival for junior athletes) that is put together by the National Sports Commission in early November. We will also be having Governor

    Dickson Wrestling Classic in Bayelsa in November. So we now have about five tournaments that we still have a chance to go to which in my mind will be able to adequately prepare our athletes for the coming season next year.

    Do we still have such athletes who performed at the past competitions such as the All Africa Games competing at their top form or are you looking at ways to replace them?

    We have less than half of the ones we had before. We have a few younger athletes which means we need enough time to groom and develop them. There are some older athletes too who have some experience but what we have been talking about for a long time is that they need wrestling experience and that is why the competitions are crucial. If you go to about three to four tournaments this year and we go to about three tournaments next year before the Commonwealth Games, I will be sitting down really comfortably knowing that we are going to compete effectively.

    Now you have to understand that at the Commonwealth, you have two superpowers, Canada and India and I think the India is even the Super Power in wrestling now than Canada. India won a silver and a bronze at the Commonwealth Championship in freestyle at 65kg . At 65kg he should have won, but he lost on criteria. So it was 2-2 between him and Iran and they said he was a bit more passive and that was why they gave it to Iran. There is also a 74kg from India that should have medal, he wrestled for bronze and lost the bronze medal match. So out of seven athletes, you have three of them wrestling in the semi finals, that is a super power in wrestling. They were in the top 10 nations in the world. So we have our work really cut out for us at the Commonwealth level and this is not because it just started this year, India has been putting up a wrestling programme for the past 10 years with Russian coaches, with the budget of over a million dollars for more than ten years and that is why they are getting to this point now.

    Looking at the technical area, is the federation planning to bring in a foreign technical adviser before the Commonwealth Games next year?

    The issue of competences of technical staff also has to do with exposure. If you expose your technical staff, they become world class. But if they are not going to competitions, if they are relegated to Nigeria, then you are going to have sub power technical officials. Everybody on our technical staff is an African champion or has competed at the Commonwealth level, so they are pretty much up to speed. But as you know, there are some more experienced technical expert that we have in other parts of the world. If we really need to up our level of performance, I think we will need some help with one or two technical people that will come and assist the ones the already have. I’m one person who believes in the competences of our people, I’m one person who believes in encouraging our people. I don’t think there is any technical official from any other country that will have the same passion or zeal or more than we have in Nigeria. So there must be a blend if we are bringing in anybody, there must be a blend between that and Nigerian content.

    If we are to bring in anyone, are we looking at Canada or Egypt?

    I will not go for Egypt necessarily, if we have a competent person sure, but now we are looking at United State, Canada, Russia, Cuba, Bulgaria.

    But we must also look for someone who will come here and be able to fit into the Nigerian system. I don’t want to have someone who comes here and within a month says he can’t handle it and goes back, then you start afresh. So for me it’s something we need to look at, sit down, analyse and look for someone who can really do the job, who will take it up as a project not

    someone who will be coming for a paycheck. But someone who will say if I do this I’m going to have a profile at the higher level.

    Assuming you get one and the person is ready to come to Nigeria, does the federation have the resources to fund it, or are you looking forward to government?

    I wouldn’t want to move ahead of what the minister will announce, but there are very robust plans for a rebranding sports system in Nigeria. In the discussions we had, we have brushed the idea of how this people will be funded. I think it will be better left for the National Sports Commission to give more insight into that, but it won’t be wrestling federation. As it stands now, we don’t have those kinds of finances in the federation. We are working towards it; we are looking at working with different partners to see how we can be a little bit more robust in funding with funds from the federation.

    You just came back from Budapest and saw some of the coaches there, did you contact any of them?

    Yes I had some very robust discussions, I won’t disclose names or countries now, but I had some discussions with people who I think may need to come to Nigeria and see the conditions here first before they make up their minds. There is one thing to be far away and look and something and say, well I want to do that and there is another thing to come somewhere and really be there for a week and see if you can be able to handle it. So over the next couple of weeks, there will be a lot of legwork going on with respect to who will come to assist us especially when the NSC is ready to move ahead in that direction.

