Newly appointed Chairman of the National Sports Commission (NSC), Shehu Dikko said Nigeria’s journey towards a sustainable sports economy has begun.
Dikko stated this on Wednesday when the former Minister of Sports, John Enoh officially handed over the affairs of the nation sports to him in a brief ceremony in Abuja.
The former chairman of the defunct League Management Company (LMC) said it is time to come up with a different approach that will see Nigeria not just participating and winning competitions but building on such achievements moving forward.
He however called for legislations and regulations that will set the framework for the sports sector to grow effectively as witnessed in communications industry.
“History has a way of coming full circle because in 2008, I was a consultant to the House of Representatives and was responsible for the drafting of the National Sports Commission Bill, a job I did pro-bono and about 16 years down the line, I’m here with the assignment to implement the work I assisted to put together.
“The objective of Mr President is to harness the full potentials of the Sports Economy in Nigeria. And we have to first change our mindset from the fixation of just competitions and winning medals and come back and fix our Domestic Sports Development.
“When we set the foundation right the results and the winning of medals will naturally come in a sustainable manner and that should be the new mindset. We cannot continue to run in cycles so we need to have a different approach from day one because in my view and indeed the firm view of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, competitions is what we call consumption because we just take scarce resources and burn out abroad without any impact on the domestic sports development ecosystem and the Nigerian Economy.
“But we have to go back to production which is deliberate sports development, where we set the structure right, set the framework and put together good parameters to have a sustainable sports development which will naturally give us a solid Sports Economy and indeed guaranteed competitive participation at all competitions and medals.
“This is the reason why our administration will be focus on three pillars including running sports as a national asset that is entitled to special privileges, regulations and concessions to drive growth and development to open its potentials to be a key driver of the economy across all sectors, a vehicle for achieving national cohesion and projection of the positive and unique attributes of our culture and national identity.
“We have to also work on Legislations and Regulations so as to set the framework to enable the Industry to grow effectively like what happened in the communications industry some years back.
“The other pillar is investing in purposeful world class infrastructures that will provide an enabling environment for growth. These infrastructures must be deliberate with maintenance culture and span from world class infrastructure for professional sports to community infrastructure to drive grassroots sports and mass participation across the country.
“The thinking of Mr President is that, after having some of all these in place, we should be able to measure the country’s sports by its contribution to the nation’s GDP by at least three percent addition via sports and the number of jobs sports and its value chain are providing in country in the next four to five years and indeed our competitiveness across all competitions and tournaments.
“Thus, it’s a visionary decision for Mr. President to approve the return of the National Sports Commission to drive this process and objectives in line to the best international practices and standards devoid of any bureaucratic bottlenecks but absolute professionalism,” Dikko said.
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