Mail & Guardian

‘Stadiums are our second homes’:

Fans are desperate to return but authoritie­s in the sector have shown little appetite to tackle difficult questions

- Luke Feltham

Internatio­nal football has been a sobering experience for South Africans. Fans have flocked back to stadiums, first in the European Championsh­ips and then in most of the continent’s major leagues.

Even on the TV screen their excitement is palpable; an explosive release of almost two years of collective Covid frustratio­n and fatigue. Their passion makes a superior broadcast product too — the bogus crowd noise has now been banished.

But as much as the developmen­ts are welcomed by all sports lovers, it’s hard for South Africans not to feel a tinge of jealousy.

“When you watch England, maybe Chelsea, play against Liverpool, there’s a lot of fans there,” Kaizer Chiefs superfan Masilo Machaka says. “There’s a good atmosphere, we say ‘wow, eish, we’d like to be there’. How can we be there?”

In the years before the Covid19 pandemic Machaka was seen at every major event or national team outing across multiple sporting codes, inevitably donning a makarapa and his raised fists bouncing. Now, hearing Anfield boom out You’ll Never Walk Alone in his living room posed a question shared by many other South Africans.

When will Soccer City have its own moment of catharsis? No one can answer that with any certainty.

With vaccinatio­n rates still low — only 11.5% of the population was fully vaccinated at the time of writing — there are no prospects of welcoming back large crowds in the near future. Not when many believe the slightest provocatio­n could usher in a fourth wave by December.

Yet a new narrative has developed suggesting that it might be in the country’s best interests to open up its stands once again — provided it does so only for the vaccinated.

It’s a suggestion apparently considered by Health Minister Dr Joe Phaahla, who said last week that the government was discussing “soft incentives” to stimulate the uptake of Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns.

“We could start opening up various activities, sports, cultural, and more businesses and other get-togethers,” he said. “To say, if you are vaccinated, so many people can go to the soccer stadium to watch a match. If you are vaccinated and you can prove that, so many people can go to Newtown to enjoy some music.”

The logic is simple: there are a number of fence-sitters, who are sufficient­ly scared of the jab that they would rather put it off. These people could possibly be coaxed with “goodies”, as Phaahla put it. He added that a proposal could be put to the government outlining how this might work.

Asked this week whether there was any movement on the proposal, Phaahla’s office said the minister still had to first have a discussion with the cabinet before it could publish a concrete scheme.

When the communicat­ions department announced that a special event would be held at Soccer

City on Wednesday morning, it was expected that more would be heard about such plans — especially considerin­g that the event was cohosted by Minister of Sports, Arts and Culture Nathi Mthethwa and Deputy President David Mabuza in his capacity as the chairperso­n of the Inter-ministeria­l Committee on Covid-19 Vaccines.

‘Return to play’

Two hours later (three if you include the late start) and there was little to be gleaned about the government’s definitive plans on the matter. What was offered instead was the launch of the “Return to play —it’s in your hands” campaign. This is essentiall­y a call to the nation’s sportspeop­le to encourage everyone to get vaccinated. Or, as Mthethwa put it, “a passing of the baton”.

The morning was a typical South African extravagan­za of protocols observed and platitudes. One by one some of the country’s prominent sportspeop­le and artists trotted to the stage to deliver the same message: vaccines save life. They included Proteas netball captain Bongi Msomi, Miss SA Shudufhadz­o Musida and footballer Siphiwe Tshabalala — who scored what is perhaps Bafana Bafana’s most famous goal at the same grounds to open the 2010 World Cup.

The top brass of the top sporting administra­tions were also on hand. They included South African Rugby Union (Saru) boss Mark Alexander, whose presentati­on was blighted by technical issues. After asking for a video to be played by “our captain”, former Bok leader John Smit popped up on screen. “Sorry, can you play the current captain now,” an annoyed Alexander said. When his request remained unanswered he produced his cellphone and held Siya Kolisi’s message up to the microphone.

“I think the stadium’s system got Covid,” came the macabre joke after it finished.

Incidental­ly, Alexander had two weeks previously said there is a group in the sporting fraternity pushing for stadiums to reopen solely to the vaccinated. He, however, didn’t want to say much more and didn’t elaborate on this occasion.

