England arrive to play it safe in high crime city

RUSTENBURG, South Africa, (Reuters) – A cluster of  local workers, police and security guards and a pack of  television crews welcomed the England World Cup squad to their  Rustenburg base in warm sunshine yesterday.

After a two-hour coach drive from Johannesburg, where they  landed earlier in the morning following an overnight flight from  London, the 23 players, manager Fabio Capello and his staff,  were greeted without much visible pomp or ceremony.

“It is good to see them come so now we know the World Cup is  starting here,” said Donald, an electrician, bedecked in a  bright green South Africa soccer shirt. “We have been waiting to  see them — and we wish them good luck on the pitch.”

Other staff from the sprawling campus of the Royal Marang  Hotel at the Royal Bafokeng Sports Campus, situated in dusty  isolation close to the main road 18 kms north of Rustenburg  towards Sun City, were gathered with him in a policed area  around 50 metres from the hotel entrance.

A new set of ‘robots’, as the South Africans refer to  traffic lights, had been installed for the occasion and these  flashed on red for several minutes.

It was a faintly surreal occasion out of context with its  surroundings — thousands of hectares of dry farmland stretching  in all directions, except the urban sprawl on the way back to  the city.
Traffic was halted to allow the England coach, carrying the  slogan ‘Playing with Pride and Glory’, to turn through the high  metal security gates that are so common in this remote mining  and agricultural city with an exceptionally high crime rate.

There was no acknowledgement from within the England coach  as it turned in, the smoked glass windows making it too  difficult in the bright sunlight to identify the players or  their reactions.

The combined efforts of the blue unformed police, many  wearing what appeared to be bullet-proof vests, and the  khaki-clad North West Traffic Police, kept most spectators  further away.

It signalled the attention to security that characterised  the mood.

Only accredited television crews were allowed near but they  were policed into a controlled area of the road’s central  reservation where they waited on the red soil that grows citrus  fruit in the surrounding savannah scrubland.

England manager Fabio Capello, greeted warmly in  Johannesburg by the South African organising committee’s chief  executive officer Danny Jordaan, said he was very glad to have  arrived for the tournament.

“I’m very pleased to be here and my team is happy to finally  be in South Africa,” he said. “I hope this World Cup in South  Africa is good for this country and, of course, for England.

“We now have to concentrate on the tournament and prepare  well for the event.”

Many of the watching South Africans, including Donald, said  they would follow England’s fortunes.

Happy, a cleaner, said he was hoping to catch sight of  striker Wayne Rooney, England’s most famous and best player. “I  like him but my favourite of all is Lionel Messi who plays for  Argentina,” he added.

England are scheduled to relax and settle in to their remote  desert highway retreat on Thursday, after a brief reception laid  on by the local organisers, before starting their training  programme at the Bafokeng Sports Campus today. They open their Group C campaign at Rustenburg’s Royal  Bafokeng Stadium, just five kms down the road, against the  United States on June 12, before playing Algeria in Cape Town  and Slovenia in Port Elizabeth on June 18 and 23 respectively.