A TRIBUTE TO AN AFRICAN ATHLETICS LEGEND - SUNDAY BADA
Posted: Dec 18, 2011
I Am Still In Deep Shock!
Four days ago, I was in Abuja when a Journalist called and informed me about the death of Sunday Bada. I was numb in pain and shock. My work for that day terminated immediately, followed by an explosion of questions. How? Where? When? What? No, Sunday Bada must not, and cannot, be dead. The country needs him too much. People like him should not die like that. How can a young, healthy, very active, recently retired ex-international athlete, and a serving police officer die under such an unusual circumstance? He had not been sick. He was at a marathon meeting that evening at the National Stadium in Lagos with several other sports administrators who testified that, in his usual boisterous self, he had played a very active part in the meeting of that day without any visible sign or indication that anything was wrong with him. They said that he excitedly left the meeting at about 8:30 pm to pick up his wife at the airport. She was to arrive that evening from an overseas trip. The rest of the story was narrated by his cousin.
Sunday was driving himself. On the way he felt very uncomfortable with a sharp pain on his side. He parked his car by the side of the road and rang up his cousin who advised him to wait where he was till he arrived. The cousin sped there and met him in his car weak and gasping. He then drove him quickly to a hospital less than 400 metres away. At the entrance of the hospital, before any help could even be sought, the man died. The period between when he left the meeting and when he was pronounced dead was less than two hours! Is that how a true African legend of athletics supposed to die? Let me tell you about him.
I am shocked to learn that he was only 41. Until he retired from active athletics some 7 years ago he was one of the true greats of African athletics. In a career that spanned over 16 years he was Nigerian Champion, African Champion and World Indoor Champion at the 400 metres event. At several meets he won Bronze, Silver and Gold medals at National, African, Commonwealth, World and Olympic Games, with the Gold medal won in the 4 by 400 meters relay at the 2000 Sydney Olympics being his greatest achievement. He was a three-time Olympian and set national and African records, some of which remain unbroken till this day. Since he retired he has not rested from Athletics. He has been very involved at technical and administrative levels in the country. A few months ago, he was elected Secretary-General of the Nigeria Olympians Association in recognition of his enviable place as a former captain of Nigeria’s Olympic contingent to the 2000 Games and for his exemplary conduct as one of the successful Olympians whose careers were untainted by any misdemeanour such as use of banned substances. Add to that his other career as a Policeman in one of the disciplined forces (the Mobile Police) where he rose to become a Superintendent in charge of Nigeria’s busiest land border, the gateway to West Africa at Seme! Such a person should not die so young. That’s particularly why his death is so painful. Having acquired and garnered all these experiences, when he was ready, at the dawn of impacting them on the teeming young athletes in the country, death suddenly came calling like a thief in the night! His death is hurtful and truly a great loss to the Police force, to athletics, to the youths, to his friends, family and to the country as a whole.
Sunday Bada was my friend, a co-Olympian and colleague in the ‘business’ of sports development. Perhaps, because we belonged to different generations, we never socialised together enough for me to know him closer than I did even though we were always interacting at critical times along the national circuit of sports administration. In the early 1990s when my restlessness to impact on Nigerian athletics took me into the realm of athletes management, he was to become the fifth athlete in my camp. I had registered with both the Athletics Federation of Nigeria, AFN, and the International Amateur Athletics Federation, IAAF, as an athletes representative and had taken under my wings Chioma Ajunwa (she eventually won Gold at the Olympics) and Charity Opara (she won an Olympic Silver medal). After the Olympics in 1996 I attracted Innocent Asonze (one time Nigeria’s fastest man) and Mercy Nkwu (one time Africa’s fastest woman) to my team. But it was Sunday that I was most interested in managing. I invited him to my office for a discussion and our conversation was very frank and very revealing. He was a man who had his neck firmly on his shoulders. He knew exactly what he wanted, how he wanted to achieve them, and how he was going to shape his future. Without telling him that my mission was to recruit him, I praised him for his foresight and for letting me into his dream. I encouraged him to follow his dream in his own way. He proved my conviction right by going on soon after that to become the World’s fastest man indoors, and to win an Olympic Silver medal that turned to Gold when the American winning quartet were disqualified several years after the Olympics for doping charges.
Nigeria and indeed the whole of Africa mourn a great African athlete. I wish he could just wake up for a moment to glean the world as it mourns him genuinely, with all the encomiums showered on him from around the world by those who knew him in the course of this life. He would have gladly gone back to his ‘sleep’ and to eternal rest knowing that he was appreciated. That’s why, it is my thought this day that Nigeria has a responsibility to its heroes all over the country; to bring them out from time to time and make them serve sports in useful ways, and also to celebrate them so that they are remembered whilst they are alive.
Sunday Bada’s death is another reminder of our mortality. We must remember there is a whole army of other great African athletes who need to be constantly celebrated so that they can become beacons, mentors and role models for coming generations.
CONGRATULATIONS NFF!
I read a report in one of the daily newspapers that a high court in Abuja has delivered judgement in favour of the Nigeria Football Federation, NFF, in a suit brought before the court. I do not know the intricacies of the matter so I am unable to make any informed comment. But if the report of the newspaper is correct, as a law abiding citizen of this country, I shall make myself subject to the ruling of the court.
