He Ran for His Country, But It Was His Country That Gunned Him Down.. Not in War, Not in Terror but in Envy..
The tragic story of Otenkwa Dele Ndubuisi Udoh.. a boy of two tribes, a dreamer of two worlds, and a victim of a jealous gun.
He was born in Umuahia, Abia State, on May 24, 1957. A Yoruba-Igbo boy, two proud heritages burning in his veins, but one soul, fast, driven, gifted. From a young age, Otenkwa Dele Ndubuisi Udoh didn’t walk, he sprinted. His feet were blessed, and so was his future.
In the 1970s, he crossed the ocean to chase a dream. America. The land of freedom. There, at the University of Missouri, he blazed through the tracks like a storm. He became a collegiate champion, loved, respected, admired. He was the pride of the Missouri Tigers, and one of the most promising 400m runners the world had seen. In 1978, he helped set a world record in the Sprint Medley Relay at the Baylor International in Texas.
In 1980, he represented Nigeria at the Moscow Olympics, running alongside legends like Sunday Uti and Hope Ezeigbo. So he came home. To serve. To run again. To make his country proud.
But what do you call a land where jealousy wears a uniform?
On July 15, 1981, Dele Udoh, aged just 24, was back in Lagos, preparing for the Continental Championships. That night they plan to eat Dinner at the National Institute for Sports camp in Surulere was over. Nothing left. So, they decided to quickly head down to Ojuelegba, just a short ride, to grab a late meal. Hunger shouldn’t kill a champion.
It wasn’t hunger that killed Dele Udoh.
A police officer flagged them down. Dele, polite and respectful, tried to explain.
He told the officer, “In the US where I just returned from, police officers don’t point guns at innocent people like this.” A simple statement. But truth offends the insecure.
The officer, now consumed with rage and envy, replied with venom. “So you think you can go to America and return to insult me? You will not go back to that your good country alive.”
And with that, the officer pulled the trigger.
Just like that, Dele Udoh, the boy who chose Nigeria over America, was shot dead by the same country he came home to represent. A bullet silenced his future. A jealous man in uniform murdered a national treasure.
Back at the camp, chaos broke out. Green Eagles teammates Felix Owolabi and Moses Kpakor were among the first to hear the news. They couldn’t believe it. No protests. No riots. Just a quiet shot, and a loud death.
A group of Ojuelegba “alaye boys” who had admired Dele from afar were the ones who ran to the camp to break the news. These street boys respected him. But the police officer, sworn to protect, did not.
As Nigeria mourned in silence, thousands of miles away in Missouri, a coach cried. Godwin Obasogie, Dele’s friend and teammate, had to break the news to Coach Teel. It was too much. Teel said, “Dele was one of our most beloved. A man of warmth, wisdom, and speed.” And now he was gone.
But there was more pain waiting.
Back in St. Louis, Dele’s teenage wife, Angela Udoh, was pregnant, and widowed. The Nigerian government under Shehu Shagari flew her to Ozu Abam for the burial. There, tradition demanded that she sleep in the same room as her husband’s corpse before he was buried. And she did. Not because she was forced, but because she loved him that much.
She left behind a daughter, Angelle Burrus, born fatherless. She never knew her father. For 37 years, she lived without knowing the full story, until a Nigerian journalist, Taiwo Abiodun, tracked her down in 2018. Her father died before she could speak his name.
Justice never came. The police officer who murdered Dele? He walked free. Protected by a system that eats its brightest.
He ran for his country. And his country shot him in return. Not in war. Not in error. But in envy.
He was 24.
He was hungry.
He was polite.
He was Nigerian.
And that was enough to get him killed.
Let history never forget the name: Otenkwa Ndubuisi Dele Udoh.
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Culled from Historylovers101