| |
2010 World Cup ‘ll boost Africa
--Mbeki
South African President Thabo Mbeki pledged Monday to ensure the
first ever World Cup to be staged on African soil would benefit
the whole of the world's poorest continent.
"We have to make absolute certainty that 2010 will benefit
Africa and the African diaspora," Mbeki said in a speech at the
African Union summit in Addis Ababa.Countries close to South
Africa are hoping to reap significant dividends from the 2010
tournament, both from tourists and teams looking for training
bases ahead of the finals.
Interest in football, already the most popular sport in Africa,
is also likely to accelerate in the countdown to the big kick-off.Mbeki
said the tournament should leave Africa as a whole better off,
and he expressed the hope that it would lead to other countries
on the continent staging the world's biggest sporting event.
"We should have this African legacy, we are working on a
systematic manner so that it has a lasting legacy," he said
before delegates at the summit which included FIFA president
Sepp Blatter.
"As we proceed on our way towards 2010, the continent and the
African people will be better than they are today thanks to the
role of football."
Blatter said Africa had fully earned the right to stage the
tournament. South Africa controversially lost out to Germany to
host the 2006 event but bounced back with its follow-up bid.
"Africa has provided the world with so many players and
coaches," said Blatter. "We had legitimate joy when South Africa
won the rights to host the World Cup in 2010.
"We are optimistic that football can make things smooth and
Africa can be looked upon with respect rather than being
patronised.
"African football has made huge strides in the last two decades
and players such as Barcelona's Cameroon striker Samuel Et'o and
Chelsea's Ivorian forward Didier Drogba, are gracing the top
leagues in Europe.
Issa Hayatou, the head of the Confederation of African Football
(CAF), said the decision to hand the continent five places at
the next World Cup was a signal of growing respect."We will see
that we have to prove ourselves after we have been handed five
places," he said.
Hayatou echoed Mbeki with his desire for the whole continent to
benefit from 2010.
"I want to tell you that the World Cup should be for the entire
continent, not only for South Africa," he said."We have
differences but we should be together from north to south and
west to east. Who could have thought about this 20 years ago?"
|
|