World Cup can be bad for health (AFP) Updated: 2006-06-12 17:03
From Mogadishu to Kabul to Baghdad, watching the World Cup is proving to be
bad for your health.
Sometimes it's fatal.
 German soldiers from
the NATO-led international peacekeepers cheer, as they watch Germany score
a goal against Costa Rica during the opening soccer match of the World Cup
on television, in Kabul June 9,
2006.[Reuters] | Hardline Islamic courts in the
Somali capital have banned people from watching the action in Germany on
television believing it to be against Muslim teaching.
In a brief but violent protest, two people were killed as gunmen, reportedly
allied to the Joint Islamic Courts, forced three cinema halls to shut and warned
football lovers against watching the matches which were being relayed through
satellite.
"The Islamic courts have ordered the closure of three cinema halls," said
Sukahola resident Abdulaziz Hanad.
"They want to make sure that nobody in Mogadishu watches the World Cup."
In war-torn Baghdad, many Iraqis feared they would miss out on the spectacle
as the country's public broadcaster had no retransmission rights and the cost of
subscriptions are beyond the means of many.
"I can't buy a decoder for the Arab channel that is showing all the matches,"
said student Mustafa Abdel Sattar.
For 175 dollars (135 euros), subscribers receive a special package that
includes all 64 matches broadcast by the ART channel.
In Afghanistan, the 10,000-strong NATO force can watch the games on
cinema-style screens at the the International Security Assistance Force
headquarters (ISAF) in Kabul.
German soldiers were to first to test-run the facility by watching their
team's 4-2 win over Costa Rica on Friday 5,000 kilometres (3,000 miles) from
where the match was being played in Munich.
They were some of the 200 NATO soldiers -- German, French, British,
Macedonian, Turkish and Swiss -- who gathered in the Wolves' Den bar in Camp
Warehouse to watch a live transmission of the match.
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