Sunday Dare, Minister of Youth and Sports Development |
The minister, represented by Simon Ebhojaiye, the Director of Federations, Elite Athletes and Development (FEAD) in the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development, announced this to newsmen.
He said the dissolution was in keeping with the Olympic
charter which stipulates a four-year tenure for all sports federation boards.
“Having run a full Olympic cycle, the Boards of the NSFs
inaugurated on June 21, 2017 are hereby dissolved to pave way for fresh
elections,” Dare said.
The minister consequently set up caretaker committees for
the 31 federations until elections were conducted and new boards inaugurated.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the committees
are now saddled with the responsibility of ensuring a good outing for Team
Nigeria at the Tokyo Olympic Games slated for July.
The 31 federations involved include those of Athletics,
Aquatics, Badminton, Basketball, Boxing, Chess, Cricket, Cycling, Darts, Deaf
Sports, Fives, Golf, Gymnastics and Handball.
Others are Hockey, Judo, Karate, Kickboxing, Wushu Kungfu,
Rowing, Canoeing and Yatching, Rugby and Scrabble.
The rest are Shooting, Squash, Table Tennis, Taekwondo,
Tennis, Traditional Sports, Volleyball, Weightlifting and Wrestling.
NAN reports that most of the federation Presidents were
however returned as committee chairmen.
The three-member committees were made up of Chairman,
Secretary and a member for each federation.
For example, the Athletics committee has Olamide George as Chairman,
Adisa Beyioku as Secretary-General and Maria Wophill as member.
Basketball also has Musa Kida as Chairman, Afolabi Omobola
as Secretary-General and Florence Adeyanju as member.
The minister also said, having consulted with the Nigeria
Olympic Committee (NOC), the ministry has concluded to organise elections into
the federations using the Code of Governance.
The code is the administrative machinery that regulates the
governance of sports federations in Nigeria.