The Nigerian football
league was suspended on Wednesday after referees were directed begin the
strike in protest at a governance crisis in the domestic game, according to GN & AFP.
Nigeria Premier League
organisers, the League Management Committee, said it was “impossible for us to
organise games” as a result of the directive from the Nigeria Referees
Association.
The NRA earlier ordered
that all referees slated to officiate in the Premier League should withdraw
from matches “until sanity is restored” in the national game.
The directive, contained
in a circular by the NRA Secretary General, Moroof Oyekunle Oluwa, also applied
to the second-tier National League, Nigeria Federation Cup and the women’s
leagues.
The Premier League and
National League are both in their 25th week of action.
Defending champions Kano
Pillars currently top the table with 43 points.
League Management
Committee official, Salihu Abubakar, said clubs and their sponsorship
partners have been informed and teams directed not to proceed to venues of
their scheduled games until further notice.
“We are already running a
tight fixture schedule and are hoping that this crisis is resolved soon so the
season can be concluded in time for our clubs to prepare for continental
registration and participation,” the statement concluded.
The Nigerian Football
Federation has been in crisis since July, when world governing body FIFA
suspended the country from all international competitions over what it said was
“government interference” in the running of the game.
The ban was later lifted.
NFF president, Aminu
Maigari, was impeached on charges of embezzlement, then reinstated because of
procedural irregularities before being held by the State Security Service for
an unspecified reason.
This week, a new
president was appointed in his place in defiance of a FIFA order only to set a
date for fresh elections of the association’s high command, raising the
possibility of fresh sanctions.
To top it all, the NFF
headquarters in Abuja were gutted by fire and national team coach Stephen Keshi
has been locked in a wrangle over a new contract, just weeks before the start
of qualification for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations. Nigeria are defending
champions.
Already, the country’s
Coaches Association has distanced itself from the NFF while football writers
have called on President Goodluck Jonathan to intervene.
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