Stakeholders
have expressed varying opinions over the seven months salaries owed
Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi, by the Nigerian Football Federation,
writes ’TANA AIYEJINA The
entire football world was held in shock and disbelief when Super Eagles
coach Stephen Keshi revealed on Wednesday that he had not been paid
seven months salary by the Nigerian Football Federation.
It
means the former Nigeria captain last got his salary in February, when
he led the national team to a third Africa Cup of Nations title in South
Africa. Thereafter,
Keshi, who has also managed Togo and Mali, had led the squad to the
FIFA Confederations Cup and has remained unbeaten in the African
qualifiers for the 2014 World Cup. In
fact, one game stands between Keshi’s team and qualification for Brazil
2014. Nigeria’s fifth ticket to the Mundial looks almost sealed after
the Eagles defeated the Walya Antelopes of Ethiopia 2-1 in Addis Ababa,
in the first leg of the African final qualifiers for the World Cup. With
the nation in jubilant mood ahead of the second leg against the
Ethiopians next month, Keshi’s revelation was the least any football
loving person would have thought about. BBC
Sport quoted Keshi as saying, “The lowest point of my career is working
and not being paid for seven months. I have never had this kind of
experience before. “In
Mali, they will never owe you; your salary will hit your account before
the end of every month. It was the same thing in Togo,” he said. “Owing
me up to eight months makes me feel I am not being appreciated, it is
like they think I am being favoured in what I am doing. “I am not being favoured. I am giving everything I have to the job — I need to be respected and given my pay.” The
NFF over the years have earned a reputation for its inability to pay
coaches of the national teams. In recent times, the likes of Shaibu
Amodu, Christian Chukwu, Samson Siasia, Austin Eguavoen, John Obuh and
Eucharia Uche have been owed salaries.
Chukwu, who led the Eagles to a third-place finish at the 2004 AFCON in Tunisia, laments Keshi’s situation.
The
1980 AFCON winner said, “It is very unfair not to pay Keshi his
salaries. It is an insult to indigenous coaches. How do you expect him
to concentrate and perform? He has a family; how do you expect him to
take care of them?
“This
issue of unpaid salaries has been on for a very long time and I thought
it had stopped. My case has been there and still there. Even Amodu was a
victim. It even extended to the Super Falcons and the age-grade
national teams.
“Maybe Keshi should have received his salaries ahead because if it was a white man, they would have paid him in advance.”
But
ace sports writer and broadcaster, Frank Ilaboya, disagrees with Chukwu
on the issue of only Nigerian-born coaches being owed by the NFF.
“Even
the foreign coaches have been owed before. The likes of Berti Vogts,
Manfred Hoener, Phillipe Troussier and Lars Lagerback have been owed.
It’s not about Nigerian coaches; it is an attitude that must change,”
Ilaboya said.
Ilaboya
frowned at a statement reportedly credited to the NFF saying that the
allowances and bonuses Keshi earned were enough to sustain him.
He
said it was unfair to treat the national coach in that manner after
having gradually turned around the fortunes of the Eagles.
“I
can’t believe this is happening now. If what I read about an official
of the federation saying that his (Keshi) allowances were enough to take
care of him is true, then it is unfortunate. How can anyone say that?
“The coach is entitled to his salaries; just as he is entitled to his allowances and bonuses.”
Observers
say Nigerian coaches have a role to play in their unfortunate
predicament. A domestic league coach, who pleaded anonymity, said most
of the coaches who get national appointments get carried away, without
signing their contract papers properly.
“Our
coaches exert their energies in trying to undo other local coaches for a
particular national team job and they then sign contracts that enslave
them,” he said.
But
Chukwu, an assistant to Dutchman Clemens Westerhof when the Eagles won a
second AFCON title and qualified for their first ever World Cup in
1994, strongly disagrees.
The 1980 Green Eagles captain, popularly known as Chairman, said most times the coaches fall victim because of patriotism.
He
said, “That is not true. We sign the right contracts. You know, because
you are patriotic, you don’t want to take the federation to court.
Foreigners won’t take that.
“We
have worked outside Nigeria before and nobody owed us. I got all my
entitlements and was treated like a king when I worked in Lebanon and
managed the Harambee Stars of Kenya.
Interestingly, former Falcons coach, Eucharia Uche, has appealed to Keshi to be patient with the football running body.
The
former Nigerian striker won the 2010 African Women’s Championship title
but was booted out of office for her failure to qualify the side for
the 2011 All-Africa Games in Mozambique and the 2012 London Olympic
Games.
During Uche’s time as coach of the Falcons, the NFF hired a German, Thomas Obliers, as her assistant.
Obliers reportedly collected $63,000 while with the women’s national team for a very short time.
But
the NFF allegedly owed Uche, a widow and mother of two, two years
salary. She was supposed to be paid N300,000 ($2000) monthly.
Uche
said, “Keshi has done very well but I will advise him to be patient
with his employers. Definitely, delay is not denial. Maybe they are
trying to sort out some things. There is no cause for alarm yet.”
An Eagles midfielder, who pleaded anonymity, said the NFF’s attitude could affect the national team psychologically.
“If
they don’t pay the coach his money, how are we sure they will pay our
allowances and bonuses. What they are doing can make the players not
give their best to the team. Personally, if I get injured while on
national duty, will anybody look my way again? This is not good for our
football. Pay the coach his money,” the player stated.
The
issue took a new twist on Thursday when the National Sports Commission
gave the NFF 48 hours to explain why the national coach was owed seven
months’ salary.
The NFF receives its funding from the sports commission.
“As
far as I am concerned, it is a national embarrassment. If they are
having challenges with raising money, they should have come to us. But
they have not complained to us that they cannot pay,” NSC
Director-General, Gbenga Elegbeleye, was quoted as saying.
He
added, “The coach is not like the secretariat staff, he is on a
contract. Because their staff have not been paid does not mean the
national coach should not be paid.
“If he gets sacked today, there is no gratuity, so why should he suffer?”
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