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Chapter V · People · Hero H100

Enefiok Udo-Obong

Olympic Gold Medalist (4x400m Relay, Sydney 2000) — Nigeria's Sprint Relay Legend

Summary

Enefiok Udo-Obong anchored Nigeria's 4×400m relay team at the 2000 Sydney Olympics with a devastating final leg sprint that earned Nigeria a silver medal — subsequently upgraded to gold when the USA team was disqualified after Antonio Pettigrew admitted doping. Nigeria's Sydney gold is one of the most dramatic Olympic outcomes in African sports history. Udo-Obong won a bronze medal at the same event at the Athens 2004 Olympics, cementing his status as the finest relay anchor in Nigerian athletics history.

Record

Born

1980

State / origin

Akwa Ibom

Category

sports

Era

democracy

Legal link

s.12 — international treaty obligations; National Sports Commission Act

Documented contributions

  • 01Olympic gold medalist — 4×400m relay, Sydney 2000 (upgraded from silver after USA disqualification)
  • 02Olympic bronze medalist — 4×400m relay, Athens 2004
  • 03Anchored Nigeria's relay team with one of the most celebrated final-leg sprints in Nigerian Olympic history
  • 04Named among the 12 greatest Nigerian sports people of all time (ESPN Africa)
  • 05One of the fastest relay anchors Africa has produced in the post-2000 era

SourcesTertiary

ESPN Africa; IOC; Nigerian athletics records

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enefiok_Udo-Obong

Wikipedia is retained here as a tertiary reference only — primary or secondary sources are still being verified for this entry.

Era context

The political and economic reality

The governments, economies and national crises that shaped Udo-Obong's public life — from roughly 2000 to 2026.

President · Fourth Republic

Chief Olusegun Obasanjo

1999–2007· PDP

National reality

Return to civilian rule, 29 May 1999. Telecoms deregulation (2001) — GSM revolution. Paris Club exit, October 2005 ($30 bn debt relief, Okonjo-Iweala). Pension Reform 2004. EFCC established 2003.

Crises of the period

  • Third Term agenda defeated 2006
  • Niger Delta militancy intensifies
  • ASUU strikes; Sharia introduction in 12 northern states

GDP (World Bank)

$59 bn (1999) → $166 bn (2007)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Adamu Ciroma (1999–2003); Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (2003–06)

  • Education

    Tunde Adeniran; Babalola Borishade; Fabian Osuji; Chinwe Obaji; Oby Ezekwesili

  • Health

    Prof. ABC Nwosu

Source: Federal Gazette 1999–2007; CBN; World Bank WDI

President · Fourth Republic

Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar'Adua

2007–2010· PDP

National reality

Niger Delta amnesty programme (2009). Yar'Adua became gravely ill in late 2009; the Doctrine of Necessity (Feb 2010) made Goodluck Jonathan Acting President. Yar'Adua died 5 May 2010.

Crises of the period

  • Yar'Adua medical absence + cabal
  • Niger Delta amnesty negotiations
  • Boko Haram founding violence (Maiduguri 2009)

GDP (World Bank)

$166 bn (2007) → $369 bn (2010, post-rebasing trajectory)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Education

    Igwe Aja-Nwachuku; Dr. Sam Egwu

Source: Federal Gazette 2007–10

President · Fourth Republic

Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan

2010–2015· PDP

National reality

GDP rebasing April 2014 made Nigeria Africa's largest economy. Chibok abduction 14 April 2014 (276 girls). Sovereign Wealth Fund established 2012. Fuel-subsidy protests January 2012. Lost the 2015 election — first incumbent defeated.

Crises of the period

  • #OccupyNigeria fuel-subsidy protests (Jan 2012)
  • Chibok abduction (Apr 2014)
  • Boko Haram caliphate at peak (2014)
  • Oil price crash from mid-2014

GDP (World Bank)

$369 bn (2010) → $546 bn (2014, post-rebasing — largest African economy)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (Coordinating Minister of the Economy)

  • Education

    Ruqayyatu Ahmed Rufa'i; Ibrahim Shekarau

  • Petroleum

    Diezani Alison-Madueke

Source: Federal Gazette 2010–15; NBS GDP rebasing report 2014

President · Fourth Republic

Muhammadu Buhari

2015–2023· APC

National reality

Two recessions (2016, 2020). Multiple naira devaluations. ASUU strike of 2022 closed federal universities for ~9 months. End SARS protests (Oct 2020); Lekki Toll Gate incident. Out-of-school children >18 million by 2022.

Crises of the period

  • 2016 recession + FX crisis
  • End SARS + Lekki Toll Gate (Oct 2020)
  • COVID-19 lockdown (2020)
  • 9-month ASUU strike (2022)
  • Naira redesign chaos (Q1 2023)

GDP (World Bank)

$494 bn (2015) → $477 bn (2022)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Kemi Adeosun (2015–18); Zainab Ahmed (2018–23)

  • Justice (AGF)

    Abubakar Malami (SAN)

  • Education

    Mallam Adamu Adamu (2015–23)

  • Petroleum

    Muhammadu Buhari (concurrent); Min. of State Ibe Kachikwu then Timipre Sylva

Source: Federal Gazette 2015–23; CBN; NBS

President · Fourth Republic

Sen. Bola Ahmed Tinubu

2023–present· APC

National reality

Fuel subsidy removed at inauguration (29 May 2023); naira floated June 2023. Inflation at multi-decade highs (>30% YoY in 2024). Student loan scheme (NELFUND) launched 2024. WAEC torchlight exam controversy (2025).

Crises of the period

  • Cost-of-living crisis 2023–25
  • WAEC torchlight examinations (2025)
  • JAMB CBT technical failures (2025)
  • Naira free-fall 2023–24

GDP (World Bank)

≈ $363 bn (2023, post-float)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Wale Edun (Coordinating Minister of the Economy)

  • Justice (AGF)

    Lateef Fagbemi (SAN)

  • Education

    Tahir Mamman (2023–24); Tunji Alausa (2024– )

Source: Federal Gazette 2023– ; CBN; NBS

Methodology

Tier 1 · primary

Courts. Gazettes. National archives.

Tier 2 · corroborating

OCCRP. HRW. BudgIT. TheCable.

Redline

Wikipedia is never a source.