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Former Argentine soccer star Diego
Maradona cheers for Argentina's David Nalbandian during his quarter-final
match against Italy's Potito Starace at the ATP tennis tournament in
Buenos Aires, February 22, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BUENOS AIRES, March 16 (Xinhua) -- Argentine soccer
celebrity Diego Maradona publicly chided the FIFA for barring high altitude
matches as he will fly to Bolivia on Sunday for a charity game.
"I am going to seek to lend Bolivia a hand. It is not
their fault if they live in Bolivia. This rule is a joke, like asking the
Chinese to leave China to play soccer, or saying that the Argentines cannot play
in the Monumental Stadium, or telling the Brazilians they cannot play in Rio,"
he said.
He also commented on a soccer-related shooting
Saturday that killed Velez Sarsfield fan Emmanuel Alvarez, 21, on his way to a
Velez-San Lorenzo match.
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Argentine soccer great Diego Maradona
waves to his fans before the match between Boca Juniors and Lanus in an
Argentine Apertura championship soccer match in Buenos Aires Dec. 2,
2007. (Xinhua/Reuters File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
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"Violence is solved by having good security,"
Maradona said. "Poor security is everywhere and we blame soccer. When you watch
television there is a death here and other death elsewhere. Poor security is
what causes pain, not a death in soccer," he insisted.
The Velez-San Lorenzo match was cancelled after Velez
fans rioted on hearing the news. He said that if England, which had the worst
tradition of violent fans, was able to bring peace to soccer, Argentina should
be able to do so too.
Maradona and Bolivia's president Evo Morales will
play in the Hernando Siles Stadium in Bolivia's administrative capital, La Paz.
The match will help raise disaster relief for the 57,000 families suffering from
floods in Beni, capital of northern Bolivia's Trinidad department.
Maradona, who was one of Argentina's leading goal
scorers in the 1980s and 1990s, will arrive in Bolivia later on Sunday leading a
team of Argentine journalists and former soccer stars including Alejandro
Mancuso, Diego Latorre, Esteban Pogany and Mathias Almeyda. The rival team will
be the Bolivian World Cup team which played at the 1994 World Cup in the United
States.
Soccer governing body FIFA barred official
international matches above 2,750 meters in May 2007. Bolivia's capital is at
3,600 meters above sea level and most of Bolivia's major cities suffer the ban.