Challenges to S.Africa's hosting of World CupPublished on Thu, Nov 26, 2009 at 10:52 | Source : Reuters Updated at Thu, Nov 26, 2009 at 12:54
Unlike several Olympics and World Cups in the past, South Africa is well on schedule to complete the 10 stadiums, five of them impressive new arenas. They are all expected to be ready by the end of the year, six months before the tournament starts. But other challenges remain.
Security World Cup chief Danny Jordaan and police officials say, however, that South Africa has successfully organised many international sporting and other events and welcomes 9.5 million tourists a year. They say protecting fans, players and officials is a much more finite and manageable task than combating random common crime. More than 50,000 officers, more than a quarter of the force, will provide security, backed by new hardware including pilotless drones and helicopters. South African police have also been trained by French gendarmes in techniques to control soccer hooligans and have prepared for terrorism -- considered of low risk here because of the country's non-aligned credentials. However, the presence of the United States and England, among other nations, could be a target, police say.
Transport South Africa lacks the extensive and efficient rail network that made travel easy at the last World Cup in Germany. But the population has stoically accepted huge traffic disruption to build a network of new roads and the Gautrain, a high speed rail link around Johannesburg and Pretoria. A modern new bus service is also being built to provide transport for township dwellers left stranded under apartheid, who were obliged to use dangerous and sometimes violent minibus operators. World Cup fans are expected to use the mass transit service to reach stadiums. Jordaan says 200 additional planes and a thousand new buses will be mobilised for the World Cup, but final planning cannot begin until the draw reveals where the big teams and their fans will be. FIFA has established a complex plan to bus and fly fans from big accommodation centres to small venues like Polokwane on match days.
Accomodation Many South Africans are also hoping to move out of their homes and let rooms at high prices to foreign visitors.
Economy There have also been concerns about power supply to meet additional need during the World Cup. Rising electricity demand in an expanding economy and lack of investment in generation capacity almost caused the national grid to collapse early last year, when there were weeks of rolling power cuts. But both analysts and the state power utility Eskom say they have capacity to avoid blackouts during the tournament. As backup, all World Cup stadiums have their own generators under FIFA requirements.
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