‘EVIL SPIRIT’ WORRYING NIGERIANS - REPS
Members
of the House of Representatives on Thursday condemned the “unsavoury treatment”
meted to the Super Falcons by the Minister of Youths and Sports, Mr. Solomon
Dalong, and the Nigerian Football Federation by failing to pay their match
bonuses and allowances.
The female national football team had won the 10th edition of
the African Women championship just concluded in Cameroon.
However, the girls were not paid their allowances, a development
which forced them to resort to street protests in Abuja for about two weeks.
The team also refused to vacate their hotel, insisting that they
would not leave until they had been paid.
Only on Wednesday, they had stormed the Presidential Villa and
the National Assembly to protest.
The Presidency had reacted immediately by summoning Dalong and
the leadership of the NFF to a meeting on Thursday.
It also directed them to settle the allowances of the players
without further delay.
At its sitting on Thursday, the House condemned Dalong and the
NFF, saying that their actions brought shame upon Nigeria.
A former Deputy Chairman, House Committee on Sports, Mrs. Ayo
Omidiran, had sponsored a motion on the burning issue.
Describing the girls as “patriotic”, she said they answered the
national call with the belief that they would be paid after the championship,
but were disappointed.
Omidiran, who is from Osun State, spoke more, “For the past two
weeks, the space has been filled with the cries of these ladies.
“Has it become a crime to make your country proud? What makes it
more painful is the fact that the Cameroonian girls, who came second, were
celebrated by their President (Paul Biya).
“These girls are not asking for anything extraordinary, but the
allowances owed them from the qualifiers till they won the trophy.
“What would have happened if the girls had refused to leave
Cameroon and carry out the protests on the streets of that country?.”
Another member from Edo State, Mr. Sergius Ose-Ogun, noted that
there was something wrong with the Nigerian attitude to things.
Ose-Ogun added that in almost every facet of national life, an
“evil spirit” seemed to be advising people to do the wrong thing.
“It is not only in sports, Mr. Speaker. Even in the civil
service, workers retire after 35 years and they are not paid their dues.
“Why did they have to subject these girls to so much pain?
“There is an evil spirit in this country, which must die”, he
said.
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