The Borneo Post

Isolated Russia aims to bring football to the fore

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MOSCOW: An isolated Russia throws open its doors in a week for a World Cup full of glitz and glamour designed to bring in the hosts from the cold.

The month-long celebratio­n of the world’s most popular sport has been haunted by fears over racism and violence as well as diplomatic spats. But Vladimir Putin has left no stone unturned making sure the biggest – and most controvers­yladen – event Russia has seen since Moscow’s 1980 Moscow Summer Olympics seduces a sceptical world.

Twelve sparkling stadiums in 11 cities spanning the European portion of the world’s largest country are ready after getting their last licks of paint. And superstars ranging from Brazil’s Neymar to Argentina’s Lionel Messi and Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo are all healed up and rearing to fight for the right to hoist the glittering Jules Rimet Trophy on July 15.

Almost every second person on Earth tuned into the last edition of the spectacula­r in Brazil in 2014. That tournament saw the hosts suffer a traumatic 7-1 beating by Germany in the semi-finals that left a nation obsessed by football in shock.

Eventual champions Germany and Brazil again top a list of favourites that also includes Spain and past winners Argentina and France.

Russia’s chances of doing something special are modest. The hosts are the second-lowest ranked team of the 32 in the final and are riven by internal squabbles and injuries.

Putin counters that Russia will come out tops simply by pulling off the most expensive World Cup ever staged while struggling under the weight of internatio­nal sanctions.

“The organisers,” said Putin when asked to pick this year’s likely winner.

The West’s penalties are a response to an ever more aggressive foreign policy Putin has pushed in the eight years since securing the hosting rights over England in a vote tainted by bribery charges.

Russia has annexed Crimea from Ukraine and defied the West by unleashing a bombing campaign in support of Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

The US intelligen­ce community believes Moscow meddled in America’s 2016 presidenti­al election. Its British counterpar­t says Russia used a nerve

agent in England to try and kil l former double agent Sergei Skripal.

A doping scandal that got Russia banned from the Olympics and forced its athletes to compete under a neutral f lag at last winter’s Pyeongchan­g Games completed a picture of relations in utter tatters.

Yet Putin has emerged from all this looking as strong as ever.

The Kremlin also does little to hide its pleasure at seeing the effective failure of efforts by some i n England and eastern Europe to organise a diplomatic boycott of Putin’s party.

England will not be sending diplomats or royalty to the opening ceremony in protest over the Skripal case.

Sweden and Iceland along with a few others may follow suit by keeping their prime ministers and heads of state home.

But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said last week he expected to see a “heavy traffic of guests at the highest level” coming to matches.

Russia’s problems do not end in the high- brow world of internatio­nal relations.

The blo ody beating English fans got at the hands of nearly 2 0 0 Russianthu­gs at Euro 2016 in France has plagued preparatio­ns as much as any dispute with the West. Neo-Nazi hooligans who organise mass fights in forests and chant racist slurs at players have lorded over Russian stadiums for years. The ant i - discrimina­t ion network Fare said Russia’s football federation was making matters worse by punishing those who reacted to racist abuse “while ignoring the perpetrato­rs”. Security services have either locked up or checked in on hundreds of hoodlums to make sure they do nothing to tarnish Russia’s image in the coming weeks. The scare tactics have worked. Some football gang members say they will be skipping town once the games begin to avoid getting rounded up. “However, we do not have as much confidence in the prevention of non-violent racist incidents (at the World Cup), despite the many well intentione­d reassuranc­es,” Fare said in a report issued last week. Yet the world’s focus in the final week before kickoff will not be on politics or Russia’s underworld but things like Neymar’s right foot. Brazi l’s latest heir apparent to Pele sparked national panic by undergoing surgery on a broken bone near his toe on March 3. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Russia’s World Cup coach Stanislav Cherchesov gestures from the touchline during an internatio­nal friendly football match at Moscow’s VEB Arena. — AFP photo
Russia’s World Cup coach Stanislav Cherchesov gestures from the touchline during an internatio­nal friendly football match at Moscow’s VEB Arena. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Djokovic plays a forehand return to Cecchinato during their men’s singles quarter-final match on day ten of French Open tennis tournament in Paris. — AFP photo
Djokovic plays a forehand return to Cecchinato during their men’s singles quarter-final match on day ten of French Open tennis tournament in Paris. — AFP photo

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