Saturday, January 10, 2009

Does South Africa deserve the 2010 World Cup?

Shaped like a giant traditional cooking bowl, built on disused land where 60 per cent of the world's gold was once mined, Soccer City, the grey steel Johannesburg stadium at the centre of the 2010 World Cup, is preparing to welcome 94,000 people from around the world for the kick-off. It is, for all of Africa, a symbol of enormous pride. Four years after the bitter loss to Germany, South Africa has been awarded the chance to host an event that rivals the Olympics in stirring the passions of billions of people around the world. Yet within South Africa, critics argue that the £2 billion cost should instead be spent on creating jobs, schools and clinics. And overseas, fear is growing that the high crime, violence and political instability may yet force an emergency switch to an alternative venue.

The world football authorities are certainly taking risks in South Africa. Crime is still alarming. Last year there were 18,487 murders, 36,190 rapes, 14,481 home invasions, 14,201 carjackings and 118,312 aggravated robberies. Large areas of the main cities are no-go areas for tourists. Black teenagers, guns in their belts, patrol ghettos within sight of the five renovated and five new stadiums that will be used. Poverty, underinvestment and disease exacerbate tensions. A lack of power generation leads to frequent blackouts in Johannesburg. Aids is still killing thousands. And amid high unemployment, the flood of refugees from Zimbabwe has fuelled xenophobia and led to township riots.

Several thousands of New Year party revellers and holidaymakers take to the North Pier Beach to spend the New Years Day in Durban on January 1, 2009. The city situated on the east coast of the African Continent attracts thousands of local and international tourists boosting the local economy at this time of the year. The city of Durban is one of the major cities to host the 2010 World Cup soccer tournament in June 2010.

But South Africa is determined to overcome the challenges. Thirteen new generators will be built to guarantee power to the stadiums. Some 200,000 armed police will be on hand to guard the matches. Helicopters and planes will patrol the skies. Around £400 million will be spent improving the country's roads, railways, airports and infrastructure. Slums are being cleared, squatters rehoused and a vast construction effort, creating at least 100,000 jobs, has begun to ensure that the facilities are ready in time.

Indeed, the World Cup is seen as vital in rallying a country in the face of economic uncertainty, political splits and growing impatience among the urban poor at the slow pace of improvements in basic health and education. The Government can no longer rely on any post-apartheid euphoria to overcome divisions of race or wealth. It can, however, appeal to an intense national sporting pride. Afrikaners have long seen rugby as a basic ingredient of their identity; for English-speakers, cricket has played a similar role. But for the black majority, football has been the escape from poverty and the unifying enthusiasm. One of Nelson Mandela's most famous acts of reconciliation was his early embrace of what was then the overwhelmingly white rugby team. His successors hope that the World Cup can deliver the same symbol of a new, better South Africa.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

South Africa does not deserve the 2010 World CUP.
They are always trying to take advantage on the tourists.
The police is a crap, they just want your money.
Even the police traffic control is organized to rob the strangers.
Every one who attend the world cup, will see how unsafe south africa is.
Thats why o say, World cup in south africa sucks...
These people is full of xenofobia and discrimantion.
Be prepared to be robbed if u go there.
Or you will stay in your hotel all day, and will wait for a Metro Taxi to get you ( and be robbed on the rates) and after the game go back to the hotel.
Even inside a mall you are not safe.

footballer3 said...

Thanks for all the truth. I belive that south africa with all the racial tension still apperant and the bad government then they don't deserve it. I say put the cup in somewhere that deserves it and can handle all the people without empying all the bad citicens in the country. The countries that deserve it are scandinavian countries or Australia/New Zealand. South africa will have a lot to live up to compared to the flawless preformance the Germans put on.
As a long time football fan I am descusted that the world cup will be played in a country that can't even handle it's own crime problems. I was waiting for so long to watch the biggest sporting event on the planet, now it will be ruined by the crappiness of South Africa.

Anonymous said...

South africa is FUCKED!
50000000 K4s
5million taxpayers mostly ageing whites!
Its living in a twilight zone.
Yours sincerely
Former 1SAI Soldier. Proud white south african.

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