Nigerian soccer sank deeper into crisis on Monday when FIFA opened an investigation into whether an official from the West African country offered to sell his vote in the World Cup 2018 bidding race.
The probe was the latest scandal to hit the sport in Nigeria, where the president banned the national team following a woeful performance in this year’s World Cup, a decision later reversed under pressure from FIFA.
Corruption allegations have trailed former executives from the national federation since then and a separate controversy has erupted over what FIFA calls the Nigerian government’s interference in the sport.
“Nigerian football is endemically corrupt because you cannot divorce it from the general society, where there are several serious moral issues,” said Osasu Obayiuwana, a former BBC sports reporter and associate editor of New African magazine.
Pervasive corruption has long held back Nigeria, where deep poverty persists and the government has been unable to provide basic services such as sufficient electricity, despite being one of the world’s largest oil producers.
It is also a country that is mad about soccer, though the sport is widely viewed here as plagued by corruption too and some say it has served as another example of Africa’s most populous nation failing to live up to its potential.
In the latest embarrassment, world soccer’s governing body launched an investigation into bribery allegations after a report by a British newspaper over the weekend.
The Sunday Times alleged it covertly filmed Oceania Football Conference president Reynald Temarii and Nigerian FIFA official Amos Adamu soliciting money in return for their World Cup 2018 votes.
It alleged that Adamu, a member of FIFA’s executive committee, asked for US$800,000 to endorse one of the bid candidates.
The paper filmed him meeting with undercover journalists posing as lobbyists for a US business consortium, in which he apparently offered a “guarantee” to vote for the US bid in the 2018 event in return for cash.
The money requested by Adamu was intended to pay for four artificial soccer pitches in Nigeria, but he said it should be paid to him personally.
The allegations have drawn major attention in Nigeria. Adamu, also president of the West African Football Union, is a controversial figure who wields major influence over the sport in Nigeria.
“I tell you this is a big challenge for FIFA. How will FIFA dance out of this situation? ... It’s a tough time for FIFA,” said Segun Odegbami, former skipper of the national team. “If it happens to be true, Adamu may not be representing Nigeria as a country but definitely he got his nomination from the Nigerian Football Federation. So, there is no way that it will not, in one form or another, affect the image of Nigeria.”
“It has come to reflect the state of the country itself,” Opeyemi Agbaje, an economist who has also written about soccer and Nigerian society, said of the sport in the country.
“While I can’t comment on the truth of the allegations against him [Adamu], I think we all know that Nigerian football is extremely corrupt ... We have the culture of the big man, the unaccountable leader. People feel entitled to be paid for every decision or action they have to take,” Agbaje said.
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