Africans Want Brazil at Their Side for World Cup

Africans hope to count on Brazil’s support for the 2010 World Soccer Cup, which will be held in South Africa. Various countries have already approached Brazil for this purpose.

The host country, South Africa, even mobilized its diplomatic corps to request Brazil’s backing. In a joint communiqué issued on March 11, the Chancellors of Brazil and India – countries that, together with South Africa, form the G-3 – pledged to mobilize efforts on behalf of the event.


Africans’ admiration for Brazilian soccer was evidenced once again in all the countries that Minister Celso Amorim visited last week (Kenya, Ethiopia, Mozambique, South Africa, Gabon, and Tanzania).


Even Kenya, a champion in long-distance marathons, wants to establish exchanges in the field of sports.


In light of the requests, Chancellor Amorim did not rule out the possibility of partnerships. According to him, there are various potential areas of cooperation.


“We can, for example, send them Brazilian coaches, maybe even some from the Armed Forces, and offer grants to receive African players here,” Amorim said.


“We can also try to organize an annual soccer match linked, for example, to campaigns against hunger or for peace,” he added.


Translation: David Silberstein
Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

WTO Meeting Will Fail If Europe Can’t Do Better, Says Brazil

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, believes that the determination of a ...

Creative Design Is Paying Off for Brazil

Cariocas (the people in the city of Rio de Janeiro, located in the southeastern ...

US$ 13 bi: The Low Price to End Brazil’s Poverty

With a little more than 2 percent of its revenue Brazil could put an ...

Brazil’s Lula Vows to Keep on Diversifying International Relations

In a meeting Wednesday, January 4, with Brazilian diplomats (among them more than 60 ...

Brazil Learns to Extract Light Oil 15,000 Feet Deep

Aboard platform P-34, anchored off the coast of the state of EspÀ­rito Santo, Brazilian ...

Brazil Decides to Become a Shipbuilding Power

Tuesday, February 7, witnessed the first step towards the concretization of the Technological Improvement ...

Brazil Is 7th in Spammers Dirty Dozen Where the US Is King

Sophos has published its latest "Dirty Dozen" report on the top twelve spam-relaying countries ...

Invasion of Brazilian Congress Caused US$ 45,000 in Damages

It is estimated that the damage caused by the members of the Movement for ...

Brazil: Snubbed Dailies Cast Shadow on Press Award

It doesn’t hurt to ask: for what reason have managing editors from the newspapers ...

BRIC and IBSA Discuss in Brazil World Peace and the Planet’s Future

For a group of cognoscenti from Brazil, Russia, India and China (the BRICs) it ...