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Ready For Kickoff
In its first dry run before World Cup 2009, South Africa says it is fully prepared to host the games.
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South Africans were confronted this week with the reality of hosting one of the greatest shows on earth. The first game of the 2010 FIFA World Cup soccer tournament will get under way in just one year's time at Johannesburg's FNB Stadium. It will be a pivotal moment for this country and the continent—THE first ever World Cup held on African soil. But will the country be ready?
The biggest test comes this weekend, when national teams, officials and fans arrive for the first and last "dress rehearsal," the Confederations Cup. Officials insist that everything is on track. Danny Jordaan, CEO of the 2010 local organizing committee, promises the noisiest World Cup ever and, touching on the greatest concern of skeptics in this crime-ridden land, no security problems. "Tickets are being sold," he says, "and there is no Plan B."
As recently as 2007, officials from FIFA, soccer's world governing body, did have a Plan B—holding the tournament in Australia, which staged near-perfect Olympic Games in 2004. Fears that some of the 450,000 foreign expected visitors might be mugged or, worse, killed in a country where some 50 people a day are murdered, topped a worry list that also included finishing stadiums, accommodating fans and getting them to games and between host cities. While the whispers of a change in venue have faded, some worries remain. The South African government has spent billions addressing the first two areas of concern, and will spend billions more on the third. The price tag is problematic enough—the country's economy lurched into its first recession in nearly two decades—earlier this year. Of greater concern is whether all the spending will really deliver the safe, smooth and celebrated tournament organizers are promising.
Stadium development, for some time disrupted by legal disputes and strikes, is now on target. Four stadium upgrades have been completed, and the first new stadium was finished this week. Five others are on pace to be ready by December. Progress on transportation projects has not been as encouraging. The massive Gautrain initiative linking Johannesburg with the city's international airport and Pretoria will be only partly completed by the time the World Cup starts, and rapid-bus systems in host cities have fallen behind schedule. But billions of dollars have been spent upgrading road, rail and airport-city link systems and a much-improved public-transport system will be a key World Cup legacy.
"Transport is what I'm most concerned about," Helen Zille, premier of the Western Cape and leader of the opposition Democratic Alliance, told NEWSWEEK. "But we are on deadline and are meeting our milestones." Zille may have reason to worry. Recently, striking taxi drivers threatened to disrupt the World Cup and "turn Cape Town into another Baghdad."
Still, it is crime that worries South Africans the most—58 percent believe that safety will be a concern for visitors, according to a survey conducted for world football officials last month. Violent crime is gradually declining and the government is taking a tougher stance on tackling it, but the crime rate in South Africa remains among the highest in the world.
The government response to those concerns is impressive, at least in scope. A force of some 40,000 police officers will be deployed in cities hosting the games. Dedicated police stations, crime-investigation teams and special courts will deal with event-related crimes around the clock, and a 24-hour multilingual hotline will assist visitors in trouble. Countries competing in the event will send their own specially trained officers to assist in the effort, and soldiers could be drafted in to help the police and emergency services. Addressing the lasting jitters over crime, committee head Jordaan pointed out this week that South Africa is no stranger to hosting mega-events.
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