At a briefing on the visit’s planned activities, Air Vice Marshal Abidemi Marquis, the Director of Sports at Defense Headquarters and the chairman of the organizing committee, gave an update.
According to the Defence Headquarters (DHQ), Prince Harry and Princess Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, will travel to Nigeria on Friday, May 10, 2024, for a three-day visit. The tour will center on the Invictus Games and wounded troops from various military operations.
Prince Harry, the man behind the Invictus Game, has extended an invitation to General Christopher Musa, the Chief of Defence Staff, so he can meet and talk with some of the injured soldiers.
At a briefing on the visit’s planned activities, Air Vice Marshal Abidemi Marquis, the Director of Sports at Defense Headquarters and the chairman of the organizing committee, gave an update.
AVM Marquis disclosed that Prince Harry, who founded the Invictus Game, would alongside his wife visit wounded soldiers at Army Reference Hospital Kaduna on Saturday, and also also interact with wounded soldiers and their families in Abuja as well as witness a novelty volleyball match involving wounded soldiers and the CDS team during the visit.
He said the visit would go a long way to help the wounded soldiers in their recovery as well as help with their mental health.
In addition to visiting the wounded soldiers, Marquis said they would also visit Lagos on Sunday where they are supporting an NGO, and be a guest of the Governor Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State before departing Nigeria on Monday.
Emphasizing on the importance of the visit, AVM Marquis said, “We realised that 80 percent of our soldiers have been involved in this recovery programme and they are getting better.
“Their outlook on life is positive because when you experience a permanent disability, it affects your mental health and also your outlook on life.”
“The recovery programme has given them an opportunity to improve their personal self-esteem, to improve their mental health, their emotional intelligence and also their families seeing them continuing living.
“So this engagement with Invictus is giving us the opportunity for a recovery for our soldiers,’’ he said.
Marquis said the visit would lay credence to the fact that the Nigerian Armed Forces had been accepted as a member of the Invictus community.
Disclosing that Nigeria is also looking forward to hosting an Invictus game, he said it was one of the reasons for the visit adding that the Nigerian armed forces had concluded plan to build a state-of-the-art Invictus structure for the management of post-traumatic stress syndrome for wounded and injured soldiers due to the engagement in the counter-insurgency operation.
“They will be proceeding to Kaduna to visit the Nigerian Army Reference Hospital where our wounded and injured soldiers are kept for their medical recovery.
“On Saturday, we will have something like an exhibition of novelty matches where the CDS team and the Duke team will be having a volleyball match at the Armed Forces Officers Mess.
“This is just to engage with the wounded and injured soldiers. It’s a sitting volleyball match coming in the morning.”