An investigative committee set up by the federal government has identified the officials of the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) whose inactions led to Favour Ofili’s non-registration for the women’s 100 meters at the Paris Olympics.
The panel was inaugurated by John Enoh, the recently
departed minister of sports development, in September. The committee was tasked
with probing Nigeria’s negative exposure at the 2024 Olympics and Paralympics
in Paris.
Team Nigeria had a poor outing at the 2024 Paris Olympics,
winning zero medals. In addition to the abysmal performance, the country also
dealt with a handful of controversies at the Games.
The most prominent was the exclusion of Ofili from the
women’s 100 meters race despite the athlete qualifying. Another was the revelation
by Ese Ukpeseraye that she had to borrow a track bike from the German team to
perform in the Keirin cycling event.
In a report released to journalists on Monday, Mumini Alao,
the committee chairman, highlighted the panel’s findings and recommendations
after its investigations.
The document said “conflicting evidence” showed that the
omission of Ofili’s name “is traceable to any one of the following
organisations: Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN), Nigeria Olympic Committee
(NOC), World Athletics (WA) and the International Olympic Committee (IOC)”.
The committee added that Rita Mosindi, the secretary general
of AFN, was “negligent in her duty of communicating to the Ministry of Sports
Development and the Nigeria Olympic Committee information about Favour Ofili’s
event status in a reliable and timely manner”.
The panel also faulted Samuel Onikeku, AFN technical
director, for demonstrating “poor judgement” by not acting on information about
Ofili’s non-registration “when he first got a ‘hint’ of the ‘rumour’.”
The committee added that Ofili’s situation might have been
rescued had Onikeku reported or acted immediately on the information he
received.
The report then recommended that the officials be penalised
by the appropriate authority.
The committee said AFN should pay Ofili N8 million “for the
disappointment and depression that she suffered on account of her omission”.
“The cyclist, Ese
Ukpeseraye, should write a formal apology to the Nigeria Cycling Federation
(NCF) for the embarrassment that she caused the Federation and the Nigerian
contingent to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games on account of the unauthorised that
she made on social media X (Formerly Twitter) about the bicycle that she used
for the Cycling track event at the Olympics,” the report reads.
The committee presented its findings to ministry of sports
on October 22, a day before President Bola Tinubu scrapped the ministry and
transferred its functions to the resuscitated National Sports Commission (NSC).
Enoh then handed over the report to Shehu Dikko, the newly
appointed chair of NSC, on October 30.