By Tom Armitage BERLIN, May 31
- Never ones to miss an excuse for a beery booze-up among friends, Germans and
their guests will take to the streets during the soccer World Cup to watch
matches at thousands of open-air venues.
Soccer fans without tickets need not worry about missing out on the action as
towns and cities across the country set aside parks, squares and public
buildings to host openair parties.
Even landmark buildings in the German capital of Berlin will not be spared
from football fever, with the famous Brandenburg Gate becoming the backdrop for
a huge TV screen and dance stage.
"The Berliners, as you will notice, like to be outside," said Hans-Friedrich
Mueller, a spokesman for the Berlin mayor's office. "In the Tiergarten, in the
summer every day is like a barbeque with or without the excuse of the World
Cup."
On the fringes of the Tiergarten, Berlin's equivalent of Central Park,
families lounge on the grass on sunny days, playing frisbee and grilling meat.
Organisers of Berlin's FanFest want to capture this spirit for visiting football
fans.
"We wanted to use this tendency that the Berliners have towards being outside
and offer them an opportunity to watch football somewhere other than on
television.
"This is going to be the biggest public viewing platform in Germany," Mueller
said at the press launch of the enormous openair viewing area in the centre of
Berlin last week.
The venue will have capacity of 70,000 to 100,000 people a day, stretching
from the Brandenburg Gate -- once the symbol of divided Berlin -- along an
arrow-straight boulevard through the Tiergarten to the Siegessaeule or Victory
Column.
Offering a 60-square-metre video square at the gate itself, as well as a
further three huge screens along the length of the park, the venue aims to
create some of the atmosphere which has made lesser-known sports like beach
volleyball such a success.
In 2002, crowds of 5,000 were packed in at a popular public viewing area at
Potsdamer Platz for almost every match of the World Cup broadcast from Japan and
South Korea.
POOR, BUT SEXY
In the words of its mayor, Klaus Wowereit, Germany's federal capital is poor,
but sexy -- begging the question of who is stumping up the 5 million euros
($6.39 million) said to be needed to host the party.
Battling a budget crisis and an unemployment rate of around 20 percent,
Berlin is determined to nevertheless put on a decent show for the thousands of
German and foreign fans without tickets for World Cup matches.
In addition to the party in the Tiergarten and at the Brandenburg Gate, a
huge stage has been erected in front of the Reichstag and the famous
globe-shaped lump on the city's television tower has been turned into a giant
football.
The other 11 German cities where matches are being played will also host
their own parties, laying on giant screens, artificial beaches with cocktail
bars, massage tents for tired fans and test-your-speed goal-shooting alleys.
While many Germans gear up for the event, which begins on June 9, not
everyone has been moved.
Some have criticised the government for having come too close to private
interests in allowing German sportswear and soccer boot maker Adidas to erect a
huge stadium on a square in front of the seat of parliament.
"The state has a duty to keep this public space public," said Klaus Staeck,
the president of the Berlin Arts Academy, recently, dubbing the stadium the
"cheapest profanity."
SECURITY FEARS
Talk of terrorist attacks has also loomed over open-air events, revived after
a magazine cited a leaked Crime Office report which suggested that at least 21
matches, including ones involving the U.S., were at a theoretically high risk of
attack.
Berlin's officials say that with a secure fence encircling the Brandenburg
gate party area, they have taken the necessary steps to ensure that the open-air
event in the middle of the city is as safe as the stadium.
"All the security measures have been taken," Mueller said. "It will be
similar to the security measures at the stadiums but obviously there is no need
for tickets."
Those measures should also keep out other troublemakers, officials say, after
another threat raised its head in recent weeks -- that the World Cup could
become a target for right-wing extremists intent on targeting foreign fans.
There are fears that demonstrations organised via internet forums and aimed
at open-air events could spring up during the tournament, when police are most
stretched.
"During the World Cup, the police are not in the position of being able to
ensure the security of such events," Konrad Freiberg, head of the police force
union, told Spiegel magazine.