Monday, July 5, 2010

Nigeria stay in FIFA fold

Published>Tue, Jul 06 10 11:17 AM

Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan has dropped a threat to suspend the national football team from playing because of its poor World Cup showing, a person with knowledge of the situation has told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the official announcement had not yet been made on Monday.

FIFA did not immediately confirm the development, but has set a deadline for the Nigerian government to withdraw the threat by 6 p.m. local time. FIFA also intended to suspend Nigeria from world football if the threat wasn't revoked because its rules forbid governments to interfere in football's affairs.

A presidential spokesman announced last Wednesday that President Jonathan wanted the Super Eagles team suspended for two years to allow Nigerian football to be restructured, after it left the World Cup with just one point from three matches.

Earlier on Monday, FIFA president Sepp Blatter said at a news conference that football's governing body has taken "all adequate steps" to resolve the dispute. "We do hope that everything comes back to normal," Blatter said.

FIFA dispatched Nigeria's most senior football official - Amos Adamu, a member of its 24-man ruling executive - to mediate with the government.

A FIFA suspension would have stopped Nigerian club teams, referees and officials from taking part in international football. Nigeria is due to send a women's under-20 team to its World Cup, which kicks off next week in Germany.

The dispute between Nigeria and FIFA flared last week after the national team returned from South Africa. Nigeria earned a 2-2 draw with South Korea in its final game. It lost to Argentina 1-0 in its Group B opener and fell to Greece 2-1 in a game that turned on the first-half dismissal of midfielder Sani Kaita.

The suspension threat by Nigeria's government also followed corruption allegations that plagued the team before the World Cup. Presidential spokesman Ima Niboro said last Wednesday that all funds directed toward the Nigeria Football Federation would be examined and "all those found wanting will be sanctioned."

FIFA spokesman Nicolas Maingot could not confirm on Monday if Nigeria's federation had yet been paid any of the $8 million prize money it is due from FIFA for taking part in the World Cup.

On Sunday, the federation fired its president and vice president in an effort to convince the Nigerian state president to drop the suspension threat.

Nigeria has previously drawn the ire of international football authorities. In January 1996, the Confederation of African Football suspended Nigeria from two African Cup of Nation tournaments after military dictator Sani Abacha withdrew the squad from playing. Nigeria had won the 1994 competition. At the time, Abacha claimed he pulled the team from the Johannesburg-hosted tournament out of security concerns.


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