Thursday 15 July 2010

THANKS, SOUTH AFRICA by CAMERON DUODU





The Johannesburg Sunday Times

Thanks, SA, for giving us your best

Jul 11, 2010 12:00 AM | By CAMERON DUODU

So a dirty foul by Uruguayan player Luis Suarez prevented Ghana from going forth into the World Cup semifinals.


quote We in the rest of Africa have a vested interest in your ability quote

Sure, all Africa's hopes in the tournament died with Ghana's exit.

But who could have foretold that South Africans - some of whom had burnt other Africans alive in 2008 - would suddenly be cheering their hearts out for the players of another African country?

Xenophobia, where is thy sting, then?

And what happened to the crimes that the world's media repeatedly assured us would make South Africa rue the day she bid for the World Cup?

Okay, it's early days. Yes, I've read of the rumours that the xenophobia warriors are biding their time, and may still unleash their evil violence on fellow Africans. Again.

Nevertheless, I wish to thank the people of South Africa who were kind enough to re-christen the players of Ghana as "Bafana-Ba-Ghana".

I heard the thousands of vuvuzelas play in unison, willing Ghana to win the crucial match against Uruguay.

I saw on television, the way many South Africans had donned Ghana's colours.

I saw the way the Black Stars were mobbed when they visited Nelson Mandela and when they paid their respects to his ex-wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela.

Such scenes went around the world. They told everyone that the cynics who believe African unity is skin-deep are wrong.

Great things are sometimes revealed by small things. There were tears in the eyes of many a Ghanaian when the love that was exhibited towards our team - and our country - became so indubitably expressed by South Africans.

The World Cup came. And it now goes the way of history.

But not before it showed the world that Africa is one continent with one people, irrespective of the fact that we have so many different languages, cultures and economic backgrounds.

Who put it in the mind of a South African cartoonist to paint Ghana's flag, with the black star in the middle of it changed into the map of Africa?

Who told the little kid in the film at http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/video/2010/jul/05/world-cup-2010-south-africa-ghana to say, "I love you Ghanaians, too much"?

These things must crystallise a few things for the government of South Africa, namely: you have earned a great deal of respect - and goodwill - from the World Cup. You couldn't have bought it if you had paid foreign advertisers R10-million on a campaign of "re-branding".

Use that goodwill, please. Do not allow it to be dissipated into nothing. And the way you can make it take root is to invest hugely in the needs of your people.

Redouble your efforts to provide affordable housing to the poor.

Do not consider it "inflationary" - as the economists will claim - if you pour money into providing the townships with clean water, electricity, good roads and communications facilities.

Already, your health services are so good that an industry called "health tourism" has sprouted in your country. Make sure the good health facilities are also enjoyed by all the people. It is their labour, after all, that paid for the good facilities that the "health tourists" come to enjoy.

When you refocus the attention of your entire government into providing these things, you will ensure that the legacy of the 2010 Fifa World Cup is a true and lasting one.

We in the rest of Africa have a vested interest in your ability to achieve these objectives. We know that xenophobia cannot find a place in the hearts of a populace whose basic needs are not left to the whims of market forces, but in the philosophy that has always been inherent in the struggle for freedom in South Africa, namely "the welfare of the people is the supreme law".

Thank you and good luck, dear South Africa.

  • Duodu is a Ghanaian born journalist and author now based in the United Kingdom.

Monday 5 July 2010

Graham Poll: Now let's have penalty goals to beat cheats like Uruguay's Luis Suarez | Mail Online

Graham Poll: Now let's have penalty goals to beat cheats like Uruguay's Luis Suarez | Mail Online

BRITISH REFEREE SUPPORTS 'AUTOMATIC' GOAL FOR DELIBERATE HANDLING



Uruguay and the ‘Real Hand of God’ - Goal Blog - NYTimes.com

World Cup 2010: The best pictures of Ghana v Uruguay | Football | guardian.co.uk

World Cup 2010: The best pictures of Ghana v Uruguay | Football | guardian.co.uk

World Cup 2010: South African fans give Ghana a heroes' send-off | Video | Football | guardian.co.uk



World Cup 2010: South African fans give Ghana a heroes' send-off | Video | Football | guardian.co.uk

WHY, OH WHY, URUGUAY?

By CAMERON DUODU


To cry is the lot of all mankind
And the eyes that shine in joyous delight today
Are doomed ere long to brim over,
As the welling tears overflow
And we moan: “Woe is today!
Woe is today!
Woe is today!

I wonder what R M Ballantyne would make of that. I first heard his “To part is the lot of all mankind” from the lips of a friend, now departed, called Kwame Asiedu Acheampong, at Kyebi Government School. Kwame recited Ballantyne with great feeling, and when he said the words, “When the quivering lips pronounce the word, farewell,” he made his voice convey the idea of quivering lips -- so much so that one could actually feel oneself saying “farewell” to one’s friends. What an actor Kwame would have been, had the opportunity arisen for him.

It did once, briefly: when I was cast in a classroom play as Pythias to his Damon in an adaptation of The History of Damon and Pythias by Valerius Maximus. Teachers were erudite men and women then: ours was called Kofi Awuah Peasah, from Old Tafo, and I owe almost all my love of English literature to him. To have heard him declaim, “Frailty! Thy name is woman!” would have made one think that William Shakespeare was born on the very banks of the Birem River, and was there, to record the travails of the people of Tafo, when, as they believe, their ancestors emerged from the bottom of the River.

