The_Right_Honourable_Brit
High Tory
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2004
- Messages
- 41,698
As usual he's talking complete rubbish. If he looks at Europe, which is the powerhouse in soccer, it has a white majority in teams.
Source: Citizen
JOHANNESBURG – Is security around the 2010 Soccer World Cup being questioned because South Africa has a majority black government? Addressing the National Community Police Forum in Midrand yesterday, Minister of Safety and Security Charles Nqakula asked why security concerns were never an issue when it came to international “white” sporting events, such as rugby and cricket, being staged in SA. Nqakula said: “We don’t want to go back to the conflicts of the past” where black and white were pitted against each other, but asked “Do we want people to say it is because it is not the white man’s sport, but soccer, the black man’s sport?” Nqakula faced an outcry earlier this year after the police annual crime statistics were released. Some said South Africa was not ready to stage the international showcase for soccer, due to high crime levels.
Yesterday the Minister admitted that levels of violent crime were “unacceptably high”, but pointed out that they had been on the decline since 1995. At the time the police statistics were released it was suggested Fifa was considering moving the World Cup to Australia. Regarding such suggestions, Nqakula asked: “Is it because in South Africa the government of the day is a predominantly black one, and in Australia it is a predominantly white government?” Nqakula joked that “We have lots of psychics” who were “predicting” high crime levels during the 2010 Soccer World Cup. He asked why they could not warn him before a crime took place.
In answer to criticism Nqakula said the restructuring of the police force was intended to allay security fears. A study done in 2005 at station level into police resources had revealed a serious capacity problem. “Despite the fact that there are people on the ground with skills, what is lacking is management skills,” said Nqakula.
He emphasised that the community had a central role to play in fighting crime.
Source: Citizen