    As a former wrestler and an Olympic gold medalist, how will you rate our wrestlers worldwide?

    You know there was a lot of hullabaloo just recently about the track and field and how they had not won any medal at the World Championship for 14 year. Well, in wrestling, we won a Bronze medal at the World Championship in 2009, we also won a bronze medal in 2010. In 2011, we wrestled in the semi finals and also wrestled for a bronze, losing the bronze match at the world Championships. So we have athletes who are at that level. If you win a bronze medal at the World Championships, you can win the gold medal, on a good day. If you wrestle for bronze and you lose at the World Championships, you can win a medal on a good day. So I would say we have athletes who, given the necessary support, can win medal in Nigeria right now. But it has to do with consistency, it has to be consistent. if you look at the Super Eagles, every month they are playing a friendly match, it’s not just because they want to play, but it if because they want to get that match fitness, get idea of how to play together and it’s the same for every other sport especially in wrestling, you must compete. A few year ago, Mongolia was nowhere in wrestling, now Mongolia would have won the whole World Championship for women. They started about eight years ago, got new coaches, got a robust budget for wrestling and they are more focused on women and they were second in the world. They won four medals out of seven. So those are the kind of things we need to do and I knew Mongolia was going to do well because every competition you go, Mongolia is there. And what happen even with FILA, our parent body is, if such a country and a country that is not regular is competing in a competition and there is a tie, Mongolia will get it because they are supporting FILA . That is what we need to start doing in Nigeria. I want to be at every championships, I want to be in the US, Iran, Germany, Russia, I want my athletes to be competing about ten times a year internationally. If we start doing that, before you know it, they’ve wrestled everybody in their weight class, if they lose the first time, the second time they could win it.

    At the National Sports Festival, you see some athletes dumping wrestling for another sport. Is it that it is not a very reliable source of livelihood or what?

    This was because of this rule that says athletes can only feature at the Sports Festival three times. You know there was much pressure on the sports councils for some of those athletes. Lots of them were sacked because sports council employs you to perform for them at the festival,not for any championship. So once you are ineligible, you are out of the system. And some of them were ineligible as early as 20 year of age. This is because they went to the first festival at the age of 16, the second one at 18 and the third one at 20 and they were done, they became useless goods to the sports councils. So you have to either go and do other sports to be relevant and be useful or they will do away with you. And if we are now talking of an athlete who we are looking forward to go to the World Championship or the Olympics to do well who has now left wrestling to go and do weightlifting, then what are we talking about. That is why I was one of the advocate for Open Festival and I’m happy that it is open. If the festival is our Olympics, then why will you debar anybody from competing at it? If an athlete is 90 years old somebody should beat them. If you can’t beat them, then let them remain there. So we’ve done that now and in Calabar it’s going to be Open which I think is one of the best things we’ve done to sports. In fact there are no competitions for these so called elite athletes. In some federations, there are no competitions for two years and it’s only the festival. This is because most federations can’t fund championships because they are expensive. Sports generally is expensive, it’s not cheap. That is one of the things I commend the minister on. For having the courage to go against the tide because it was a hot button issue. A lot of states were opposed to it and he put down his foot and insists that this is what he want to do and that is what I like about people with guts.

    If you look at it, from 1991 that we had this system, how have we faired as a country in sports. Nigeria should not be happy for winning one bronze medal at the Olympics, that is not success. From 1991 if you look at the records we had internationally, we’ve not really had any records aside 1996 where we had two performances that were unexpected and we rested on our hoarse. But I do believe we are getting to a point that things will change.

    Talking about your presentation in Argentina, beyond this sport coming back to the Olympics, what do we stand to gain in wrestling?

