Saturday, February 11, 2012

Post World Cup

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Final_matchImmediate reality check as visitors leave

The last cheers had hardly died down at Soccer City, when it was back to business as usual in South Africa. Despite government ministers dismissing warnings of impending xenophobic attacks as mere rumour mongering by opposition leader Helen Zille, the media and a sinister third force hell-bent on undoing South Africa’s very positive current world image, the attacks began last night. And south of Johannesburg, the township service delivery protesters went back to work, blocking the Golden Highway with burning tyres.

Meanwhile, with the infrastructure build programme connected to the Fifa Soccer World Cup now largely something of the past, high unemployment – coupled to tense labour relations manifesting itself in the current wage negotiations season – adds to the more sombre domestic picture when it is stripped of the glamour, razzmatazz and euphoria of the World Cup.

While analysts and commentators are wracking their brains to figure out what the measurable longer term benefits for South Africa will be of spending R33 billion on the highly successful World Cup, the stark realities of real life for many ordinary South Africans continue unchanged.

President Jacob Zuma believes the billions spent have bought South Africa “priceless” benefits in race relations, patriotism and national solidarity. He told investors after the Cup final that lasting improvements in communications and transport had been achieved.

Projects such as the 1Goal campaign in education have also been borne from this extravaganza.

Media reports and mini polls all suggest local business leaders are confident that the benefits of the World Cup will be felt for many years to come, some even likening its marketing value for Brand SA to that associated with the release of Nelson Mandela two decades ago. Business leaders say the country has undergone a psychological metamorphosis, with a revitalised national self-image and rediscovered national pride and unity being the major achievements of this massive investment in the soccer extravaganza.

But they all add a cautionary note, saying the country will need to build further on these achievements to make a lasting difference. And therein lies the rub, as none of the many problems confronting South Africa has gone away during this past month of magical make-believe.

The legacy of South Africa’s World Cup will be an abundance of world-class sports stadiums, gleaming new or upgraded airports, new bus services, the Gautrain, improved road infrastructure in some places (mainly in the vicinity of soccer stadiums used during the tournament) and increased, more effective and more visible policing.

What has not been constructively affected by the World Cup, however, is high unemployment, extreme levels of poverty, housing shortages, high levels of crime experienced daily by ordinary South Africans, service delivery failures and related violent protests, corruption, racism and xenophobia, poor public health services, massive problems in education, climate change developments and impacts, recovery from the recession, agricultural and land-related pressures, electricity and on water resources, and more.


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In addition to this, political meddling by the African National Congress (ANC) government in South Africa’s judiciary and criminal justice system, threats to media freedom, an ongoing centralisation drive by the ANC, economic policy pressures, high levels of tensions within the ANC and the ruling Alliance, and serious leadership lapses continue.

The legacy of the World Cup, however, offers respite. In the words of Roger Jardine, chief executive officer of construction firm Aveng, as quoted by Fin24.com: "The need for public-private partnerships has been elevated during this period. These must be expedited so that the nation can leverage the balance sheets, technical skills and project management expertise of the private sector to deliver water, power, roads, hospitals and general infrastructure. With such programmes come new skills and jobs."

In other words, perhaps the greatest legacy of the World Cup is to be found in the energy, skills, expertise, knowledge, teamwork, drive, programmes and focus produced during the country’s preparations for the World Cup – a legacy that should now be harnessed in a project-driven approach to South Africa’s many challenges as has already been called for by business and political leaders. Whether the ANC government will heed these calls – once it returns to politics as usual – is another matter.

In the interim, however, the sordid reality of the downside of living in South Africa continues, nowhere more starkly illustrated than in Sunday night’s xenophobic attacks. After a night of sporadic attacks on, and looting of foreign-owned shops in Western Cape townships, about 100 foreigners from townships in Paarl, Wellington, Franschhoek and the Cape Flats were given refuge in police stations. Most of the victims have been Somalis and they have been advised by police to leave the townships.

This follows weeks of growing rumours and indications that xenophobic violence was about to return to South Africa’s townships at the conclusion of the World Cup – rumours and indications that the country's police bosses tried to dismiss as the work of the media, opposition leaders, agents provocateurs and non-patriots. (See full report on xenophobia) This, unfortunately, is the other side of the glittering World Cup coin.

Comments (5)
  • Wendy Gibson  - South African
    If you put any country under such scruitiny as you have done - if you look for all the negatives you WILL find them - South African did an outstanding job with the World Cup and yes, we still have problems and yes they need to be address! Bringing up all the negatives of our country like this is totally unnecessary especially with the a photo of the World Cup being held high !!
  • Nick  - Just negative
    Wendy, with what spectacles did you read this article. To me it looks like it in fact started off with the positives, but advocates a balanced approach. To put our heads in the sand would be dangerous. Try and tell those migrants who are presently to afraid to get onto a train or a taxi to get to work, that the fact that they are effectively being robbed of an income and their kids therefor have to go hungry or forsake other essentials of life or who had their shops burned down, that every thing is just honky dory!
  • Dain  - Trying to contact Wendy
    Hi Wendy

    Please cn you contact me on dainr552@gmail****. I have been trying to get hold of you from Cyprus.
  • No rose coloured spectacles he  - No rose colored spectacles here
    Do yourself a favor Wendy and read the article again. Then when you are done with that try using Google. You seem to have no idea what is going on in the townships today or for the past 2 years. Perhaps you should join the hundreds of people sitting (frozen by now) on the sides of the N1 trying to leave SA to return to their home countries because they are sick and tired of being victimized. Sick and tired of being robbed and threatened.
  • Deon  - Proud South African
    Didn't really want to comment, but will throw my fews cents worth in. Putting all the long list of negatives and very short list of positives aside. The one thing I don't understand is why and how the ANC government can allow an influx of foreigners into South Africa when we have such a rediculously high unemployment rate. The Government should first look to get SA citizens employed and only then allow foreigners into the country for work. The government is negligent to protect the very people who elected them. Hope it will come right but the odds are heavily against me.
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