Stephen Keshi |
Nigeria
coach Stephen Keshi, in collaboration with his employers the Nigeria
Football Federation, has responded to the query the world football
governing body, FIFA issued him. The query is over his alleged racist
remark targeted at Malawi technical adviser Tom Sainfiet.
The Nigeria coach was given a September 16 deadline to respond to the query.
The General Secretary of the NFF Musa Amadu who spoke with The PUNCH on Tuesday confirmed that the response to FIFA’s Zurich headquarters was dispatched on Monday deadline.
He said, “Yes, we met the deadline. The
response was sent by email and fax. And today (Tuesday) we are sending
the hard copy by courier service.”
Amadu said he was positive that FIFA would understand the background under which the statement was made.
“We’ve explained the circumstances under
which the statement was made; it was under normal pre-match antics we
see of different coaches.
“Of course we all know that Keshi is
somebody who has cross-cultural background and incidentally played his
professional football career in Belgium where Saintfiet comes from. He
was never involved in any racist row all through his career as a player.
His intentions were pure and not the way it appears; they were merely
based on football relations.”
The Malawi federation reported to FIFA what it called ‘racist’ remarks by Keshi aimed at the Belgian.
“We feel the racist remarks by Mr Keshi
are not acceptable,” FAM’s general secretary Suzgo Nyirenda said after
their federation sent official complaint to Zurich.
“We thought it was a personal attack on
our coach and we had to defend him regardless of skin. We felt we should
help our coach and at the same time put a stop to the racist remarks
from Mr Keshi. We have sent evidence of what Keshi said and we hope FIFA
will come up with some measures to control Mr Keshi.”
In the phone interview aired on UK-based
African television show, Keshi was quoted to have said, “I think the
coach of Malawi is crazy. If he wants to talk to FIFA, he should go back
to Belgium. He is not an African person, he is a white dude, he should
go back to Belgium.”
It is not yet clear what type of
sanction may be handed Keshi if found culpable. Active players are
usually suspended from a number of matches and fined as well while teams
are made to play their games in empty stadiums if their fans are guilty
of racist acts. In recent times acts of racism have been rampart in the
Italian league while the separate cases involving Luis Suarez and
former England captain John Terry made the headlines in English
football.
FIFA and other regional football governing bodies have stepped hard against racism in response.
PUNCH
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