    Obviously if you are not part of the Olympics you are not in the Olympic movement. I think that is the biggest thing we stand to gain. Firstly, that you will be funded by the federal government. Secondly you have young athletes who will now be saying I want to go to the Olympics. The Olympics is our professional sports, a soccer player wants to play professionally, in England, Germany or Italy, that is his goal. A basketball player’s goal is not to go to the Olympics, it’s to play in NBA. Somebody who plays hockey’s goal is to make it in the NHL. In wrestling, what you want to do is to go to the Olympics. I think that is the biggest thing that we’ve gained. If you want to talk about specific games that Nigerian wrestling will make, I will like to give kudos to the governor of Bayelsa State who wrote a lot of letters to the IOC, to the FILA president and essentially sponsored all my activities around the world for this campaign. Because we were so front and center of this, we now have a one-on-one relationship with the leadership of FILA. I can call the FILA president, Nenad Lalovic now and he will pick up the call and talk to me.

    Bayelsa State is building a state of the art gym dedicated for wrestling only. When I told him about it, he promised to donate all the mats that the gym will need from FILA and that we should let him know when it will be commissioned as he will not be opposed to be there personally himself.

    So we now have that relationship with FILA which will make things a lot easier for Nigeria because that is the highest level you can go. If you have any issues, and you have somebody who can call the president directly and iron them out, I think that is what you want in sports and fortunately this gave us that opportunity. I knew Lalovic but I didn’t have that kind of relationship with him. But having been with him in St Petersburg for over a week and in Buenos Aires for almost two weeks, everyday, morning to night, going to lunch, dinners, practicing our speeches together, we are now very close, we have a good chemistry. It’s not just with him, it’s also with the FILA bureau, we have over 20 members of the bureau and I now know every one of them. Most of the top referees, most of the sponsors of wrestling, I know a lot of them, I think that has given us a lot more advantages.

  • Igali to make wrestling’s final push to IOC

    Igali to make wrestling’s final push to IOC

    The International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles (FILA) has named the President of the Nigeria Wrestling Federation, Dr Daniel Igali in a five-person team that will be making their final presentation at the 125th International Olympic Committee (IOC) Session in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Sunday, 8 September.

    Igali will be joined by FILA President Nenad Lalovic, Vice President of the French Wrestling Federation, Lise Legrand, former U.S. Olympic Committee CEO Jim Scherr and former wrestler Carol Huynh of Canada.

    Igali, a Nigerian-Canadian wrestler who won a gold medal in Men’s Freestyle (69 kg.) at the Sydney 2000 Olympics Games, was in the same five-member team that made FILA’s successful presentation to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Executive Board in May.

    Wrestling is up against squash and a joint bid by softball-baseball for a spot in the Summer Games beginning in 2020. Each sport will present to the full IOC membership in Buenos Aires before the vote.

    Following this presentation, the full IOC membership will vote on which sport to include in the Olympic Programme for 2020 and 2024.

    In their presentation, the team will highlight all of the extraordinary changes and initiatives FILA has completed this summer; remaking one of the world’s oldest sports. Several of these ground-breaking steps include: innovative rules to encourage competition, new distribution of weight classes to increase opportunities for women and the formation of an athletes’ commission. These changes were supported by a special Save Olympic Wrestling meet in Ancient Olympia, Greece, that featured the first-ever women’s wrestling match at the birthplace of the Olympic Movement.

    “I am pleased to announce our team for the final presentation today and I am especially grateful that this team, that has already represented the sport of wrestling so well, will be able to make the trip to Buenos Aires for this historic moment,” said FILA President Nenad Lalovic.

    “Our final presentation will highlight all of the great work the FILA Bureau and Olympic wrestling fans and supporters have done over the last seven months, as well as explain to the IOC why the version of wrestling they will witness in 2020 is new, exciting and modern.”

  • Igali: we won’t give up until wrestling is reinstated

    Igali: we won’t give up until wrestling is reinstated

    President of the Nigeria Wrestling Federation, Daniel Igali is optimistic of the inclusion of wrestling among sports that will be competed for at the 2020 Olympic Games.

    Igali was among a six-member delegation that pleaded wrestling’s case to the International Olympic Committee for the reinstatement of status during a meeting in St. Petersburg, Russia last Wednesday.

