Long after the celebrations that greeted Uganda’s emergence as host of the 2031 African Games, a different contest is beginning to unfold, one not on the track or field, but in the documents, resolutions and records that shaped the outcome.
At the centre of the emerging debate are official African Union (AU) resolutions that appear to raise more questions than answers about Nigeria’s unsuccessful bid and the explanations that followed.
The documents, originating from the Fifth Ordinary Session of the African Union Specialized Technical Committee on Youth, Culture and Sports (STC-YCS V), provide a rare glimpse into the continental process governing one of Africa’s biggest multi-sport events.
What they reveal is not necessarily evidence of wrongdoing. But they do expose gaps in the public record that deserve closer scrutiny.
The first entry in the file
Buried among the resolutions is a provision acknowledging Nigeria’s interest in hosting the Games.
The document states:
“ACKNOWLEDGES the Federal Republic of Nigeria’s submission of a bid to host the 15th Edition of the African Games in 2031.”
At first glance, the statement appears routine.
Yet it establishes an important fact.
Nigeria was not a casual observer. The country was formally in the race and had advanced its candidature through the appropriate continental channels.
That acknowledgement immediately raises a question that remains unanswered:
What happened between Nigeria’s formal bid submission and Uganda’s eventual emergence as host?
The road not taken
Another section of the same AU document appears even more significant.
Addressing uncertainty surrounding the hosting arrangements for the 2027 African Games, the committee resolved:
“RECOMMENDS re-opening the bid to host the 2027 African Games, considering the delays to sign the Host Protocol Agreement between the Arab Republic of Egypt and the African Union if it is not signed by 28 February 2026.”
The recommendation was repeated elsewhere in the resolution.
“FURTHER RECOMMENDS re-opening the bid to host African Games if a host country fails to comply with Article 18 of the Statute of the AU Sports Council…”
For students of sports governance, the language is noteworthy.
The operative phrase is “re-opening the bid.”
Not transfer.
Not concession.
Not allocation.
The committee’s preferred remedy, at least according to the available resolution, was a fresh bidding process.
That principle lies at the heart of current questions being asked by stakeholders.
How are bids reopened?
Who qualifies?
What criteria are applied?
And what role did Nigeria play within those discussions?
The rotation argument
The documents also shed light on another issue that has circulated within sports administration circles: geographical rotation.
The AU resolution requests member states to align future hosting arrangements with the continental geographical framework to ensure equitable opportunities among regions.
However, the document adds a crucial qualification:
“This rotational framework shall take effect from the 2035 African Games onward.”
The significance of that timeline should not be underestimated.
If the framework takes effect from 2035, stakeholders may reasonably ask how much influence, if any, regional rotation considerations had on decisions relating to earlier editions.
The question is not academic.
It goes directly to the explanations that have been offered in the aftermath of Nigeria’s unsuccessful bid.
The documents that have not been seen
What makes the story particularly intriguing is not merely what the available documents contain.
It is what they do not contain.
The resolutions reviewed for this report acknowledge Nigeria’s bid.
They outline principles governing future hosting arrangements.
They discuss the circumstances under which bidding processes may be reopened.
Yet they do not explain how Uganda ultimately secured hosting rights.
Somewhere between the acknowledgement of Nigeria’s candidature and Uganda’s successful bid lies a documentary trail that remains largely outside public view.
That trail may include:
Technical evaluation reports;
Inspection and assessment findings;
Bid comparison matrices;
Correspondence between bidding nations and AU authorities;
Recommendations from evaluation teams;
Deliberations by decision-making bodies;
Voting records, where applicable.
Without access to those documents, the full story remains incomplete.
The questions that remain
The issue is no longer simply whether Nigeria lost a bid.
Countries lose bids regularly.
The larger issue concerns transparency, accountability and institutional learning.
Several questions remain unresolved.
What technical strengths distinguished Uganda’s bid?
What weaknesses, if any, were identified in Nigeria’s submission?
Who prepared Nigeria’s bid documents?
What observations did evaluators make?
How much public money was invested in the campaign?
Were concerns raised during the process, and how were they addressed?
Most importantly, what documentary record exists to explain the final outcome?
Beyond winners and losers
Nigeria successfully hosted the African Games in 2003 and remains one of Africa’s most influential sporting nations.
That pedigree makes the country’s failure to secure the 2031 edition a legitimate subject of public interest.
The objective is not to assign blame before evidence is gathered.
Nor is it to diminish Uganda’s success.
Rather, it is to understand how decisions were made, what lessons can be learned and whether Nigeria’s sporting institutions are adequately positioned to compete for major international events in the future.
For now, the available AU documents have performed an important function.
They have opened a window into a process that has largely remained behind closed doors.
Whether that window leads to greater transparency or merely deeper controversy may depend on what documents emerge next.

