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FIFA loses 5-0Beware Orange. It signals caution at stop streets, announces to South Africans that they are close to experiencing rolling blackouts, or identifies you as a Dutch soccer fan. These days it also serves as a 'go directly to jail' card thanks to the ministrations of FIFA and a whipped South African parliament. ![]() By now everybody has heard of the ambush marketing stunt pulled by Dutch brewer Bavaria, who has reportedly been selling orange mini dresses as part of a gift pack with its beer in the Netherlands. It flew a couple of these dresses over to SA, hired some girls to wear them, sneaked them into a stadium (FIFA claims they wore other outfits over the Orange outfits in a bid to outwit security), and the girls then proceeded to cheer on the Dutch team - until they were ejected from the stadium that is. Two Dutch women, Barbara Castelein and Mirte Nieuwpoort, have been targeted for arrest and prosecution by FIFA and its enforcement arm, the SA Police Service. An over-reaction of noteSome folks in the world of marketing and intellectual property 'rights' would argue these girls deserve what is coming to them. They would say that FIFA has warned firms not to try their luck with 'ambush marketing' (as defined by FIFA of course). You ignore the rules, you get smacked, sorry imprisoned. I disagree - FIFA's over-reacted to a ridiculous extent and has shown South Africans and fans that they really are humourless, heavy-handed, controlling micro-managers with no sense of justice or fair play. 1. FIFA undermines our human and constitutional rights: FIFA also strictly controls which media voices it allows into its stadiums. Through its one-sided accreditation process it ensures known critics, like journalist Andrew Jennings, never make it near Sepp Blatter. It even controls the questions journalists ask at its press conferences as when a FIFA media officer cut off journalists questioning North Korean coach Kim Jong-Hun. Finally it took a High Court order to force FIFA's local organising committee (LOC) to release tender documentation to the media on how exactly it spent South African taxpayers' money. The court concluded, to quote the Mail & Guardian newspaper that brought the application in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act, that the committee "charged with organising the most significant sporting event in the world, purporting to do so in the public interest, takes a legally insupportable stance in seeking to keep its conduct inaccessible to public scrutiny". 2. FIFA is ignoring growing discontent with its practices: 3. FIFA proves its disconnect with its customers: 4. FIFA doesn't have any sense of an appropriate response: What would have lead to a few laughs in the Netherlands has caused an international diplomatic incident with the Dutch government calling the arrests absurd and protesting to South African authorities. "It is absurd that the two women have a jail term hanging over their heads for wearing orange dresses in a football stadium," Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen has said. 5. FIFA doesn't do its sponsors any favours: About Herman Manson: @marklivesThe inaugural Vodacom Social Media Journalist of the Year in 2011, Herman Manson (@marklives) is a business journalist and media commentator who edits industry news site www.marklives.com. His writing has appeared in newspapers and magazines locally and abroad, including Bizcommunity.com. He also co-founded Brand magazine. View my profile and articles... |