…as NFF, SWAN mourn foremost women football promoter
ANDREW EKEJIUBA
The remains of Henrietta Ukaigwe, Nigeria’s foremost women football promoter and administrator, who died on Tuesday, have arrived her home town in Nwangele Local Government Area of Imo State.
She died at the Ikeja General Hospital, Ikeja, Lagos, at about 10:20am after a brief illness.
1stnewsonline.com reports that the veteran sports journalist was a member of the Board of the Nigeria Women Football League (NWFL), and for several decades was at the vanguard of promoting the game of women’s football in Nigeria and even beyond the shores of the country.
She was a staunch member of the Sports Writers Association of Nigeria (SWAN), who played a key role in the wide interest gained by the game from the 1990s as Nigeria’s Super Falcons relentlessly dominated the African game and became a permanent fixture in the FIFA Women’s World Cup.
Ukaigwe was also at the head of a corps of women’s football-passionate reporters and stakeholders, who birthed the Female Football Interest Group (FFIG), comprising a number of individuals, who actively promoted and energetically projected the women’s game and made it an item of serious importance in the media and public space across the nation from the nineties. The group did not only report the game; it coalesced efforts and resources to organise women’s football tournaments and provided much-needed clout and meaningful support to administrators at that incipient stage.
They also worked assiduously with the precursor-proprietors, including Chief (Mrs) Simbiat Abiola, Alhaja Ayo Omidiran, Elder Eddington Kuejubola, Princess Bola Jegede, Chief Christopher Abisuga, Mr. Larry Eze, Alhaja Rashidat Oladimeji and Chief (Mrs) Gina Yeseibo to stoke serious interest and mainstream support for the game even before a league was launched.
FFIG’s efforts reaped bounteous rewards, as Nigeria and other African countries raised women’s national teams at senior, intermediate and junior levels to compete in competitions that FIFA launched with only moderate expectations.
Today, Nigeria’s domestic women’s football has 20 clubs in the premier division, with 12 in the pro division and dozens in the amateur cadre, counting both registered and unregistered teams. Nationally, the Super Falcons, Falconets and Flamingos are fixtures at their different FIFA tournaments, and the FIFA Women’s World Cup, FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup and the FIFA U17 Women’s Cup have carved their own niche and continue to thrive.
Ukaigwe worked at the Vanguard Newspapers, MINAJ Broadcasting Service, Super Screen Television and a couple of other media houses before serving as Co-ordinator of the Senior Women National Team, Super Falcons.
A couple of years ago, she was appointed into the Board of the Nigeria Women Football League headed by another ace promoter of the women’s game, Aisha Falode.
“The death of Henrietta Ukaigwe is a devastating blow to the game of women’s football in Nigeria. We are still in rude shock at her premature departure, but we collectively take solace in the fact that she left her formidable footprints in the sands of time. We pray that God will give her eternal rest and also grant those she has left behind the fortitude to bear the big loss,” NFF General Secretary, Dr. Mohammed Sanusi, said in Abuja.
Reacting to her death, NWFL Chairperson, Aisha Falode, told reporters that, “The management of the NWFL and the Ukaigwe’s family are in deep in sorrow following her demise. She left us after a brief illness and the NFF and NWFL shall be sending further information regarding the burial arrangements.”
Throwing more light on her demise, a member of FFIG, Humphrey Njoku, said Ukaigwe was admitted at the Ikeja General Hospital five days ago for ulcer complications before she passed on.