Australia wildfires slowly being controlled

Porcelain dolls sit in front of a burnt house in the township of Phesant Creek, 100km north of Melbourne.
The wildfires that have roared through southeast Australia for nearly a week were slowly coming under control Friday, as investigators continued the search for who may have set some of the deadly blazes.

The Country Fire Authority said the number of fires burning had dropped to 21 from about 35 on Thursday. While “the threat will remain for weeks to come,” a spokesman said no towns were under threat Friday morning and that good weather had allowed firefighters to build containment lines around the fires. Meanwhile, more than 150 detectives were working on an arson investigation, authorities said. Two men who were arrested for “suspicious behavior” on Thursday were released without charges. “We are satisfied with their explanation and don’t expect to talk to them again,” Victoria state police inspector Peter Sheppard said. Firefighters have battled blazes since Saturday — including several new fires that broke out Tuesday night, which officials said almost certainly were the result of arson. See map of fire-hit areas »

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The official death toll from the fires has remained at 181 for the past two days. But government officials say that number could reach as high as 300 based on the number of people missing and number of homes destroyed. iReport.com: Raging fire approaches home Sheppard said the tally is not being updated as frequently because it’s become harder to verify fatalities from the fires — which have destroyed more than 1,800 homes and displaced about 7,000 people. “Initially it was a fairly straitforward process — bodies were in cars, on sides of roads,” he said. “Now, the search is through buildings. Many have collapsed.” Watch profiles of lucky animals that survived the fires »

He said that in the town of Marysville, which was hard-hit by the wildfires, bodies are believed to be in a hotel but firefighters cannot get access to it. iReport.com: Wildfires tear through Victoria state » On Thursday, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced to parliament that the government will hold a memorial service and national day of mourning for victims of the fires. He said the government is working with the nation’s Council of Churches to determine the day.

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Dead rodents, excrement in peanut processor lead to recall

The plant produced oil-roasted and dry-roasted peanuts, peanut meal and granulated peanut.
The Texas Department of State Health Services on Thursday ordered the recall of all products ever shipped from the Peanut Corporation of America’s plant in Plainview, Texas, after discovering dead rodents, rodent excrement and bird feathers in the plant.

The order, which applies to products shipped since the plant opened nearly four years ago, came a day after the discovery of filth in a crawl space above a production area during a health services inspection, Texas Health Department Press Officer Doug McBride told CNN in a telephone interview. The plant’s ventilation system pulled debris “from the infested crawl space into production areas of the plant resulting in the adulteration of exposed food products,” a health department news release said. Officials at the plant, which opened in March 2005 and produced oil-roasted peanuts, dry-roasted peanuts, peanut meal and granulated peanut, voluntarily stopped operations Monday night. “Our understanding is that the bulk of their products go to other food manufacturers,” McBride said. “We’re not aware of any direct sales to consumers.” The state has the authority to stop a company’s operations and order a recall if it finds “a condition that poses an immediate and serious threat to human life or health,” as was the case here, he said. Though tests are being carried out to determine if the products contain salmonella or other disease-causing organisms, the orders are not contingent on what is found, he said.

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The plant is barred from resuming operations without health services approval. The company’s peanut butter and peanut paste products produced at its plant in Blakely, Georgia, have been linked to a nationwide outbreak of salmonella poisoning that has affected 600 people, killing nine. A call to the company’s telephone number, which was working earlier this week, elicited a recording that said it was no longer in service.

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Harlem’s Big Apple Surprise

Harlems Big Apple Surprise

Once one of the most downtrodden and dangerous areas in New York City, Harlem is in the throes of a serious rejuvenation. And to cater to everyone moving into and hanging out in the north Manhattan neighborhood, Harlem’s culinary scene is blossoming with new restaurants and lounges.

One recent arrival is Talay in Morningside Heights, where Laos-born chef Soulayphet Schwader — a veteran of Laurent Tourondel’s BLT restaurant empire — turns out a mixed Latin-Thai menu. Schwader’s signature small-plate dishes include grilled langoustine with sriracha aioli and lemongrass pork sausage, as well as South American classics such as ropa vieja — all served in the sleekly hip dining room or the private, plush Buddha Room.