Even as I do not agree with it as reported I shall not challenge or appeal it. Those directly involved with the case have that responsibility to perform, should they feel that way. However, because the judgement affects me personally I am seeking a little harmless clarification from the reading public through this medium, having spent a lot of money so far in seeking justice through the only means approved by the Statutes of both the NFF and FIFA. You will notice that I refer to the ‘Nigeria Football Federation, NFF’ and not the ‘Nigeria Football Association, NFA’ in accordance with the ‘judgement’ in the newspaper report. In deference also to the report of the court ruling I shall desist, henceforth, (unless there is a superior pronouncement by another court or interpretation of some contrary opinion) from referring or describing the NFF as an illegal body.
Having said that, these are the few issues that still bother me now.
I admit now that had the annulled elections of August 26, 2010, not been halted by a court order a day before, and I had contested, I would have been roundly trounced with honours. The odds as stacked against me as the electorate,
assembled the way it was, would never have voted me in. So, I concede that to the present leadership of the NFF. All expenses I bore would have been lost and I would have been forced to retire to the cocoon of my narrow personal interests, licked my wounds, swallowed my pride and gone on with my life. If I knew that, why was I willing to lose all that my hard-earned money, mostly contribution by people that believed in my struggle to challenge the mangled statutes of the NFA which had been mutilated to suit a particular agenda, and gone ahead with the elections? The answer is simple. If I did not contest I would not have had the moral and legal grounds to challenge the system and seek to fix it so that future elections will be conducted in a proper, open, and democratic process in line with the statutes of the NFA without any interference from any external body including FIFA. So, in that spirit I am still battling on in FIFA (and ultimately Court of Arbitration,CAS) seeking that it owns up to its culpability of meddlesomeness, and leaves the NFA (and all African football federations in particular) alone to conduct its business in line with its own independent, approved statutes and without dishonouring, disrespecting or offending the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
The simple clarification I seek is this: who pays me for the huge price I have had to pay for obeying a court order? That’s all I ask. For almost one year before the halted and annulled elections I organised and funded strategic discussions, press conferences and meetings, travelled with my group to several parts of the country for consultations, campaigns, the Presidential debate and even a public protest, sponsored candidates for other elections, paid all the required election fees, and sponsored my own guests, supporters, family and friends to the venue of the elections. That cost me good money.
Then some other aggrieved persons went to court (not me) and secured an order to stop the elections. I got a copy of the order. I stopped everything I was doing. Some people disregarded the court order and went on with the elections. The aggrieved persons went back to the same court, complained and secured the second judgement of court annulling the elections. I also have the written copy of the court judgment declaring the elections as null and void. Since then I know of no other judgement either vacating the original orders of court, or changing it. That is, until now.
Individual members of the NFF executive committee had gone to
another court of equal jurisdiction as the first, on a different matter from questioning the validity of the original court order, and had now secured a new judgement that I read in the report in a newspaper as invalidating the judgment of the first court. I am getting confused. In my legalistic ignorance I cannot understand what all these mean. My question once again is what happens to all the expenses of the one person that obeyed the first legitimate court order? Should I suffer for being a lawful citizen? Where should I seek redress now? Who do I go to for the refund of all my expenses? Whilst congratulating the NFF for their ‘victory’ in the courts as reported by a newspaper. I look forward to receiving a copy of the judgement so that I will determine where to seek my redress. Meanwhile, this must go down as the most expensive court order in the history of football!
FROM MY MAIL BAG
Re: The Return Of El-Kanemi Warriors
Thanks for visiting Borno State; and for the beautiful write-up. However, please note that since the present crisis started, no youth corper was killed in Borno. I have been in Maiduguri since the present crisis started and the only case related to a Youth Corper which I can remember was when one Youth Corper was injured during the elections due to an explosion at a polling station in the Maidokiri area of Maiduguri. Youth Corpers were killed in the post election violence in some states of the federation, not in Borno state. Check with the NYSC headquarters. For your information, there was nothing like post election violence in Borno state. Please check your facts.
during the elections due to an explosion at a polling station in the Maidokiri area of Maiduguri. Youth Corpers were killed in the post election violence in some states of the federation, not in Borno state. Check with the NYSC headquarters. For your information, there was nothing like post election violence in Borno state. Please check your facts.
Thanks once again for writing a generally true reflection of the situation on ground in Maiduguri. Many people still think the city is a no-go war zone but you have seen the reality and told Nigerians who care to read.
agshettima@gmail.com
My response: I am truly sorry if the opinion I expressed happens to be wrong.
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Orindare Rufus
Dec 27, 2011
If it is stroke that is killing all of them, it must be traced to the ills and difficulties of getting bye in a society where nobody cares. I am not a doctor but I will advise everybody to check with their doctors. While at that, taking one 81mg Bayer aspirin on a daily basis will go a long way in preventing stroke. You can take that to the bank.



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Chrisesse
Dec 20, 2011
Math7 please u should include this in your papers as u are in this grassroot thing. Its surprising that Actors and Atletes are dying too cheaply. It only indicate one thing- these guys are not regularly checking their Blood Pressure. Sam Loco and now Bada. Its so painful. I even read that popular actor Elebele is in a hospital with Stroke. Ojukwu died of Stroke too. Footballers slump on the field. All these are ugly news. Its just 30 secs and the BP is taken. Antihypertensive Drugs are cheap. 100 tablets of NIFIDIPINE and some others is not up to 400naira. Have they not heard fr seen of the advert by Zebrudaya on VASOPRINE that helps to prevent Heart Attack and Stroke? When Speed, d coach of scotland(?) committed suicide, the primiere league immediately distributed a 30pages(?) booklet on how to manage stress and depression to players, coaches and clubs. NSC should do something like that too. Atletes should regularly check their BP. Math7 you are in a better position to spread this. I really feel for the family especially the wife who may be feeling, negatively, that if not that he was going to pick her, he might still be alive. She needs psychological support.