World Cup will bring races together – Jordaan

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – Next year’s soccer World Cup  will have a major impact in building racial harmony and  stimulating future economic growth in South Africa, organising  committee chief Danny Jordaan said on Tuesday.

In an interview, Jordaan also dismissed concerns over  transport, accommodation and crime during the World Cup.

He said June’s Confederations Cup, viewed as a rehearsal for  2010, had seen whites and blacks, rich and poor, mixing and  sitting together at matches.

“It is an experience that many people never had in this  country. All of those things convey the kind of images and the  mood we want the world to see of a country of both black and  white celebrating football.”

If the same atmosphere prevailed during the much bigger  World Cup next June and July “then I think we will have taken a  significant step forward to create that non-racial country that  (Nelson) Mandela was dreaming of.”

Jordaan said the success of the Confederations Cup had  changed the atmosphere ahead of 2010 from doubt and questioning  to anticipation and excitement. “The doubting Thomases are now  believing Thomases,” he said.

Asked about crime, a serious concern because of South  Africa’s record levels of murder and rape, Jordaan said visiting  fans would be in the same situation as the 9.5 million tourists  visiting South Africa annually, almost all without problems.   Security around the event, when the fans, teams and tourists  would be in known locations which police could monitor, was  completely different to random general crime.
EVENT SECURITY

South Africa had successfully staged many events, including  a rugby and cricket world cup and hosted the recent British and  Irish Lions rugby tour at the same time as the Confederations  Cup without major incident.

“This country has the capability and the capacity to deal  with security from an event standpoint. Crime is a different  challenge.”

Asked about South Africa’s current “winter of discontent” of  labour disputes, which included a now-resolved strike by workers  building World Cup stadiums, Jordaan said working class South  Africans were football fans and committed to the event.

“I think the workers understand the importance … for the  country. We want not just infrastructure improvement and  increased tourism. We want to see it as a nation building  exercise, we want to see a brand building image makeover for  this country and the continent… we want to attract more  tourists, more foreign direct investment, greater trade, so that  it will be a lasting legacy beyond the event.”