Next door to Talay is Covo , a massive warehouse of a joint where the wood-burning ovens deliver around a dozen types of pizzas — from prosciutto crudo to Treviso — and the fresh sea bass is marinated in white wine and oregano before being baked whole in a brick oven.

Just moments away, there’s the Hudson River Café . The split-level boite, set into a converted mechanic’s shop right under the West Side Highway, serves up a “new American” menu heavy on comfort food: grilled pork chops, lobster quesadillas, Kobe-beef burgers. And to wash it all down, a selection of Harlem-inspired cocktails such as the Harlem Spice — a mix of tequila, fresh lime, fresh orange and jalapeño.

Ten minutes south, on Broadway near Columbia University, Campo — “gathering place” in Italian — is living up to its name . New York foodies congregate inside the rust-and-gold dining room to indulge in chef David Rotter’s fresh takes on Italy’s greatest hits, including fried risotto balls, monkfish milanese and chicken alla diavolo cooked under a brick.

And close by is Community Food and Juice , brought to you by the folks behind the Lower East Side’s cult-favorite eatery Clinton Street Baking Company. With its pastry provenance, Community is good for mornings and even better for brunch, when chef Neil Kleinberg dishes up midday must-tries such as smoked salmon benedict and seven-grain waffles with roasted apples and pears. It’s a mix as eclectic and exciting as Harlem itself. See 10 things to do in Washington, D.C.
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Will Pakistan Arrests Ease Terrorism Tensions with India?

Will Pakistan Arrests Ease Terrorism Tensions with India?

After months of denial and equivocation, Pakistan is officially acknowledging what India and the U.S. have long known: that last November’s Mumbai terrorism attacks were planned, at least in part, on Pakistani soil. On the same day that U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke concluded a four-day visit to Pakistan, the nation on Thursday announced that it had initiated trial proceedings against eight suspects and arrested most of those involved in the Mumbai massacre. The announcement, tentatively welcomed in India, will be greeted with relief in Washington, which has been working hard to avert a confrontation and to align the governments of India and Pakistan in a common fight against extremism in the region.

“Some part of the conspiracy has taken place in Pakistan,” Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik told reporters in Islamabad on Thursday, marking a significant climbdown for the government. Less than two weeks ago, one of Pakistan’s most senior diplomats had claimed the opposite. Pakistani officials attribute the change to information turned up by the Federal Investigation Agency, Pakistan’s equivalent of the FBI. Drawing on leads furnished last month by New Delhi, Malik laid out a narrative of events that largely concurs with the Indian version.

Pakistan’s investigation found that the Mumbai gunmen had departed the Pakistani port city of Karachi aboard three inflatable boats. With the help of telephone and bank-transfer records, investigators were able to trace a recovered engine from one of the vessels to a shop in Karachi belonging to Hammad Amin Sadiq. The shopkeeper — ambiguously described by Malik as “the main operator” — was arrested. From his interrogation, the authorities were able to apprehend three other suspects at two hideouts, one in Karachi, the other two hours away.

Two presumed handlers of the Mumbai shooters are still at large but are to be indicted, together with six men in custody, on charges of “abetting, conspiracy and facilitation” of an act of terrorism. The accused include Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhwi, the alleged mastermind, and Zarar Shah. Both are considered leading members of Lashkar-e-Taiba , the banned militant group blamed for the attacks. They were arrested in an earlier crackdown on Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a charity now banned after being accused of acting as a front group for LeT.

Underscoring Pakistan’s intention to try the suspects, Malik announced that a criminal report had been registered and read its reference number. The Pakistani government is also making a cross-border appeal for further help before beginning prosecutions. A list of 30 questions has been forwarded to New Delhi, including a request for DNA samples of the 10 gunmen, details of their intercepted conversations with handlers in Pakistan and information on a possible Indian connection. There was also a suggestion by Pakistani officials that the two fugitive handlers could be in India.

