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07.07.2010 World Cup

kofi Annan: Ghana true winners of Uruguay game

By myjoyonline
Kofi AnnanKofi Annan
07.07.2010 LISTEN


Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Tuesday that despite their defeat in the dramatic World Cup quarter-final against Uruguay, Ghana were the true winners.

In a letter to the Ghana team, Annan, a Ghanaian himself, said his reaction at the end of the match on Friday when the last African representatives in the first World Cup on African soil lost in a penalty shootout was "how unfair".

"Heartbroken, that's how you must have felt at the end of your epic match against Uruguay last Friday. There is no other word for it. Hundreds of millions of us felt the same way," he wrote in the letter.

Ghana could have won in the last minute of extra time when they were awarded a penalty after Uruguay's Luis Suarez had been sent off for a deliberate hand ball on the goalline, but Asamoah Gyan fired the spot kick against the bar.

"In fact, while you lost the game, you came out winners. I wanted to congratulate you not only on a fantastic performance in which you can take great pride, but also for accepting your defeat with dignity. You won because you were such great ambassadors for the game - and for Africa," Annan wrote.

"I cannot think of another occasion on which the whole continent was so united as during your quarter-final," he added, in the letter released through the London-based PR company for his Africa Progress Panel.

"I am sure we have all felt at some stage of our lives that the world is united against Africa. But this World Cup, and particularly your last match, has shown the enormous goodwill towards our continent," he added.

The Ghana players received an ecstatic welcome home at the country's main airport on Monday.

Read the full letter
Open Letter to the Black Stars on the occasion of their defeat at the World Cup

Geneva, 6th July 2010
Dear Black Stars,
Heartbroken – that's how you must have felt at the end of your epic match against Uruguay last Friday. There is no other word for it. Hundreds of millions of us felt the same way.

For a moment, my reaction to those last minutes of drama was “how unfair”. But in fact, while you lost the game, you came out winners. I wanted to congratulate you not only on a fantastic performance in which you can take great pride, but also for accepting your defeat with dignity. You won because you were such great ambassadors for the game – and for Africa.

I cannot think of another occasion on which the whole continent was so united as during your quarterfinal. “BaGhana BaGhana” replaced “Bafana, Bafana” for our South African hosts, and I am sure I could hear the earth shake when Muntari scored – a mighty roar went up from Cairo to Cape Town, Dakar to Dar es Salaam – even the deafening Vuvuzelas couldn't match it. This thunderous solidarity is a tribute to you all, and a great omen for Africa, which is so often depicted as divided and conflicted. You won because you brought us all together.

Crucially, this unity went far beyond the shores of our continent. Millions of non-Africans cheered for you, too, something that would have been unthinkable a few decades ago. I am sure, we have all felt at some stage of our lives that the world is united against Africa. But this World Cup, and particularly your last match, has shown the enormous goodwill towards our continent. You won – we all won – because you opened so many hearts and eyes.

The lasting trophy to take away from the tournament is this incredible moment of unity. I wish we could preserve it and invoke it more broadly for the development and wellbeing of the continent. There is no reason why we should wait another four years for another moment of solidarity; we can draw upon what you have created, now.

Kofi Annan
Chair of the Africa Progress Panel
Former UN Secretary-General






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