Super Eagles’ Coach Stephen Keshi on Wednesday described the seven-month salary being owed him by the Nigeria Football Association (NFA) as “the lowest point” of his coaching career.
Keshi said this in Abuja at the
Home-based Super Eagles’ interactive session with the media ahead of the team’s
upcoming international friendly with Jordan in Amman.
He spoke in reaction to a statement
credited to the NFA that the allowances and bonuses the team’s coaches
earn were enough to sustain them.
Keshi is being owed about N35million
in salary arrears.
Keshi however said the NFA had not
done him any favour with the Super Eagles’ coaching job, because he had done
the job with all he had.
‘’Owing me up to seven months makes
me feel I am not being appreciated. It is like they (my employers) think I am
being favoured in what I am doing.
I am not being favoured. Whatever I am doing here, I am doing it with everything I have and I need to be respected and be paid’’
I am not being favoured. Whatever I am doing here, I am doing it with everything I have and I need to be respected and be paid’’
The former Super Eagles captain
recalled that he was never owed his salaries when he worked with the Malian and
Togolese football federations as coach of their senior national teams.
“In Mali, they will never owe you.
Your salary will hit your account before the end of every month. It was the
same thing in Togo.
He said it was unbelievable that he
and his colleagues had worked without pay for about eight months out of the 24
months they have worked with the Super Eagles.
“I don’t like discussing about money
issues and if there is any NFA member who said we can work for free, then I
will want to speak with him face to face.
“If they say we can work for free
and that they are not going to pay, so be it.
“I can’t have my family abroad and I
will be in debt because I have not been paid for seven months and somebody is
saying we should not complain,” the coach said.
He regretted that the NFA appears
not to be concerned about their plight “in spite of training under rain and sun
to make Nigerians happy”.
Aminu Maigari, the
NFA chairman, had recently confirmed the debt owed Keshi and his colleagues.
He had however said the Nigerian
football governing body could not help it as it was cash-strapped.
-vanguard
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