Islamabad proclaims the steps as proof of its bona fides in cracking down on terrorism. “I think today’s announcement reflects our seriousness in bringing the perpetrators to justice,” Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister, told TIME. “It is a testimony to what we’ve been saying, that we’re serious about the investigation. What was given to us was fairly sketchy — but through our own investigations, we’ve been able to act. The Indian High Commissioner was called in today, and we handed in our investigation. We have shared it with our friends abroad, the European Union, China and the rest. We have some questions post our investigation. We wanted Indian input and help.”

India’s help was needed to strengthen the government’s legal case, Qureshi said. “What they said was not legally tenable,” he added, in a reference to the Indian dossier. “We need evidence that can stand up to the test of law.” India promised to share whatever information it can with Pakistan. “This is a positive development,” the Indian Ministry of External Affairs said of Pakistan’s findings. “It remains India’s goal to bring the perpetrators of the terrorist attack on Mumbai to book, and to follow this process through to the end.”

The shift in tone may not camouflage the substantial differences that remain between the two countries on the issue of militancy, but given Pakistan’s stonewalling until now, it will be counted as nothing less than a breakthrough. A steady stream of U.S. and British envoys have pressed Pakistan to act more decisively, while urging restraint on India. Although Qureshi and his colleagues strenuously deny it, it is widely believed that Holbrooke’s four-day visit in Pakistan may have coaxed the government into action.

Despite the breakthrough, the Mumbai issue could still reignite tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbors. Cyril Almeida, an editor at Dawn newspaper, warned that tensions could arise over the arrested suspects. “Are they the same people India believes are responsible for the attacks” Almeida asked.

Long-standing differences could also erupt over the relationship of Pakistan’s shadowy Inter-Services Intelligence agency with militant groups. Malik emphasized on Thursday that the suspects were “non-state actors” — a perspective shared by Washington and London. But Shiv Shankar Menon, India’s Foreign Secretary, bluntly accused the military-led ISI of involvement. “The perpetrators planned, trained and launched their attacks from Pakistan, and the organizers were and remain clients and creations of the ISI,” he told a conference last week in Paris, provoking fury among the Pakistani establishment.

Washington and London have been hoping that Islamabad will seize the crisis as an opportunity to permanently uproot the training camps that were first used by militant proxies of the Pakistani army to stage raids into Indian-administered Kashmir. Qureshi, the Pakistani Foreign Minister, insists that this has been done. “Absolutely,” he said. “Whatever action needed to be taken has been taken.” But his counterparts across the border are yet to be convinced.
See pictures of terror in Mumbai. See pictures of Pakistan’s vulnerable Northwest passage.

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Hamas: Gaza truce agreement near

Hamas supporters stand on the rubble of a building hit by an Israeli strike.
Israeli and Hamas negotiators have "almost reached agreement" on a long-term truce for Gaza, a spokesman for Hamas told CNN early Friday.

Tahir Annono, who is in Cairo for the truce meetings, said that more meetings would take place Friday and Saturday, and on Sunday an announcement would be made. It was not immediately clear if Israel was in agreement. Hamas’ deputy leader, Moussa Abu Marzouk, said that the truce would last for 18 months and that all commercial border crossings between Gaza and Israel would be opened. Marzouk spoke after a meeting at a Cairo hotel between representatives of Hamas and Egyptian intelligence officials.

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Egypt has been working to broker an agreement between the two sides. Israel and Hamas, the Islamic militant group that has ruled Gaza since 2007, declared separate, tentative cease-fires January 21 following more than three weeks of fighting in Gaza. Marzouk said that any discussion of a prisoner exchange was “a separate issue” that had “nothing to do with the truce.”

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Dead rodents, excrement in peanut butter plant lead to recall

Authorities issued a recall for all peanut products shipped from a plant in Plainview, Texas.
The Texas Department of State Health Services on Thursday ordered the recall of all products ever shipped from the Peanut Corporation of America’s plant in Plainview, Texas, after discovering dead rodents, rodent excrement and bird feathers in the plant.

