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AFCON viewing right: Shame of a nation



After watching Cyril Stober and his panel of analysts at one of the weekly Tuesday-Live programmes on the Nigeria Television Authority, a friend who watched the programme simultaneously phoned me and asked rhetorically, “So, an average Nigerian won’t get to see live pictures from the 29th African Cup of Nations in South Africa on an indigenous television station – where Nigeria is a major force and participant?” Promptly, I replied him, “What more can you get in a land where absurdities thrive?”

But wait a minute! How on earth has the mighty fallen and descended to this ludicrous stage? By the way, who plunged Nigeria into this mess? These are questions, among others, that a majority of the people cannot answer with all modesty and honesty.

The 29th edition of the AFCON, apparently the biggest sporting event on the continent, is underway already with Nigeria in firm participation. But back home, an average Nigerian has been sardonically denied the opportunity to watch the Super Eagles take on other countries. No thanks to the failure of government and lackadaisical approach of some administrators who are just there for their hedonistic benefit and pecuniary affluence.

It is a known fact that football is the common language every Nigerian speaks and it’s apparently the only unifying factor in the Nigerian system. An average septuagenarian can easily recall the names of some footballers but may never know the head of the Nigerian Sports Commission or even the Deputy President of the Senate.

Having listened to several analyses on why Nigerians won’t get to watch their darling Super Eagles and the entire Nations Cup via their preferred indigenous television stations, I came to the surreptitious conclusion that they were all saying the same thing with different mouths and from different perspectives. The bottom line is, Nigerians are not watching the Nations Cup live from their terrestrial stations. Smacks of crass lugubriousity!

The reasons postulated were that the Confederation of African Football solely handed over the televising right to a company in South Africa (SportsFive) which is expected to link up with other participating or interested countries for expansive transmission worldwide. The company was reported to have demanded six million Euros from their Nigerian counterparts through the Broadcasting Organisation of Nigeria, before they’ll grant them the indulgence to beam the soccer fiesta live on terrestrial stations. BON was said to have negotiated the “astronomic” price to 3million Euros but the company insisted and stood their ground. The administrators too couldn’t shift their ground as well, so it became a battle between two elephants and at the end of the day the grass (the average Nigerian) bears the brunt. In one of the fora, the question raised by an analyst was that, “how can the same company charge Ghana 1.5 million Euros and then ask Nigeria to pay 6million Euros?” This question is not just sick in content but also warped in comparison! How can anybody be thinking of Ghana whose population is not even up to the population of Lagos state alone (with all due respect) and comparing it to a country with a staggering population of 160million?

The fact is, Nigeria is a strategic market for any investor or market to thrive. There’s simply no logic they can tender to Nigerians for not beaming the competition live to Nigerians who don’t have easy access to DSTV – which obviously is the only remedy.

Furthermore, it is not just the brunt of high transmission charges that have thronged Nigerians into the state of utter bewilderment and profound frustration; our football administrators also didn’t deem it fit to put the right peg into the right hole at the right time. How can you go bidding for transmission rights a few weeks before the competition when others started queuing up immediately after the last edition in Angola? It is often said that “no man goes to the stream early and fetches dirty water”. It’s all a business affair. You don’t come late and expect the best of the deals! It is either you get crumbs or you’re plunged into a tight corner where you’d lose. It is not the businessmen in SportsFive that have brought pains to the Nigerian football-loving people rather it is the failure of government and its administrators! “Businessmen will forever remain son of bitch” as J.F. Kennedy was once quoted to have said. That’s why Roman Abrahamovich, the Chelsea FC of England owner could whimsically dismiss nine coaches in eight years for all he cares – it is business!

Sincerely, it is quite painful to see how the joy, support, passion and enthusiasm of an average Nigerian soccer faithful have been reduced to nothing. Coincidentally, as if the National Orientation Agency foresaw this imbroglio that it staged a campaign nationwide a day before the kickoff of the Nations Cup, with the theme “Do the right thing”. Our football administrators’ inability to do the right thing at the right time has brought another untold pains to Nigerians. “Tell it not in Gath and publish it not on the pages of Askeleon” that Nigerians are paying through their nose to catch a glimpse of a competition that is played on their own continental soil.

