Hub of Cricket Information

best from cricket world

South Africa Challenges

Bookmark and Share

By Gerald Imray, AP Sports Writer

World Cup organizing chief Danny Jordaan said Thursday South Africa still has challenges to meet just two months before the start of the tournament.

Security concerns following an upsurge in racial tensions and disappointing ticket sales are undermining the first African host's preparations for the World Cup.

"We've achieved a lot, we still have challenges," Jordaan said as the organizing committee reported that it was on track to deliver the tournament within budget.

When asked if organizers feared a violent reaction during the competition to the murder last weekend of right-wing leader Eugene Terreblanche, Jordaan said: "No, it's not going to happen."

There were already question marks over team and fan safety at the monthlong tournament before Terreblanche's murder brought South Africa's violent crime problem to the fore again.

FIFA and tournament organizers have said they will not comment on the case. FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke only addressed general security matters on Thursday.

"Whatever is happening, we are dealing with security and it's not public," Valcke said. "On security, we have done the maximum we can do."

On the readiness of the country to host the World Cup, Valcke said: "We are confident. We have been for a long time."

Valcke likened the last two months of preparation to a train ride, with no more stops between now and kickoff on June 11, and no way back.

"Whatever I'm hearing, whatever I'm reading, it's too late," Valcke said. "When you are organizing an event, you are waiting for the end, for the final, for July 12, where you can say, 'Gosh, it's over'."

Valcke said the former head of operations at Interpol had now joined FIFA as its security adviser but did not say if it was related to an increased security threat in South Africa.

South Africa's place in the international spotlight as host of one of the world's biggest sporting events has coincided with a number of recent race-related incidents which have cast the country in an unflattering light.

Terreblanche, a notorious white supremacist, was bludgeoned to death last Saturday near the town of Ventersdorp, northwest of Johannesburg. Police say he was killed by two black farm workers in a wage dispute but Terreblanche's Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) group say the murder was linked to the singing of a revolutionary song by black youth leader Julius Malema.

There were confrontations between blacks and whites following Terreblanche's murder, and an AWB official stormed off a television debate Wednesday after arguing with and then threatening a black woman.

In the midst of this, the message from World Cup organizers is that the tournament will be safe and a success.

"The (World Cup) infrastructure is not just in place; it is world class." Jordaan said. "Our stadiums were ranked among the best in the world. We have 68 percent of our budget left to deliver the World Cup and we have completed the stadiums.

"We are in a good position to deliver the event, which we want to be world class."

Jordaan said this World Cup was about the people of the country embracing the event.

Organizers hope there is still both time and a desire for visitors to come to the country and boost disappointing ticket sales.

"Be South African and be a good host," Jordaan said to the home fans on the same day Malema, the president of the ANC's youth league, swore at and then asked security to remove a foreign journalist from a news conference at the ruling party's headquarters.

Jordaan would not comment on the incident, saying he did not know the details, but said: "All of us must act as good hosts."

On broader World Cup issues, Jordaan said "This country cannot cut itself off from the international community.

"The teams coming here, (Lionel) Messi is an international and so is (Cristiano) Ronaldo and so is Kaka. This World Cup must reintegrate South Africa as part of the global community."

Jordaan said the global economic climate -- not South Africa's reputation -- had affected ticket sales.

Foreign visitors are expected to fall well short of the 450,000 expected for the tournament, but organizers remain positive, saying ticket sales compared favorably with the same point in 2006 ahead of the World Cup in Germany.

Organizing committee chairman Irvin Khoza said he was confident that South Africa could overcome the world's skepticism ahead of the "biggest show on planet earth."

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Labels:

posted @ 10:50 AM,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home


Light Within

Blog Roll

ss_blog_claim=eebcdd26d5c32d5838ede03f68f01f91 ss_blog_claim=eebcdd26d5c32d5838ede03f68f01f91