The order, which applies to products shipped since the plant opened nearly four years ago, came a day after the discovery of filth in a crawl space above a production area during a health services inspection, the department said in a news release. Inspectors also reported that the plant’s ventilation system was pulling debris “from the infested crawl space into production areas of the plant resulting in the adulteration of exposed food products,” the release said.

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Officials at the plant, which opened in March 2005, voluntarily stopped operations Monday night. Under the order, they are not allowed to resume operations without health services approval. The company’s peanut butter and peanut paste products produced at its plant in Blakely, Georgia, have been linked to a nationwide outbreak of salmonella poisoning that has affected 600 people, killing nine. A call to the company’s telephone number, which was working earlier this week, elicited a recording that said it was no longer in service.

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Karzai: U.S. troops can’t leave Afghanistan soon


President Hamid Karzai said that with a resurgent Taliban, a still-flourishing drug trade and a border with Pakistan believed to be home base for al Qaeda, Afghanistan can’t afford for U.S. troops to leave any time soon.

“U.S. forces will not be able to leave soon in Afghanistan because the task is not over,” Karzai said in an interview on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS,” scheduled to air Sunday. “We have to defeat terrorism. We’ll have to enable Afghanistan to stand on its own feet. We’ll have to enable Afghanistan to be able to defend itself and protect for its security … . “Then, the United States can leave and, at that time, the Afghan people will give them plenty of flowers and gratitude and send them safely back home.” Karzai’s comments come as President Barack Obama plans to send another 30,000 troops to fight what he’s called the “central front in our enduring struggle against terrorism and extremism.” At the same time, Karzai said, the actions of troops in Afghanistan have turned some of the public against them. “It’s the question of civilian causalities. It’s a question of risk of Afghans. It’s the question of home searches,” he said. “These activities are seriously undermining the confidence of the Afghan people in the joint struggle we have against terrorism and undermining their hopeful future. “We’ll continue to be a friend. We’ll continue to be an ally. But Afghanistan deserves respect and a better treatment.”

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While he said he welcomes additional U.S. troops, Karzai suggested they need to work along the Afghan-Pakistan border and in the poppy fields that fuel a drug trade that threatens to turn the nation into a narco-state — not in the villages where most Afghans live. “We have traveled many years on. What should have happened early on didn’t, unfortunately, happen,” Karzai said. “Now, the country is not in the same mood as it was in 2002. And so any addition of troops must have a purposeful objective that the Afghan people would agree with.” The Obama administration is conducting several reviews of U.S. policy in Afghanistan, including a review by Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in the region. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has said the original mission in Afghanistan was “too broad” and needs to be more “realistic and focused” for the United States to succeed. “If we set ourselves the objective of creating some sort of central Asian Valhalla over there, we will lose, because nobody in the world has that kind of time, patience and money,” Gates said during a recent Senate hearing. He called for concrete goals that can be reached in three to five years.

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Speaking via satellite from Kabul, Karzai called former President George Bush “a great person,” but said he can work with Obama despite the president’s comments as a candidate that Karzai had “not gotten out of the bunker” to improve security and infrastructure in Afghanistan. “President Obama is a great inspiration to the world,” he said. “The people of America have proven that they can really be the light holders for change and the will of the people in the world. “And his coming to power by the vote of the American people is a manifestation of that great power of the American people.” Karzai also acknowledged corruption in the Afghan government, but defended the work he’s done to combat it. “Sure, corruption in the Afghan government is as much there as in any other Third World country,” he said. “Suddenly this country got so much money coming from the West, suddenly so many Afghans came from all over the world to participate. Suddenly there were projects — suddenly there was this poverty that turned into some sort form of prosperity for this country,” he said. He said a government department has been created to deal with corruption and that corrupt judges, administrators and other officials are dismissed “daily” over corruption charges.

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Pakistan: Mumbai attackers trained here

The coordinated attacks on hotels, hospitals and railway stations in Mumbai killed more than 160 people.
The Pakistani government acknowledged Thursday that "some part of the conspiracy" behind the November attacks in India’s financial capital, Mumbai, took place in Pakistan.

