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World Cup Street Festival Cape Town

The City of Cape Town is getting ready to launch into the 2010 FIFA World Cup™ in style, with a 10 hour-long “Cape Town Welcomes the World Party” on the eve of the official kick-off. The party on the Grand Parade on Thursday 10 June 2010 will be the culmination of the City’s many hospitality initiatives, and will be built around the theme of welcoming the world to the southern tip of Africa. Local residents and visitors will have the opportunity to be part of the celebration and get into the football spirit. About 25 000 people are expected on the Grand Parade for a concert featuring an exciting line-up of mostly local artistes. The concert will start at 14:00, and at 18:30 flaming torches will light a cauldron on the City Hall balcony – from which Nelson Mandela made his first speech after his release – to signal the start of the carnival parade. At 19:00, the Rainbow Parade featuring 2 000 Cape Minstrels will move through the city centre. The party will also include the switch-on of eight colourful soccer streetlight displays in Adderley Street. About 10km of rope lights was used to create the displays. These use 55% less energy than traditional light bulbs. “The City wants to position itself as the party capital of the world. This party promises to be bigger, better and safer than any of the previous parties,” said Cape Town Executive Mayor, Dan Plato. Law enforcement officials will be out in full force, and trains will run until 01:00. Bus services – including the City’s newly-launched MyCiTi service, will also be operational. Food and art stalls as well as toilet facilities will be available. Executive Deputy Mayor, Alderman Ian Neilson, posed for photographs with some of the performers at a preview event. “It’s very exciting, after four years of planning – in which we built a stadium and a transport system – it’s finally here. “And in just over a month, it’s all going to be over, so we’ve got to grab this opportunity and make the most of it,” he said. More details about road closures will be published closer to the time. Published by Martin Pollack 2010 World Cup Blog for the Fans

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World Cup Street Festival Cape Town

Today is the day all South Africans have been waiting for.

WORLD CLASS: Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban will host various World Cup matches. PHOTO: Thuli Dlamini STUNNING: Soccer FANS at Peter Mokaba stadium in Limpopo PHOTO: ELIJAR MUSHIANA SPLENDID: green Point Stadium in Cape Town. PHOTO: SIMON MATHEBULA All our host cities and their stadiums are ready. Fan transport and fan parks are prepared and ready for the big day. Bafana Bafana has been scoring goals and today the games begin. Bafana has had 12 consecutive wins. More than 500million people in the world are going to bring their attention to South Africa and we will not disappoint. Today Bafana Bafana takes on Mexico in the month-long tournament. Local Organising Committee chief executive Danny Jordaan yesterday said today “is going to be an incredible day”. “South Africans are late believers but once they believe, they are fanatical believers. Of course our team has increased our ability to believe,” he said. He likened the run-up to the 2010 Soccer World Cup to the struggle against apartheid, joking that his next career move might be to the post office. “Then the prison doors opened and he (Mandela) walked out … and we thought, what are we going to do next? I think I will look for a smaller job now … like a job in the post office. I think I’ve seen enough struggle.” Jordaan said during the country’s key historic moments the rest of the world – and some South Africans – always seemed to expect the worst of South Africa. “You see the headlines: “Race war’, ‘Bloodshed’, ‘Chaos’, ‘Plan B’, ‘Don’t do it’, ‘It’s not going to happen’,” Jordaan said. The recent successes of Bafana Bafana, whose tour on a party bus to Sandton in Johannesburg on Wednesday drew tens of thousands of fans on to the streets, played a big role in South Africa’s new-found optimism. “Of course our team has increased our ability to believe,” said Jordaan, referring to the 12 consecutive wins. To top the journey off, he said, he really would like to see Nelson Mandela at Soccer City during the opening this afternoon. “Nelson Mandela is 92 years old … he himself wants to be there. Whether he stays five minutes or the whole match is really not our decision. “As things stand now, there is a very, very great chance that, in fact, he’ll be there because he wants to be there. How long he will stay, that is really his decision. But we’ll just be happy if he shows his face,” Jordaan said. He said that Mandela had been the symbol of unity for a democratic South Africa, whose citizens saw racial barriers being torn down in the run-up to the Cup, especially when the Blue Bulls rugby team trekked to Soweto for the Super 14 finals . “ Today was set to become a pivotal day in South Africa and Africa’s history . It is a psychological barrier that has been crossed … it’s an assertion of who we are as Africans and what we can deliver.” Source – Sowetan.com 2010 World Cup Blog for the Fans

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Today is the day all South Africans have been waiting for.