Editorials
Loss of sponsor for Nyayo stadium too costly
Posted Thursday, May 21 2009 at 18:34
Coca-Cola has withdrawn its Sh120 million, three-year deal to refurbish the Nyayo National Stadium.
The about-turn is due to the insistence by Sports minister Hellen Sambili and others in government that renaming the venue Coca-Cola National Stadium and dropping the name “Nyayo” would amount to discarding a national heritage.
The minister’s decision is ludicrous, to say the least, especially considering that Coca-Cola won a competitive bid tendered by the Sports Stadia Management Board, a parastatal in the ministry charged with marketing sports facilities.
The acquisition of naming rights is not unique to Kenya; it is a global trend in sports marketing. Coca-Cola has already given the government Sh16 million as part of the deal, with a further Sh6 million going into refurbishing the erstwhile run-down venue.
The ramifications of the pull-out, therefore, are more than meets the eye. The stadium will revert to its earlier name and, undoubtedly, degenerate to its former dilapidated state, given the meagre maintenance budget allocated by the government.
This also means that the government will have to refund over Sh20 million to the company, and a lot more money for breach of contract.
Most importantly, it will mean that the country’s athletes will miss an opportunity to compete and train in the world-class facility that Coca-Cola envisaged.
With football’s World Cup coming up next year in South Africa, a refurbished Coca-Cola National Stadium would have positioned itself adequately to enjoy the spill-overs.
The minister must offer assurance that the government can match, if not improve on, Coca-Cola’s investment, failing which it must allow the corporate to enjoy the naming rights to the letter.
Hanging onto a name that offers nothing to development under the guise of protecting national heritage is patently ridiculous.
-
Submitted by stekashPosted May 25, 2009 06:17 PM
-
Submitted by MDuale
With the withdrawal of the Coke deal, Kenyans can kiss goodbye the oppotunity to see in action Brazil, Argentina, England, Germany and/or any of the other footballing superpowers who would have used the facility in Nairobi to acclimatise for the South Africa 2010 World Cup.
Posted May 22, 2009 06:57 PM -
Submitted by NdettoNation
What is Nyayo. i dont think this is heritage at all. the remarks by the minister are extremely blutant. I do support cocacoolas withdrawal from the deal. This government seems to be taking everyone for granted. Even those who play a major role.
Posted May 22, 2009 10:30 AM -
Submitted by Agogdhano
I support the minister one hundred percent not because I am a conservative but because I cherish our national heritage and also recognise Mzee Moi's initiative that gave us these sporting facilities. Let's maintain them. Long live NYAYO!
Posted May 22, 2009 10:30 AM -
Submitted by vnajit
Yet another misguided ODM legislator. What value does the name "Nyayo" add to the stadium? Is "Nyayo" going to use his billions to refurbish the stadium- I bet not!
Posted May 22, 2009 10:25 AM




RSS
If national heritage is so important, why have you let frogs and mosquitos take over the pool at both major stadia? A site of national heritage is there to be taken care of and maintained, not run down. Past and previous governments don't consider the stadium and other such like facilities "our national heritage". If they did, they would do away with the hefty hospitality budgets for tea and mandazi in GoK offices, and use that to refurbish the stadia and feed hungry Kenyans! Washindwe!