The most detailed plan of the day belonged to the head of the South African Football (Safa), Danny Jordaan.

“It’s very clear. If you are unvaccinat­ed, you must go to the hospital, you can’t come to the stadium,” he said. “We want you to come to the stadium, we don’t want you to go the hospital.”

He announced that, pending an agreement with the sports minister, Safa will give away 50% of the tickets to Bafana’s next game against Ethiopia. Given that game is a month away, it would seem he assumes stadiums will open up in some capacity between now and then.

To complete proceeding­s before the keynote address by the deputy president, Mthethwa — who still struggles to shake his moniker of “minister of condolence­s” — got his second Covid vaccinatio­n onstage after Ladysmith Black Mambazo performed their new song:

“Let’s vaccinate,

Stay alive.

Let’s vaccinate,

Save South Africa.

It’s not about you, it’s not about me It’s about all of us.

Let’s vaccinate.”

It fell to Mabuza to say when South Africans can return en masse to stadiums. The answer is, simply, when we are ready to — which coincides with the government’s previously stated goal of achieving a rate of 70% of the population vaccinated by the end of the year.

“A vaccinated nation is what it will take to once again open the stadium for the popular Soweto Derby,” he said. “A vaccinated nation is what it will take to open the Cape Town Jazz Festival, the Macufe and other prominent music events in our calendar. And, indeed, a vaccinated nation is what it will take to open the Durban July and other similar events.”

Sticky questions

But it remains unclear how the government thinks it will wield sport incentives beyond messages of encouragem­ent.

In his discussion­s last week, Phaahla referenced recent financial incentives offered in the United States. Following the directive of President Joe Biden, some states offer up to $100 to its citizens who are yet to be vaccinated.

Countless other examples of incentives can be found, from cow raffles in the Philippine­s to free football tickets and Uber has offered 10-million rides to people who can’t get to vaccinatio­n sites.

South Africa, Phaahla acknowledg­ed, does not have the means to offer raw cash and thus has to be more creative in how it encourages people to have the jab.

With the devastatin­g effect of the hard lockdowns still reverberat­ing across the sport, arts and culture orbit, there are no shortage of lobbyists raising their hands to help prod the process along.

One such person is the Western Cape’s MEC for cultural affairs and sport, Anroux Marais. She said her department had written to President Cyril Ramaphosa this week requesting permission to reopen events in the province.

“Especially now. Our people are feeling depressed,” she said. “What this pandemic taught me is that sometimes you think arts and culture and sport is just by-the-way. Now it seems that [it is] very essential. It’s come more and more to the foreground. We need it back.”

Marais has already overseen an incentive initiative. As part of Heritage Month, the province is offering free entry to all its museums to those who can present a vaccine card. The hope is to soon extend similar initiative­s to stadiums. But she is uncertain whether that would involve preventing the unjabbed from entering.

“I wish we could, but [we] cannot say ‘you have to be vaccinated’ because we don’t have the legal mandate for that,” she said.

It is this sticky question that much of South African sport is skirting around: where do we draw the line between incentive and punishment? The country’s liberal sentiments will never see anyone legally compelled to take the vaccine but some might argue that restricted events is penalisati­on under a different name.

This argument has raged around the world and, now that Discovery Ltd has designatin­g itself the canary in the coal mine, it is being debated in South Africa. The company has announced that it will introduce a mandatory vaccinatio­n policy for all its employees in 2022, and will later extend the rule to all of its properties.

How the debate plays out in the coming days and weeks may inform how the sporting sector formulates its own decisions.

 ?? Photos: Lefty Shivambu/gallo Images/getty Images & Duif du Toit/gallo Images ?? Superfans: Masilo Machaka (above, second left) with Chiefs fans during the match between Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs in 2009. Dejan Miladinovi­c (below, centre) with Orlando Pirates supporters at the game between Pirates and Bidvest Wits in 2014.
Photos: Lefty Shivambu/gallo Images/getty Images & Duif du Toit/gallo Images Superfans: Masilo Machaka (above, second left) with Chiefs fans during the match between Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs in 2009. Dejan Miladinovi­c (below, centre) with Orlando Pirates supporters at the game between Pirates and Bidvest Wits in 2014.

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