2014 NFF Elections: Analyzing Ajunwa’s verdict

By Toyin Ibitoye

A very good friend of mine (Names withheld) sent me a DM (Direct message) via twitter asking why we (Nigeria) love to make a ridicule of ourselves among the comity of nations in the football family.

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Of course, my friend, a Non-Nigerian, who works for one of the largest football publications in the World, merely teased me with that comment to get my reaction to the latest drama of the absurd, as it concerns the Nigeria Football Federation(NFF)Elections Appeals committee with the attendant ‘Majority Vs Minority’ decisions.

I replied my friend that the drama is just a reflection of the state of our nation,promising him that I would put my opinion together on the matter once I was able to get the details of the two (majority & minority) verdicts.

Thankfully over the weekend I was able to lay my hands on both verdicts and I must confess it was not easy reading through the bulk of both materials but I made sure I sniffed through the most important parts of both documents.

I will not pretend that I do not personally  know some of the persons involved either directly or indirectly in this matter or that I will not rely on some of the privileged information I got from them to arrive at some of the opinion I will express here.

Ajunwa’s verdict:

The major summary of Barrister  Okey  Ajunwa’s  verdict are here listed

  1. Dismissing  Dotun  Coker  from the NFF Elections Appeals committee  because of his membership of a NFF standing committee.
  2. Annulling the elections of Felix  Anyansi  Agwu  and Sheriff Rabiu  Inuwa,NFF Executive Committee members from the South East and North West,disqualifying them from future elections because of the  membership of  Emeka  Inyama  (NNL chairman) and  Mohammed  Kawu  (NNWL chairman)  on the same NFF Executive  Committee.
  3. Persons cleared and who contested August 26 and September 30  elections for position of President and Board member for South East  and North West Zones be allowed to participate and contest bye  elections.
  4. Any person seeking to participate and contest the bye election and who  had filed any matter concerning the NFF before any court or tribunal in  Nigeria (or  any other country) or the Court of Arbitration for Sport shall  withdraw such case forthwith in order to be cleared to contest the bye  election.
  5. Electoral committee should harmonize list of persons cleared and that  contested for various positions now declared vacant in August 26 and  September 30 elections and such  persons shall not be disqualified for reasons that they contested the August 26 election.
  6. Seyi  Akinwunmi’s  election as NFF 1st Vice President is annulled as he is from the same zone as the NFF  President   Amaju  Pinnick
  7. Shehu  Dikko  was wrongly disqualified from the NFF  Elections.

Let’s take a good look at the issues.

  1. Dotun  Coker’s Dismissal

The  questions to be asked are

  1.   Does  Okey  Ajun-wa  have the powers to dismiss a  member of the  NFF Elections       Appeals Committee, duly nominated to such a  position by the  Extraordinary Congress of the Nigeria Football  Federation?

ANSWER:Based on the statutes of FIFA, CAF and the NFF as well as the    FIFA, NFF electoral code, the answer is no. Only the congress has      such powers.

  1.     Does membership of a standing committee of the Nigeria Football    Federation disqualify any one from being a member of the NFF    Election Appeals  committee if nominated to such a position by the NFF congress?

ANSWER:Based on the statutes of FIFA,CAF  and the NFF as well as the    FIFA, NFF Electoral code, the answer is no

Article 3 (4) on Basic  principles  of Electoral Committee as stated in the FIFA Standard Electoral code clearly outlines the ground for any person to be withdrawn from the electoral committees.

Barrister  Okey  Ajunwa  needs to know the limits of his powers. The other members of the committee elected him as their chairman. He was not named chairman of that committee by the congress as he claims. His views cannot be superior to those of the other members.

  1. Annulment of Felix  Anyansi  Agwu  &  Sheriff  Rabiu  Inuwa’s  mandate and ordering of bye elections.

Without any doubt,this  is easily the trickiest part of the 2014 NFF Elections Appeals palaver.

Article 7(b) of the 2014 NFF Electoral   Guidelines provides  that:

NO STATE SHALL PRODUCE MORE THAN ONE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEMBER.

However, the major part of the argument for me is which Executive  Committee  member got elected first in the cases under review. Remember,the NFF Executive Committee was  dissolved on the floor of the elective congress of September 30 in Warri just before the elections that produced the Ordinary Members of the Committee and got constituted immediately after the elections. It is important for the NFF congress to differentiate between the elections of the  ordinary members of the Executive Committee and those  coming into the Committee as representatives of the leagues.

Interestingly, when this issue of two NFF Executive Committee members from the same state first reared  its  head in 2011,I initiated the process that challenged the emergence of High Chief Emeka Inyama as the chairman of the  Nigeria National League (NNL) Board. I argued that since Ordinary member Felix Anyansi Agwu from the same state as Inyama was already on the Executive Committee, it would be a breach of the NFF Electoral  guidelines to have him there and so felt his election as the NNL representative on the NFF Executive Committee should not stand but guess  what….it was  Barrister  Iyke   Igbokwe  (yes, this same  Iyke  Igbokwe) that stood to  Inyama’s  defence, stating that his mandate could not be taken away from him  after he was duly cleared to contest the NNL Chairmanship position.