The comments by Rehman Malik — the head of the Interior Ministry — was Pakistan’s first formal acknowledgment that Islamic militants trained in his country were behind the plot and was welcomed as a “positive development” by India’s foreign minister. Malik, speaking to reporters, said Pakistani authorities had charged eight people with providing the Mumbai attackers with cell phones and helping them reach the city’s shore by boats from Pakistan. Among them is the mastermind, a man who lived in a rented apartment in the city of Karachi. “The incident has happened in India and part of the conspiracy has been done in Pakistan and therefore (the charge) will be aiding terrorism,” Malik said. Of the eight people charged, six are in custody, including a person from Barcelona, Spain, who Malik said made payments for the attackers’ cellphone communications. Malik said Pakistan would ask for Interpol assistance because the e-mail addresses and calling technology that the plotters used to interact with one another were registered in various countries, such as the United States and Italy. “It worries me that somebody sitting in Pakistan and India were able to exploit the system in Italy and Spain to their benefit,” he said. Spanish police were not aware of the alleged link to Spain in the Mumbai attacks, but have contacted Pakistani authorities to seek more information, a Spanish Interior Ministry spokeswoman told CNN in Madrid Thursday. But Spain has arrested several dozen Pakistan-born men in Barcelona in recent years, including 10 who were indicted last June for an alleged plot to carry out suicide attacks on Barcelona’s mass transit system in January 2008, according to a court document viewed by CNN. The Indian government has said the three-day siege in Mumbai in November was carried out by Lakshar-e-Tayyiba, a Pakistan-based outfit. Malik agreed that some of the suspects have been linked to the organization. While Pakistan’s admission was described as a “positive development” by Indian Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee, he said Islamabad still needed to take “credible steps” to destroy what it called terrorist infrastructure in that country. Mukherjee said India would examine Pakistan’s request for more information on the attacks and will share whatever it can with Islamabad.

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Special:  Mumbai attacks

The series of coordinated attacks on hotels, hospitals and railway stations in Mumbai killed more than 160 people, including many foreigners. The accusations renewed tensions between South Asia’s longtime rivals, who have fought three wars since independence and conducted tit-for-tat nuclear weapons tests in 1998. Pakistani officials promised to cooperate with the investigation, but insisted that India show evidence supporting the claims. Announcing the arrests Thursday, Malik said: “People of India, we are with you and we have proved that we are with you.” Malik said the final report into the inquiry was pending and asked Indian authorities to help answer 30 questions, including providing the DNA of the suspects, that will help strengthen Pakistan’s criminal case. “We have a joint responsibility. We want to investigate. We just need help. And when we say ‘help,’ I am just signifying that we need more evidence,” he said.

Previously, the only senior Pakistani official to acknowledge a Pakistani link to the attack was fired. National Security Adviser Mahmud Ali Durrani was sacked on January 7 when he said that Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the only surviving suspect from the attacks, had ties to Pakistan.

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Obama returns home for final stimulus plan push

Rohingya refugees being treated in Idi, Indonesia.
President Obama took his economic stimulus proposal back on the road Thursday, urging final congressional passage of the now-$789 billion bill during a visit to a Caterpillar plant in the state that launched his political career.

In an exclusive interview with CNN Thursday, Abhisit Vejjajiva said he could not pinpoint who in the government approved the practice, but said he was working on rectifying the problem. “It’s not exactly clear whose work it is,” Vejjajiva said. “All the authorities say it’s not their policy, but I have reason to believe some instances of this happened, but if I can have the evidence as to who exactly did this I will certainly bring them to account.” Thousands of Rohingya refugees — a Muslim minority group from Myanmar — have fled to Thailand over the years and many of them have been housed in Thai camps near the Myanmar border. In some cases, there are charges that many of them have been kicked back out to sea from Thailand. A recent CNN investigation found evidence of the Thai army towing an apparent boatload of 190 Rohingya refugees out to sea, prompting Thai authorities to launch an investigation. And a group of the refugees rescued by Indonesian authorities last week told harrowing tales of being captured, beaten and abandoned at sea by the Thai military.