Do you know how much each public viewing centre rakes in from the sale of tickets for each match? Multiply it by the total number of matches (32). Sum them up nationwide and then tell me why six million Euros became a herculean task for the acclaimed giant of Africa? But a National Sports Commission secretary once told Nigerians last year January that they spent millions of naira to open a Facebook account for the commission. We are not all fools in this country!

What more can we ask from a nation where N28m could be spent to renovate 26 toilets? What more can we ask from a nation where football administrators just convene at the Glass House to collect allocations without  doing the right thing at the right time? What more can we ask from a country where a mere Local Government Chairman has the capacity to single-handedly sponsor the Nations Cup from his profligate affluence? What more can we ask from a nation that parades itself as the giant of Africa? What more can we ask? And how much is much? By the way, the 2014 FIFA World Cup, I am told, is just by the corner.

•Chukwu, ex-editor-in-chief, Psychology Press Organisation, University of Ibadan
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11 comments

  1. It's indeed a shame that Nigerians (not just average nigerians) are unable to watch the AFCON games live. The game against Burkina faso yesterday, am sure less than half the population of this country watched that game, including those that have cable tv ( only dstv) showed the game. Well we have long ago lost interest in anything Nigerian.

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  2. Sometimes our leaders tink that t is okk wen they go abt parading themselves wit stolen funds...living their duty to suffer,its painful dat the so called most populous black nation will nt b transmittin the nation cup live..buh am nt surprise @ all..this is jux the begininng until our so called leaders turn a new leaf.

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  3. It seems you are promoting for that shylock marketer of tv right

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  4. I feel so bittered like u do.everthing is getting worse every second..

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  5. Shame of a nation indeed. The nation keeps sinking to ridiculous depths every day. I really don't know how long we can keep up with this.
    A brilliant and unbiased write up, keep it up Chukwu. And hope this gets published in all the dailies across the country.

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  6. Mr.ex editor u are one of those nigerian who join to mess up this great country instead of building it. How can u say that government should pay 6m euro while south africa pay 2m euro while ghana pay 1.5m is nigeria giving a special treatment is our economy better than all other african country. Let me ask u much did usa and england pay for world right compaire to other country find out and compair that to what is happening in africa. You seen to forget that it is nigeria private business that will bear the pain of such high fee,companies like Ait, sliver birds, channels and others will high fee to show such and it will lead to high advert charge. Let stand together and say no to this exploitation of nigeria

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  7. Every commentator is entitled to his/ her opinion, but one thing am sure of is that Nigerians were not interested in the first place in paying that ridiculous amount on Rights for the tournament. The amount is ridiculous. Even if it is shown on local media, we Nigerians still preffer to go to viewing centres where we can argue and brag. The South African Company are the greater loser. Atleast the missed 3million Euros.

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  8. stop calling the team national team but regional team for now.

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  9. Good write up, in everything they would say we cannot compare Nigeria to Ghana, in relative to their sizes, then why would our administrators expect to pay the same amount with a country whose population is not up to 10% of Nigerian population. Or have you forgotten that the more your population the more audience sponsors/advertiser will reach out to.

    This is all about business the South African government is not like Nigeria government who has hosted the tournament in the past and incurred losses.

    Therefore this should be a good lesson to us that when next we host a mojor event it is an opportunity to generate revenue for the country and not to waste public fund.

    1.3b naira in my own opinion is not too much an amount to pay in bringing joy to Nigerians. Afterall not all Nigerians love watching matches at viewing centres as suggested by Naijaman, who I wonder, if he visits the viewing center with his wife and children or are they not Nigerians too.

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  10. Firstly,I will like to state it that Nigeria is not a major force in AFCON otherwise Nigeria Referees will not be shunned. (How many Nigeria Referee do we have officiating in the AFCON currently ?)

    Meanwhile,it is a great shame for NTA Sport on Startimes for not showing the game. I do not care how much they are to pay for the right,after all in what way can you tell me revenue/profit or whatever that comes from sport benefited the country?

    Whatever that comes from the sport is only to the benefit of those that participated in it.No economic value to the country.

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  11. Nigeria are aware that even the price has a Nigerian factor.corruption in Nigeria is part of its administrative system.May the Lord help Nigeria

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