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	<title>Waterfriendly.co.za &#187; Fifa</title>
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		<title>South Africa welcomes the World to the Fifa World Cup 2010 with different expectations!</title>
		<link>http://www.waterfriendly.co.za/south-africa-welcomes-the-world-to-the-fifa-world-cup-2010-with-different-expectations/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jun 2010 05:34:15 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[2010 Soccer World Cup]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fifa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Football]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[South Africa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2010 World Cup]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[World Cup]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Dear World Cup visitors,</p> <p>Now that you are safely in our country you are no doubt happily realising you are not in a war zone. This may be in stark contrast to what you have been bracing yourself for should you have listened to Uli Hoeness or are an avid reader of English tabloids, which <p>Continue reading <a href="http://www.waterfriendly.co.za/south-africa-welcomes-the-world-to-the-fifa-world-cup-2010-with-different-expectations/">South Africa welcomes the World to the Fifa World Cup 2010 with different expectations!</a></p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.waterfriendly.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/capture1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-814" title="Madiba - Fifa World Cup 2010" src="http://www.waterfriendly.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/capture1.jpg" alt="" width="170" height="155" /></a>Dear World Cup visitors,</p>
<p>Now that you are safely in our country you are no doubt happily  realising you are not in a war zone. This may be in stark contrast to  what you have been bracing yourself for should you have listened to Uli  Hoeness or are an avid reader of English tabloids, which as we all know  are only good for wrapping fish ‘n chips and advancing the careers of  large-chested teens on page three.</p>
<p>As you emerge blinking from your luxury hotel room into our big blue  winter skies, you will surely realise you are far more likely to be  killed by kindness than by a stray bullet. Remember that most of the  media reports you have read, which have informed your views on South  Africa, will have been penned by your colleagues. And you know what  journos are like, what with their earnest two thousand word opuses on  the op-ed pages designed to fix this country’s ills in a heartbeat.  Based on exhaustive research over a three-day visit.</p>
<p>Funnily enough, we are well aware of the challenges we face as a  nation and you will find that 95% of the population is singing from the  same song-sheet in order to ensure we can live up to our own exacting  expectations.</p>
<p>We are also here to look after you and show you a good time. Prepare  to have your preconceived notions well and truly shattered.</p>
<p>For instance, you will find precious few rhinos loitering on street  corners, we don’t know a guy in Cairo named Dave just because we live in  Johannesburg, and our stadiums are magnificent, world-class works of  art.</p>
<p>Which is obviously news to the Sky TV sports anchor who this week  remarked that Soccer City looked ‘ a bit of a mess’. She didn’t realize  the gaps in the calabash exterior are to allow in natural light and for  illumination at night, and not the result of vandalism or negligence.<br />
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The fact that England, the nation which safely delivered Wembley  Stadium two years past its due date, is prepared to offer us South  Africans advice on stadium-readiness should not be surprising. The  steadiest stream of World Cup misinformation has emanated from our mates  the Brits over the past couple of years.</p>
<p>If it’s not man-eating snakes lurking in Rooney’s closet at the  team’s (allegedly half-built) Royal Bafokeng training base, then it’s  machete-wielding gangs roaming the suburbs in search of tattooed,  overweight Dagenham dole-queuers to ransack and leave gurgling on the  pavement.</p>
<p>In fact what you are entering is the world’s most fascinating  country, in my opinion. I’m pretty sure you will find that it functions  far more smoothly, is heaps more friendly and offers plenty more  diversions than you could possibly have imagined.</p>
<p>In addition to which, the population actually acts like human  beings, and not like they are being controlled by sinister forces from  above which turns them into bureaucratically-manipulated robots.</p>
<p>Plus we have world’s most beautiful women. The best weather. Eight  channels of SuperSport. Food and wine from the gods themselves. Wildlife  galore. (Love the Dutch team’s bus slogan: “Don’t fear the Big 5; fear  the Orange 11”).</p>
<p>Having said all that, Jo’burg is undoubtedly one of the world’s most  dangerous cities. Just ask those Taiwanese tourists who got out of  their hire car to take close-up snaps of tawny beasts at the Lion Park a  few years back. Actually, ask what’s left of them. And did you know the  chances of being felled by cardiac arrest from devouring a mountain of  meat at one of our world class restaurants has been statistically proven  to be 33.3% higher in Jozi than in any other major urban centre not  built upon a significant waterway? It’s true. I swear. I read it in a  British tabloid.</p>
<p>Having recently spent two years comfortably cocooned in small town  America, I’m only too aware of how little much of the outside world  knows about this country. The American channel I used to work for has a  massive battalion of employees descending on World Cup country. It has  also apparently issued a recommendation to its staff to stay in their  hotels when not working.</p>
<p>Given that said corporation is headquartered in a small town which  many say is “best viewed through the rear-view mirror”, I find the  recommendation, if it’s true, to be utterly astounding. In fact I don’t  believe it is true. Contrary to the global stereotype, the best  Americans are some of the sharpest people in the world. The fact they  have bought most tickets in this World Cup proves the point.</p>
<p>Of course I have only lived in Johannesburg, city of terror and  dread, virtually all my life, so don’t have the in-depth knowledge of  say, an English broadsheet journalist who has been in the country for  the weekend, but nevertheless I will share some of my observations  gleaned over the years.</p>
<p>Any foreign tourist or media representative who is worried about his  safety in South Africa should have a word with the Lions rugby fans  from last year, or the Barmy Army cricket supporters (lilywhite hecklers  by day, slurring, lager-fuelled lobsters by night). They managed just  fine, just like the hundreds of thousands of fans who have streamed into  the country over the past fifteen years for various World Cups, Super  14 matches, TriNations tests and other international events. Negligible  crime incidents involving said fans over said period of time.</p>
<p>Trivia question: which country has hosted the most global sporting  events over the past decade and a half? You don’t need me to answer  that, do you?</p>
<p>In addition. Don’t fret when you see a gaggle of freelance salesmen  converge on your car at the traffic lights (or robots as we like to call  them) festooned with products. You are not about to be hijacked. Here  in Mzansi (nickname for SA) we do a lot of our purchasing at robots.  Here you can stock up on flags, coat hangers, batteries, roses for the  wife you forgot to kiss goodbye this morning and a whole host of useful  merchandise.</p>
<p>Similarly, that guy who runs up as you park the rental car outside  the pub intends no malice. He’s your car guard. Give him a buck or two  and your vehicle will be safe while you refuel for hours on our cheap,  splendid beer. Unless someone breaks into it, of course.</p>
<p>We drive on the left in this country. Exercise caution when crossing  the road at a jog-trot with 15 kilograms of camera gear on your back.  Exercise common sense full stop. Nothing more. Nothing less. If you want  to leave wads of cash in your hotel room like our Colombian friends,  don’t be surprised if it grows wings.</p>
<p>Bottomline. Get out there and breathe in great lusty lungfuls of  this amazing nation. Tuck into our world-class food and wines. Disprove  the adage that white men can’t dance at our throbbing, vibrant  night-clubs. Learn to say hello in all eleven official languages. Watch  at least one game in a township. You will not be robbed and shot. You  will be welcomed like a lost family member and looked after as if you  are royalty. Ask those Bulls rugby fans who journeyed to Soweto  recently.</p>
<p>With a dollop of the right attitude, this country will change your  life.</p>
<p>It’s Africa’s time. Vacate your hotel room. Join the party.</p>
<p>Waka waka eh eh.</p>
<p><em>by Peter Davies &#8211; Supersport presenter</em></p>
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