World Cup chief condemns South Africa violence

Fri May 23, 2008 11:36am BST
 
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By Nick Mulvenney

BEIJING (Reuters) - World Cup 2010 chief organiser Danny Jordaan condemned anti-immigrant violence in South Africa on Friday but said it would pass before the tournament takes place.

At least 42 people have been killed and more than 25,000 driven from their homes in 12 days of attacks by mobs that accuse African migrants of taking jobs and fuelling crime.

Jordaan said the level of scrutiny on 2008 Olympic hosts China in the wake of the Sichuan earthquake and his own country after the recent violence was an inevitable result of hosting the world's two biggest sporting events.

"We can see the focus of attention on our countries, for completely different reasons, both of them tragic," he told the International Football Arena conference.

"Our standpoint is that this World Cup must be a celebration of Africa's humanity.

"Africa has too often been a continent of division, of wars, of humiliation. And certainly we condemn any situation that continues to inflict on African people humiliation, suffering, war, disease.

"So our position is crystal clear and we ask that every action must be taken to stop inflicting on displaced people further displacement."

Jordaan said South Africa hoped an increase in tourism from 7.4 million last year to 10 million tourists in 2010 would be one of the main legacies of the World Cup and he was confident the violence would not be a problem by then.  Continued...

 
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