The Citizen (Gauteng)

SA 2010 saw ‘African boom’

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Danny Jordaan, the man who spearheade­d the 2010 World Cup, believes the tournament put an end to “Afro-pessimism” and helped transform the African continent from “hopeless to hopeful”.

Ten years after the event, Jordaan said the World Cup put sceptics firmly in their place and sparked a boom for Africa.

In 2004, when then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter announced South Africa would be the 2010 host, it had already been a century since the governing body was formed.

“It took 100 years...and the reason for that is a doubt that had been created around Africans and the African continent that they don’t have the capacity and they will never deliver the infrastruc­ture,” Jordaan said.

“This is something that we have to contend with – Afro-pessimism.”

After it won the bid, the country embarked on a six-year journey to deliver the required infrastruc­ture including rail, rapid-transport systems, roads and freeways, as well as upgrading broadcast and telecommun­ication systems.

That came at a R33-billion price tag.

“After 2010, Africa became a destinatio­n for tourism, for investment, for trade,” Jordaan said.

“The environmen­t has changed from a hopeless continent to a hopeful continent, a continent of the future and now, no one can ignore the African continent.”

He added: “There is no contradict­ion between being African and being world class.

“It is again, the Afro-pessimism. We are not going to allow them to put their knees on our necks,” he said metaphoric­ally referring to George Floyd, the African-American man whose death at the hands of a white policeman in Minneapoli­s has sparked worldwide protests.

Jordaan, who was head of the 2010 organising committee and is now the president of the South African Football Associatio­n (Safa), hailed the tournament’s legacy.

“The infrastruc­ture legacy together with 25 new hotels, which have been built, places this country with some of the best infrastruc­ture on the continent,” said Jordaan at his office at Safa house, situated at the FNB stadium on the fringes of the Soweto township.

Of the 10 stadiums that hosted the 64 matches during the monthlong tournament, five were built from scratch, and five received upgrades so they could collective­ly seat more than half-a-million spectators.” – AFP

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