NUREMBERG, Germany, March 16 (Reuters) - Nuremberg police director Walter
Ernstberger says his first thought on hearing the results of the World Cup
soccer draw was that his city could look forward to hosting some exciting games.
Then came a more sobering realisation.
"Our next thought, as policemen, was security. Yes, you could say there are
certain increased challenges," he said with careful understatement.
Terrorism and hooliganism are the overriding concerns of police throughout
Germany ahead of the World Cup, which starts on June 9 and runs for a month in
12 cities.
But Nuremberg faces some of the biggest potential security headaches of the
64-match event.
The English team, with its huge army of travelling fans and their reputation
for troublemaking, comes to town on June 15 to play against Trinidad and Tobago.
The United States will face Ghana in Nuremberg a week later.
Of the 32 teams competing, England and the United States are seen as among
the top potential terrorist targets -- Britain and the United States are high on
al Qaeda's list of enemies.
Before those two matches, Mexico will face Iran, also seen as politically
sensitive, in the medieval city. Nuremberg will host one more group match, Japan
versus Croatia, and one of the last-16 matches.
COMPLEX TASK
With less than three months until kick-off, preparations are gathering pace
across Germany to guarantee security at one of the biggest events in sport -- a
task made more complex by the German federal system in which each of the 16
states has its own intelligence service and police force.
Two of the host cities, Hamburg and Berlin, staged drills this month in which
hundreds of police and emergency workers rehearsed for a variety of disasters,
from riots to explosions.