FWWC: Super Falcons protest unpaid bonus, allowances
Nigeria were eliminated from the round-of-16 by Germany after a 3-0
defeat on Saturday, June 22 in Grenoble, France.
Just hours after their elimination, the players have revealed that
they will not leave their hotel until they are paid what they have
asked for.
The outstanding bonuses run into N2m from two games, against Gambia
and Senegal, from as far back as two years ago.
The players, according to the report, have also not been paid their
camp allowances for five days in France.
“They paid us N1 million and said that is all. We want them to pay the
balance,” one player said in the report.
“Part of that money is from two years ago, the other is from three
years ago. And they are also owing us five days’ daily allowance here
in France.”
President of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) Amaju Pinnick,
however, insists that all outstanding allowances have been paid with
the only debt being from the participation fee from FIFA which will
only come after the tournament.
According to Pinnick, the Super Falcons players say their Cameroonian
and French colleagues have already received money from the
participation fee.
This is not the first time the Super Falcons are staging a sit-in
protest at their hotel over unpaid bonuses and allowances.
Shortly after winning the 2004 Africa Women’s Cup of Nations (AWCON)
in South Africa, the Super Falcons refused to leave their hotel,
protesting their unpaid allowances and bonuses from the tournament.
They got their money after staying five days at the hotel.
It happened again in December 2016 when the Super Falcons had a
nine-day sit-in protest at a hotel in Abuja after winning the AWCON
title in Cameroon.
The players who seized the AWCON trophy also took to the streets in
protest and marched National Assembly Complex where President
Muhammadu Buhari was scheduled to be present.