
ENGLAND  fans, have a look at the picture above. Those who remember Marseille in 1998 and  Stuttgart in 2006, where hoodlums bearing the cross of St George disgraced their  nation, had better beware.
 In  South Africa, where violent crime is daily occurrence, the cops don't tend to  take prisoners. Literally.
 The  local police staged a major show of force through the streets of Rustenburg  yesterday before England's opening World Cup clash against the USA on June 12.
Armoured trucks,  bomb disposal units, guard dogs, mounted police and patrol  motorbikes sent out the message: We're ready for anything.
Sleepy  Rustenburg awoke to the sounds of police sirens as a vast armada of security  forces made their way down the main street. A parade nearly two miles long ended  with dramatic simulations of some of emergency and disaster management  responses.
The  "Security Show of Force" as the local NorthWest police dubbed their march, comes  the day after a bomb hoax at the official World Cup fan  park.
Lesego  Metsi, one of the men tasked with keeping peace among the fans - England and the  USA are the two biggest ticket buyers for this World Cup - also has to deal with  terrorist threats and high, though declining, local crime  rates.
He  said: "Our intelligence team is working around the clock with Interpol. Security  will be high for the teams at their base camps. We have enough forces and  capacity to deal with any threats." Nationwide,  World Cup security is being dealt with by a genial General Bheki Cele. I've  spent some time with him. Big chap. Got a glint in his eye. This week he was  grilled on television over his eagerness to encourage his forces to shoot first,  talk afterwards, when confronted with problems.
In  Durban last week he told me: "I have the England fans on my radar. I've been  over and talked to your police. I know all about them. They will be dealt  with."
Cele  will send out buses known as "Jaws" with a full-functioning court and cells on  board. He grins: "When we get them, we'll charge them and deal with them. If  it's a serious offence, they go to jail. Or we take them straight to the airport  and send them home."
Guess  we've got the message, loud and clear.
Sneak  preview of the US World Cup base at Irene Lodge: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OtSyTVjDOc
Subscribe  to my YouTube feed for the Greek, Italian and New Zealand bases. Coming  tomorrow: England's base at the Royal  Marang. 
For reaction (53 comments at the last count) to the Sun's "Deadly Snakes threaten England camp" nonsense, see: http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=3102&art_id=vn20100525111223421C329520
Loving your balanced, fair and supportive reporting Neal. Thanks for telling it like it is.
ReplyDelete(Small point on this and your Star article - USA v. England is on Day 2 - 12 June. 11 June is opening day with 2 matches from the Group A teams only.)
We ran another "we're not fans of the Sun" post over on BlaBla as well after the snakes story, with suitable annotations on their story. Silly bunch they are.
Come on guys, don't take it so seriously. No-one pays much attention to The sun other than page 3. I don't think any level headed fan is going to change his travel plans after reading that load of crap.
ReplyDeleteSecurity forces are well up for it at any football tournament. South Africa is no different.
Greg, thanks mate, nobody knows that better than I do... need a sub-editor to help me! Glad we're building a surge against negative reporting! Iwasthere... it is serious. Sun readers aren't the intellectual types. They'll take this on face value... important to hit back when they run rubbish like that. By the way, have you found the hidden fans at the AmaZulu game yet?
ReplyDeleteIf they are hidden, how would I find them ? Let's just accept that you happened to be the only white at the match when whites regularly attend all other games. Astonishing coincidence.
ReplyDeleteOops sorry, the only white as far as you could tell.