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World Cup 2010 Photo Gallery

  • Thread starter Thread starter Sun Jian
  • Start date Start date

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Vladimir Weiss (left) from Slovakia and Junior Diaz (right) from Costa Rica challenge for a ball
during a friendly soccer match between Slovakia and Costa Rica in Bratislava. -- AP



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Cristiano Ronaldo (right) of Portugal is challenged by Mozambique's Gerry during their friendly
soccer match at Wanderers stadium in Johannesburg. -- REUTERS



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Brazil's Kaka (left) gets past Tanzania's Nadir Haroub (center) and Shadrack Nsajigwa in their friendly soccer match in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. -- AP


 

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North Korea's Ri Kwang Hyok, Jong Tae Se and Kim Kum Il challenge for the ball during a team training session in Tembisa near Johannesburg. -- AP


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Ivory Coast's Kolo Toure smiles after scoring a goal during their international friendly soccer match against Japan in Sion. -- REUTERS


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Spain's Cesc Fabregas celebrates after he scored against Poland's goalkeeper Tomasz Kuszczak during a friendly
soccer match at the Nueva Condomina stadium in Murcia, Spain. -- AP



 

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Honduras' Wilson Palacios (right) fights for the ball with Belarus Sergey Kislyak (left) during their
friendly football match between their teams in the local stadium of Villach. -- AFP



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Switzerland's national soccer team player Hakan Yakin kicks a ball during a training session in Lens, near Crans Montana. -- REUTERS


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Chile's Gonzalo Fierro (right) clashes with New Zealand's Chris Killen (left) during their international friendly football match
at Kanyamazane Stadium near Nelspruit. -- AFP



 
Fortune Teller : 'Argentina will win the World Cup.'


And the winner is... Zulu sangoma reveals all

11/06/2010, by AFP

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Constance (right), a 'sangoma' (soothsayer and healer) of the Zulu tradition, is pictured with her son at a boutique that sells medicinal herbs and plants in Port Elizabeth. Constance, who has been a sangoma for 12 years, after a night of dreams and consultations with the ancestors, looks into the future to see the winner of the 2010 World Cup.

A Zulu sangoma, after a night of dreams and consultations with the ancestors, looks into the future to see the winner of the 2010 World Cup. The 70-year-old fortune teller, a cheerful lady called Constance, plays a critical role in Zulu culture, blessed with special powers to heal and divine the future. But she was mighty hard to find.

A two-day search aided by street sellers and shop owners in the southern city of Port Elizabeth had produced nothing but a series of false dawns. It appeared one needed a sangoma to find a sangoma. Then a toothless lady of indeterminate age kneading dough on a pavement beside a taxi rank suggested trying a muthi herbal specialist off Govan Mbeki Road.

The shop, an Aladdin's cave of pills and potions and ointments, had a high counter behind which were two people. One, a man, had his face painted in tribal warpaint. The other, a woman, was Constance. "You've made it," she smiled, as if she had been expecting the visit all the time. After negotiating her fee, Constance opened a door into a storeroom packed with sacks of dried roots and animal hides hanging from a makeshift washing line.

Through a curtain at the back was her "office" -- with a frayed floral couch, more bags of herbs and plant extracts, and shelves crammed with somewhat incongruous tins of Jeyes Fluid household cleaner. "I use all this to make my medicines," she said, easing her generous frame into a chair beside, which was a small table with incense and a yellow candle.

"When someone comes to me and wants me to help them with trouble in their life or look into the future, I get them to light this candle. That way I can see through them, I can see what the problem is," she explained. "I help cure people who are mad or who have AIDS using 'muthi'." Constance has been a sangoma for 12 years.

"My father and my sister were sangomas, and when they died they came to me in a dream and told me 'you have to be a sangoma now'," she said. "I didn't want to, but they made me ill. They hit me with sticks, I couldn't walk. "They sent me into the sea for seven days to sleep. When I woke up I accepted to become a sangoma. "I went away to train for one year. Then my ancestors came back to me and said 'you can finish the training now, you are a sangoma'.

"I then slaughtered five goats and one cow." She says she has many clients, rich and poor, black and white, old and young, who turn to her for a multitude of reasons. "People come to me because they have problems sleeping, or with their marriage, they want to know the future, or they are ill. I help them all." Football players also turn to herbalists for potions, balms or talismans to boost their performance or treat injuries.

More than 30 percent of African athletes use traditional medicines, according to one survey. Johannesburg's Ellis Park stadium is a hop from major medicine markets, and an ox was slaughtered at the showpiece Soccer City site to bless the 10 World Cup pitches. Asked about the World Cup, Constance shuts her eyes, as if asleep, in meditation, then opens them sharply.

