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Football
envy at the UN
Kofi Annan
June 12, 2006
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1795258,00.html
The World Cup
makes us at the UN green with envy. As the pinnacle of the only
truly global game, played in every country by every race and religion,
it is one of the few phenomena as universal as the UN. You could
say it's more universal. Fifa has 207 members; we have only 191.
But there are better reasons for our envy.
This is an event
in which everybody knows where their team stands, and what it did
to get there. They know who scored and how and in what minute of
the game; they know who saved the penalty. I wish we had more of
that sort of competition in the family of nations. Countries vying
for the best standing in the table of respect for human rights,
and trying to outdo one another in child survival rates or enrolment
in secondary education. States parading their performance for all
the world to see. Governments being held accountable.
Millions of
people around the planet love talking about the World Cup. In Paraguay
fans will be picking over that own goal; in Japan they will be debating
strategies for today's contest with Australia. Everywhere people
are dissecting the games, revealing an intimate knowledge of their
own teams and many others. Tongue-tied teenagers suddenly become
eloquent and dazzlingly analytical. I wish we had more of that sort
of conversation in the world at large: citizens consumed by the
topic of how their country could do better on the Human Development
Index, or exercised about how to reduce carbon emissions or HIV
infections.
The competition
takes place on a level playing field, where every country has a
chance to participate on equal terms. Only two commodities matter:
talent and teamwork. I wish we had more levellers like that in the
global arena. Free and fair exchanges without the interference of
subsidies, barriers or tariffs. Every country getting a real chance
to field its strengths on the world stage.
The World Cup
illustrates the benefits of cross-pollination between peoples and
countries. More and more national teams now welcome coaches from
other countries, who bring new ways of thinking and playing. The
same goes for the players who represent clubs away from home. They
inject fresh qualities into their new team and are able to contribute
more to their home side when they return. In the process, they often
become heroes in their adopted countries - helping to open hearts
and minds.
I wish it were
equally plain for all to see that human migration in general can
create triple wins - for migrants, for their countries of origin,
and for the societies that receive them. Migrants not only build
better lives for themselves and their families, but are also agents
of development - economic, social, and cultural - in the countries
they go and work in, while they inspire with new-won ideas and knowhow
when they return.
Playing in the
World Cup brings profound national pride. For countries qualifying
for the first time - such as my native Ghana - it is a badge of
honour. For those doing so after years of adversity - such as Angola
- it provides a sense of national renewal. And for those who are
currently riven by conflict, but whose World Cup team is a unique
and powerful symbol of national unity - such as Ivory Coast - it
inspires nothing less than the hope of national rebirth.
Which brings
me to what is perhaps most enviable of all for us in the UN: the
World Cup is an event in which we see goals being reached. I'm not
talking only about the goals a country scores; I also mean the most
important goal of all - being there, part of the family of nations
and peoples, celebrating our common humanity. I'll try to remember
that today as Ghana play Italy in Hanover. Of course, I can't promise
I'll succeed.
*Kofi
Annan is secretary general of the United Nations
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