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Actress Angelina Jolie, a goodwill ambassador for the U.N. refugee agency, spoke out on the plight of the refugees last week as she visited the area with her husband, Brad Pitt. She asked Thailand to permit greater freedom of movement for the roughly 111,000 refugees housed in nine camps along the Thai-Myanmar border. Vejjajiva said “at times” there has been “a lot of pressure in terms of the numbers of these people coming in.”

“There are attempts, I think, to let these people drift to other shores. I have asked whether people are aware of such practices. The one thing that is clear is that when these practices do occur, it is done on the understanding that there is enough food and water supplied.” The prime minister said he regrets “any losses” that may have occurred from the refugees’ ordeals, but he said he is “doing the best I can to correct the situation.”

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Could South Africa be the worst team to host the World Cup?

South Africa crashed out of the 2006 African Cup of Nations without scoring a single goal.
It is an unwritten rule of all World Cups: if the host nation fails on the pitch, interest in the competition dies off the pitch.

As the 500 day countdown to the 2010 World Cup begins, most commentators have focused on South Africa’s preparedness, with the country’s vast unfinished stadiums causing concern in some quarters. But far more worrying for the country’s fans is the state of the national football team. “Bafana Bafana” — or “The Boys” – have recently plummeted down the Fifa rankings. Wednesday’s 2-0 loss to Chile in a friendly game at the Peter Mokaba Stadium in South Africa, and the lackluster form the team showed have led many to wonder whether they will be the worst host nation in the tournament’s history. Bafana Bafana has gone from being one of Africa’s great hopes in the 1998 and 2002 World Cups, and winning the African Cup of Nations in 1996, to not qualifying for the 2006 tournament in Germany. Since then, they appear to have been on to a losing streak. See South Africa’s rocky road to 2010. » In 2006, they exited the African Cup of Nations without scoring a single goal. Another early African Cup of Nations exit followed in 2008 before the team failed entirely to qualify for the 2010 regional tournament.

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The failure was even more embarrassing given that the Confederation of African Football (CAF) had decided to run simultaneous qualification for both the 2010 African Cup of Nations, to be hosted in Angola, and the World Cup. Although South Africa automatically qualified for the 2010 World Cup as hosts, the team still failed to make it to the final qualification stage. Will “Bafana Bafana” make it to the World Cup second round Have your say It was a low point for the team. After hitting 16th on the Fifa rankings in 1996, their highest ever, 2008 saw the team plummet to 80th. The decline can be attributed, at least in part, to a constant revolving door of managers and a decline in the number of players plying their trade at the highest level. Since 1997, South Africa has gone through 12 managers in 12 years, with some of the best in the game failing to get the best out of their charges. Philippe Troussier, who guided Japan to the finals, and Carlos Queiroz, the Portuguese national coach, have both floundered. Brazilian World Cup winner Carlos Pereira fared no better, before quitting last year due to family problems.

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“The biggest threat to [the] 2010 [World Cup] is the anemic state of the national football team,” explained Achille Mbembe in his column in South Africa’s Sunday Independent when news broke that South Africa had fallen to 80th on the Fifa rankings. “If the current downward spiral persists, the nation’s performance in 2010 will be an embarrassment for Fifa and a source of shame and humiliation for the entire continent … the truth is that South African players are simply not good enough to make it on the world stage,” he added. The team’s failure is even stranger given that the game is hugely popular and the national Premier Soccer League is the richest and best organized on the continent. And yet all hope is not lost and some small, fragile green shoots of recovery are poking through. Current coach, the Brazilian Joel Santana, had presided over five straight victories, before Wednesday’s loss to Chile, two of which were against regional powerhouses Cameroon and Ghana. This gave them a boost in the Fifa ranks and they now stand at 74th in the world. A handful of the team’s star players are also beginning to hit form. Everton’s Steven Pienaar has arguably been one of the best players in the Premier League this season, Blackburn’s Aaron Mokoena has excelled in a struggling team. Striker Benni McCarthy has been brought back in from the cold after regular arguments with a succession of coaches at both national and international level.

But more will have to be done if South Africa wants to avoid becoming the first nation to be thrown out of their own footballing party. What do you think Is South Africa the worst team to ever host the World Cup Finals

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