“Woe is today?” Why do I say that?

Did not the whole world see that Ghana had beaten Uruguay and should be the one to advance into the semi-finals of the 2010 World Cup?

Was not the whole of the African continent afflicted with excruciating pain, when Uruguay’s Luis Suarez used his hands to push back a ball that had entered the Uruguayan goal?

Red card, penalty -- was that Africa wanted? No! Justice demanded that the goal be awarded so that Ghana would the winner -- the first African country ever to cross the semi-final barrier!

Uruguay cheated. Our missed penalty was just a red herring.

Uruguay cheated -- and benefited from cheating.

Nobody on the African continent will ever forget that act of infamy. Especially after they have read these defiant words of the cheat, Luis Suarez.

“The Hand of God now belongs to me”, Suarez said after the match.
“Mine is the real Hand Of God,” he repeated. “I made the best save of the tournament. Sometimes in training, I play as a goalkeeper so it was worth it…. When they missed the penalty, I thought 'It is a miracle and we are alive in the tournament'.”

Sometimes in training, “I play as a goalkeeper”, Suarez said. The question is: Does FIFA think it acceptable that a team should field two goalkeepers in a match?

FIFA’s rules were made by men, and are not immutable. This particularly transparent bit of cheating by Suarez is a warning to FIFA that it is in danger of creating a very bad precedent, which will be followed by a whole population of football player-cynics, who will do everything in their power not to lose a match. Isn’t one Maradona enough? Now. We’ve also got a Suarez! Cheats will be “Suarezing all over the place,” mark my words.

As could be expected, the Internet is awash with analyses of what happened to the Ghana Black Stars on Friday 2 July 2010.

The writer whose views are most cogently argued is Mr Solomon Amanzulley Akessey of Grinnell College, USA.
He notes that the World Cup in South Africa “has raised a long list of ethical issues against the beautiful game” that “FIFA must address if the game is to remain beautiful.” He thinks the most pressing of these are “deliberate hand ball fouls”, like the one that denied Ghana the chance of qualifying to the Semi-Finals.

“If FIFA refuses to look into this problem, then the message it seeks to send is that cheating , however unethical and immoral, is useful and players can and should cheat to win.

“Uruguay clearly did it [on Friday 2 July 2010]. Suarez, being the last defender on the line, deliberately arrogated the privileges of the goal-keeper to himself and handled the ball. Had he not handled the ball, it is pretty obvious that [Ghana] would have scored the goal... The rules were clear and the referee played fair and promptly showed him the red card and awarded a penalty to Ghana.

“But therein lay the problem. When a goal has clearly been denied in such an illegal way, it is simply unconscionable for FIFA to try to solve the problem in a way that does not punish the opposing team as they deserve, but rather rewards them.

“If a player is the last man on the line and he handles the ball, when he is not the goal-keeper, then it should be an automatic goal… For if a penalty is awarded, the pressure alone could make the [penalty] taker miss the shot, in which case the player who committed the foul would have been justified in committing it. And we saw [that happen] when Suarez started jumping up and down, when Asamoah Gyan missed the penalty.”


If you ask me -- and I don’t want to generalise -- it is not surprising, however, that Ghana was so blatantly cheated by a Latin American country. In Latin America, some people take football fanaticism to an almost religious level.

The most notorious incident of non-football football occurred in 1969 in Latin America when, during a series of World Cup qualification matches between El Salvador and Honduras, feelings were aroused to such an extent that riots occurred, followed by a “Football War” (known locally as La guerra del fĂștbol) between the two countries. It lasted for 100 hours or four days, during which 2,000 people were killed.
If you want to look it up, it is at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Football_war

It was also trouble in stadiums in Latin America that made it necessary for moats to be built in some stadiums to prevent the football fans from invading the pitch and trying to lay hands on referees who have angered them. In one instance, a crowd surrounded a referee and tried to strangle him. And many of my readers will be familiar with the story of Andres Escobar, the Colombian player who was shot and killed after an own goal scored by him had caused Colombia to lose 2-1 to the United States in a Word Cup match in June 1994.

The world desperately needs protection from those who want to cheat in order to advance in the World Cup. Now that the FIFA president, Mr Sepp Blatter, has accepted the principle of using technology to assist referees in decision-making, all manner of cheating should be eliminated so that the world can enjoy football without any reservations. What is the point of leaving games to be decided by non-offside offsides; goals-not-given when the ball has clearly crossed the line; free kicks given as a result of play-acting on the field; etcetera etcetera, when 21st technology can help to eliminate all doubts from the minds of referees when they are making decisions?

The most amazing thing that technology has brought into cricket is to eliminate cheating. When the cricket ball hits the edge of a bat so faintly that it is difficult for the umpire to detect whether the ball had touched the bat or not, an infra-red video can show whether the ball did in fact hit the bat.

So we live in a world that has made incredible advances in technology. It is only our human intelligence that is lagging behind. I am sure that if Mr Blatter were walk in the streets of Soweto today, he’d hear someone say, “This is the man whose stupid organisation threw out the last African country from the World Cup, when it was only cheated of victory because there were two goalkeepers playing for its opponent, Uruguay.”

Everyone I know says “our boys did us proud”. The cheating they suffered will not be in vain, if it galvanises FIFA into action, to eliminate once and for all, such idiocies from thrilling football matches.