    Following a vote, wrestling was in a group of three sports selected as candidates for the final provisional sport spot in the 2020 and 2024 Olympic Games.

    The other sports on the short list of candidates include squash and baseball/softball, while the IOC dropped karate, roller sports, sport climbing, wakeboarding and wushu.

    A final vote will be held by the entire 100-member IOC General Assembly in its meeting in Buenos Aires, Argentina from 7th to 10th September.

    Only one of these sports — wrestling, squash or baseball/softball — will be included in the 2020 and 2024 Olympics and Igali who expressed happiness to have scaled the first hurdle in bid to have wrestling back in the 2020 Games, said everything will culminate to success when they have the final meeting in Argentina in September.

    “There were eight sports that were short-listed, wrestling passed the first ballot to be considered in Argentina on the 7th of September for inclusion into Olympic programme in 2020.

    “This is the first victory for us in wrestling and we look at it as unfinished business. We are going to restructure, reconvene and plan again in order to make sure that we get wrestling listed as one of the sports for the 2020 Olympics,” he assured.

    Wrestling was dropped from the Olympic program in February, while baseball and softball were dropped from the Olympic program for the 2012 Olympic Games in London in 2005. Squash has never been included on the Olympic stage before, but has had full medal status at the Commonwealth Games since 1998.

  • Igali: Bayelsa set to host 2016 festival

    Igali: Bayelsa set to host 2016 festival

    The Technical Adviser, Wrestling Federation of Nigeria, Daniel Igali yesterday said that Bayelsa State is currently putting in place sporting infrastructure that will enable the state host the National Sports Festival as from 2016.

    Igali, who is the committee chairman on sports, Bayelsa State House of Assembly, while speaking to journalists inside the multi-purpose hall, University of Lagos, venue of the wrestling event, said that in the 2013 budget of the state, sports is fourth after roads, health and education.

    “In Bayelsa, the sports budget is the fourth largest in the state budget. We are now working on the upgrading of pitches, wrestling gym that will be of international standard; the construction has been awarded and it will be ready in May, 2013.

    “We have equally built a weightlifting gym. We are also looking at building a modern multi-purpose gymnasium, tartan tracks and building sporting facilities in the three senatorial zones of the state.

    For the wrestling events, Igali said: ”It has been fantastic, we have so far had a good competition. The first day, a great number competed; Delta State won a large number of gold medals, four gold medals out of seven, Bayelsa and Rivers States two and one gold each, it was a Niger/Delta affair.

    “The female wrestling was spread out; Lagos had gold, Imo and three gold for Bayelsa. Now freestyle is going on, and it looks like a south-south affair. I’m happy because there are a few athletes I have seen here that can make us proud in the next four to eight years.

    The former Olympic gold medalist in Sydney, Australia, 2000 said he was surprised that his state had made a lot of progress in the ongoing National Sports Festival despite the flood that affected their preparation towards the festival.

    “Bayelsa is looking ahead to hosting NSF in 2016. I also encourage states to improve on the standard of their equipment. We don’t know the importance of sports here, that is why we are trying to downplay the importance of equipment.”

    On the no-entry-fee-policy of this year’s festival, Igali said he had been on the campaign for an open festival for the past ten years, he however give thanks to God that the people that matters in sports had finally listened to their voices.

    “It’s something I have been clamouring for in the past ten years. Thank God we are there now,” he said.

    Igali, captained the Nigerian wrestling team to Canada to compete in the 1994 Commonwealth Games. He remained in the country while seeking refugee status due to political unrest in the Niger/Delta then. He acquired citizenship in 1998.

    In Canada, Igali won 116 consecutive matches wrestling at Simon Fraser University from 1997 to 1999. He placed fourth at the 1998 world championships.

    At the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, Igali won a gold medal in the Men’s 69kg freestyle wrestling. He represented Canada on the world stage. At the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, Igali won a gold medal in the Men’s 74 kg freestyle wrestling.