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'Springbok emblem must go'
Article By:
Fri, 10 Oct 2008 13:57
Rugby's corporate sponsors and its hallowed symbol the Springbok
came under fire from delegates on the first day of a two-day National
Sports Indaba held in Durban on Thursday.
Sports Portfolio Committee chairperson Butana Komphela told delegates:
"The Springbok divides us. We have a responsibility to unite our
country on one national emblem.
"Minister, I want you to observe the arrogance of white people on
the Springbok emblem," he said.
Komphela said that there could be "no negotiation" on the Springbok
emblem.
When the floor was opened to the delegates, many speakers called for
a resolution removing the Springbok emblem to be passed as soon as
possible.
However, Sports Minister Makhenkesi Stofile said: "My view is that
emblems are not matters of life and death."
He said there should be one national emblem which all sporting codes
would endorse.
Komphela added that the Sharks rugby franchise's failure to
wear
"Say no to racism" on their jerseys was nothing but "rampant racism" on
the part of manufacturer Mr Price.
"Dealing with the legacy of apartheid cannot be dealt with by market
forces," he said.
SA Rugby Union (Saru) chief executive Johan Prinsloo said he could
not participate in the debate on the emblem as he had not been
authorised to do so and the Springbok emblem had not originally been on
the agenda of the Indaba.
According to the sports ministry the main purpose of the indaba,
among others, is to develop an integrated national strategy in order to
accelerate the implementation of the national sports development
agenda.
The indaba will focus on the number of critical topics such as
"Politics, sport, transformation and excellence, and access to
resources".
Beijing performance under scrutiny
Earlier in the day SA Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee
(Sascoc) president Moss Mashishi said the
country's poor Beijing
Olympic results need to be examined without "stones being thrown at
each other".
He said the "painful lessons of this experience need to be examined
soberly rather than be used an opportunity to throw stones at each
other".
South Africa's able-bodied athletes only managed one silver medal
-their worst result since being readmitted to the international
sporting fold.
In contrast the country's paralympians a month later enjoyed their
best Paralympics to date, raking in 30 medals, including 21 golds, to
finish sixth on the medals table.
Mashishi said that "now that we have given the big powers such as
the Russians a fright we should put more resources into the team".
Referring to the sports funding from the national lottery, Mashishi
questioned why the control of those funds were not within the sporting
fraternity.
An area that needed to be cleared up was the relationship between
federations and school
sport.
"It's an area that is grey and hazy," he said.
Should the Springbok emblem go? And is it really dividing people? Leave a comment below!