(I  do not hold anything against  Iyke Igbokwe  for his change of opinion now. He is entitled to it. We all change our opinion on issues from time to time,sometimes when we get superior information.)

If you could remember,the NFF Elections Appeals Committee at that  time with Barrister John Ola  Mafo as its chairman annulled  Inyama’s  election but the  matter  had to be resolved eventually by an Arbitration Panel led by a former  Akwa  Ibom  State Attorney General,Chief Victor  Iyanam.Iyanam’s Panel  upheld  Inyama’s  election  and advised the NFF to amend their electoral  guideline to accommodate the independence of the leagues. I think  that  Iyanam  Arbitration ruling of 2011/2012 should still be very relevant  today.

However, it is also important to note the major discrepancies that have  emerged from Okey  Ajunwa’s verdict in this respect.

While annulling the elections of Felix  Anyansi  Agwu  and Sheriff Rabiu Inuwa, he ordered for bye elections into the positions he declared  vacant like that of the NFF President, the Executive Committee members  from South East and North West.

Ajunwa  then blew off the roof by ordering  that persons, who were  cleared and who contested positions in the August 26 and September 30 elections should  be allowed to contest in the new polls.

I gasped for breath as I read that…did I hear August 26?

The same August 26 elections that FIFA declared a sham?  An event  that even the laws of the land, as represented by the National  Assembly, proclaimed a fraud?

I looked through all the prayers of the appellants to see if any of them had included this in their Appeals…none!

I asked the other members as well as the substitute members of the Appeals Committee separately if such was ever discussed at any of their sittings..the response I got was that they NEVER whispered it not to talk of deliberating on it.

I put a few thoughts together and tried to imagine where it could have come from.

This is it…

Reading through  Ajunwa’s  verdict (numbered 3,4,5  earlier in this write up)one  name pops up at me….  Chris  Giwa!

Barrister Ajunwa  goofed big time in ruling that those who were cleared and contested the August 26 election for the post of NFF President should be free to participate in his bye

election if they withdrew their case from CAS. Who else could he be referring to?

Ajunwa should have been more thorough. He should also  have known and also declared that Giwa  cannot contest that NFF presidency  anymore since Plateau State already has Suleiman  Yahaya  Kwande  on  the Executive committee.

With Suleiman Kwande,Yusuf Ahmed ‘Fresh’ and Dilichukwu Onyedinma(3 slots)all representing the North Central zone on the Executive Committee,there was no way there would be room for one more.

That guy had dug the grave for his own ‘learned’ report.

  1. Seyi  Akinwunmi’s  Election annulled.

This is another spurious verdict.

If Seyi  Akinwumi’s  election as the NFF 1st Vice President was annulled because he is from the  same zone (South) as the NFF President  Amaju  Pinnick, how else  would any  other  candidate from the South like  Emeka  Inyama  and (in case  the August 26 elections)  Obinna  Ogba be eligible for the bye election  that  Okey  Ajunwa  is advocating without causing some confusion.

So if all Southern candidates are not eligible to contest for the NFF 1st  Vice President position what happens?

  1. Shehu  Dikko’s  Disqualification was wrong.

On a personal note, I felt bad that  Shehu  Dikko  could not contest the elections after working so hard  and I could not really understand why.

There were some whispers that a State Security report nailed him. Some others  said that report  was   fabricated. Well  which ever  way,it is very regrettable that  he  could not  exercise his right.

Dikko  is well within his right to seek redress  and   appeal  against  his disqualification. The confusion now has to do with whether he withdrew  that Appeal or not.

My correspondent at the Appeals Committee hearing told me that during one  of the earlier meetings,the chairman  Okey  Ajunwa  confirmed Dikko’s withdrawal of his Appeal. Some members of the committee  corroborated this but  suddenly the Appeal resurfaced on the last day

This is really baffling.

If Dikko  had withdrawn his Appeal, who  revived it on the day that the verdict was meant  to be given? Well, maybe  only  Ajunwa  and Dikko  can answer that.

My Verdict:  Majority   vs  Minority 

I have read the FIFA statutes,NFF statutes,FIFA Standard Electoral Code,NFF Electoral Code  and Guidelines several times and I can safely  say this in the larger interest of Nigerian Football.

In every judicial  committee(  for football),FIFA deliberately allows for odd  number of members so  that there will always be a majority decision if there is a tie, the committee  chairman’s vote is usually the tie breaker.

This principle of majority decision is also contained in the FIFA Standard  Electoral Code in relation to the  Electoral Committee (Article 8 on  Decisions)

I  believe  that if FIFA Standard Electoral Code agrees to majority decision  for the Electoral Committee, the same principle will apply to the Election Appeals Committee.

For Barrister Okey Ajunwa,only a national apology for his very disappointing exercise would do. I am ready to provide him that opportunity for his own sake.

I have put this piece together in the larger interest of Nigerian football.Enough of this embarrassment.

  • Ibitoye, a broadcaster wrote this piece just before FIFA dismissed Okey Ajunwa’s minority Appeals Committee report on the September 30 NFF Elections.
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