"All the teams here are strong, but I have to consult my ancestors, I have to ask them what they think, and they will tell me in my dream tonight. "Come back tomorrow, and I will have your answer." The next day, Constance is again waiting behind the counter, with the answer not to eternity but almost as important. "Argentina will win the World Cup."



 

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Supporters of 2010 South Africa World Cup blow plastic trumpets known as a vuvuzela as they march through a street in Rustenburg, South Africa. -- AP


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Cape Town residents blow vuvuzela horns in support of the South Africa soccer team, during a fans party in Cape Town. -- REUTERS


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Residents of Soweto, a suburb of Johannesburg, paintings welcoming messages on the street for the 2010 Football World Cup,
a day before the start of the tournament in South Africa. -- AFP



 

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South African children with their faces painted in the South Korean and South African colours are pictured during an opening ceremony of the Dream Stadium for children at Ikhwezilethemba primary school in Pretoria. -- AFP


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Gregory da Silva, who calls himself the Eggman, smiles during a fans' party in Cape Town, one day prior to the start of the 2010 World Cup. -- REUTERS


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Ten-year-old Tylo Kenneth wears a colored mohawk wig while walking through the spectator zone on the V&A Waterfront in Cape Town. -- AP



 

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Fans cheer during the FIFA World Cup Kick-off Concert at the Orlando Stadium in Johannesburg on Thursday
ahead of the start of the 2010 World Cup football tournament. -- AFP



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A band plays as it marches through the city center streets during the Fan Fest parade in Cape Town. -- AP


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Women dance in a parade during a fan fest through the city center streets. -- AP


 

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Soccer fans dance in the street during a Fan Fest on Thursday. -- AP


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Women in a crowd cheer as performers sing during a Fan Fest in Cape Town. -- AP


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Fans raise scarves and wave flags during the opening concert for the 2010 World Cup at the Orlando Stadium in Soweto, Johannesburg. -- REUTERS


 

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Around 60,000 football fans brought the streets of Johannesburg to a standstill to show their support for the South African World Cup team.


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South Africa's national football team "Bafana Bafana" celebrate on the streets of Sandton during a parade.


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South African coach Carlos Alberto Parreira waves while riding atop a bus with the national team.


 

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A football fan blows a vuvuzela as the team parades in Sandton
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South African football fans wait for the Bafana Bafana team to parade through the streets of Sandton


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Fans celebrate as they waits for the arrival of the South Africa's national football team Bafana Bafana
during a parade on the streets of Sandton, north of Johannesburg



 

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South African fans dance in the streets while they wait for the South African World Cup football team


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A woman shows her fingernails painted with the colours of the South African national flag


 

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A South African woman cheers during a parade to support the South African football team


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South African President Jacob Zuma waves to the crowd


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A member of the South African Police watches the crowd as President Jacob Zuma arrives to see the national team


 

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South Africans pose next to a giant statue of former president Nelson Mandela


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Siphiwe Tshabalala closes in on goal with only Oscar Perez in the Mexico goal to beat


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Tshabalala unleashes a ferocious strike


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Perez is helpless as the ball arrows into the top corner of the net


 

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Tshabalala begins the celebrations with a neatly executed but rather conventional aeroplane imitation


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Tshabalala gives the signal to his team mates to ready themselves for celebration part II


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Step 1: You put your right arm out...


 

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Step 2: your left arm out...


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Step 3: and you twirl around


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Sideline approval: Tshabalala's goal sparked more conventional celebrations on the South Africa sideline...


 

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Wonderful scenes: and lifted the roof off of the Soccer City stadium...


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Religious blessing: and prompted the evergreen Desmond Tutu into a merry jig of his own


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Golden opportunity: Mexico's Giovani dos Santosspurns the first goalscoring opportunity of World Cup 2010


 

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Lucas Thwala throws himself into a challenge to rob Paul Aguilar of Mexico of possession


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Heads you win: Rafael Marquez is thwarted by the safe hands of South Africa goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune


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Bafana acrobat: South Africa's Siyabonga Sangweni displays incredible athleticism


 

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Mexico's Rafael Marquez threatens from a set piece


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Former West Ham striker Guillermo Franco goes close for Mexico in the first half


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Francisco Rodriguez's determination to win the ball sees him tower over South Africa's Katlego Mphela


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Carlos Vela is denied the glory of scoring the first goal of World Cup 2010 by the linesman's flag


 
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