@csrf

05.08.2021 news JUST IN: PUMA to Sue Nigeria for Breaching $2.7m Kits Agreement

Published 5th Aug, 2021

By Damilola Ayeni

PUMA, a sportswear manufacturing company based in Germany, says it will sue Nigeria’s Ministry of Youth and Sport and the Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) for breaching the provisions of a $2.76m kits contract.

This was revealed by Sunday Adeleye, AFN’s Vice President, while appearing on Arise Tv on Thursday.

“We are sure that PUMA will go to court on this matter,” Adeleye said. “Their officials have called that they were sending documents from their legal department.”

PUMA’s latest move follows a letter dated Wednesday, August 4, where it communicated its decision to terminate the three-year-old contract with Nigeria.

In July 2019, the AFN, under the leadership of Ibrahim Gusau, had signed a four-year deal with PUMA in Doha, Qatar. As part of the deal, the company was to supply apparel to Nigerian athletes free of charge. In addition, PUMA would award $15,000, $5,000 and $3,000 to Nigerian Olympic gold, silver and bronze medalists respectively. However, Nigerian athletes were required to wear PUMA jerseys at the games.

According to the company, Nigeria breached the agreement when its athletes did not wear PUMA jerseys at the ongoing Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

One reply on “JUST IN: PUMA to Sue Nigeria for Breaching $2.7m Kits Agreement”

Please, fire somebody, whoever it is. These guys cannot be putting Nigeria to shame and costing us money at the same time.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Published 5th Aug, 2021

By Damilola Ayeni

Advertisement

Our Stories

Olatunji Resigns As First News Editor After Publisher’s Apology to Gbajabiamila

First News Apologises to Gbajabiamila Over Story That Landed Editor in Underground Cell

CSOs To Protest at Force HQ Over FIJ Reporter Daniel Ojukwu’s Police Abduction

‘I Don’t Know Where to Go’ — Man Who Paid N150,000 to Live Under Lagos Bridge Laments Shelter Demolition

Lawyer Assaulted at Abuja Court

Medellin Colombia

How a Colombian City Cooled Dramatically in Just Three Years

Customs' Ejigbunu

Nigeria Customs Removes Ejigbunu After Several ‘Good Morning’ Tweets

ATM

Full List: 16 Transactions Free From Cybersecurity Tax

With N5m in Customer’s Wallet, Fintech Startup Thepeer Shuts Down

Spanish-Brazilian Killer of Nigerian Schoolboy Remanded in UK

Advertisement