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Zidane delights Bangladeshi villagers
KAMAR BASULIA (Bangladesh)—French superstar footballer Zinedine
Zidane delighted thousands of Bangladeshi villagers with an impromptu
show of his legendary skills.
Zidane was on a visit to the village of Kamar Basulia near the capital
Dhaka to meet former beggars who had transformed their lives through
tiny loans from Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus’s pioneering Grameen
Bank. “He is my hero. I never thought I would see him in my own village.
I still cannot believe this is happening,” 16-year-old schoolboy Zakir
Hossain told as he watched Zidane play from a tree top. Zidane, who is
on a two-day visit to the Muslim-majority country at Yunus’s invitation,
was showered with flowers by the villagers. Some 10,000 people turned
out to watch him play.
“I am completely taken aback,” Zidane, a Muslim, told the private Ntv
television channel on Tuesday. “I never thought that people living
thousands of miles away in small villages here in Bangladesh would know
who I am,” he added. But he brushed aside questions about the notorious
World Cup final incident in which he head-butted Italian international
Marco Materazzi and was sent off minutes from the end of play. “Much has
been said about that episode and so I don’t want to comment anymore,” he
said.
Rahima Ahkter, 50, who began begging in 1976 after the death of her
husband, told the footballer she took a loan in 2003 for 500 taka (seven
dollars) and began selling toothpaste and shampoo door to door. Another
former beggar, Mohammad Babul, also 50, told how he was able to give up
begging after taking out a similar-sized loan to sell vegetables.
As well as meeting the former beggars, Zidane met women borrowers from
the village. The bank targets women because it believes they are more
astute at running family finances. “I am stunned by the affection that
people here have shown me,” he told reporters later in Dhaka. He said he
hoped that football would thrive in Bangladesh and pledged to play a
role in developing it. “Football is a European game and that’s why
European football is better than Asian (football). But I believe that if
the Asian nations try hard they can narrow the gap,” he said, speaking
in French through an interpreter.
“I will be happy to help football in Bangladesh. I hope that the
organisers will also try hard to lift the standard of football in
Bangladesh. “If the boys work hard, have a plan and the organisers do
their part, then football here will one day reach top level,” he added.
The retired Zidane, seen as a sporting legend in the football-crazy
south Asian country, later Tuesday played in an exhibition match between
under-16 teams at Dhaka’s national stadium. The match, in which he wore
the strips of the country’s two leading teams, was watched by around
30,000 spectators and shown live on the private Ntv television channel
to an estimated audience of around 25 million.
On Wednesday, he is to officially open a factory project run by French
food giant Danone and Grameen Bank at a ceremony in Dhaka. Each has a 50
percent stake in the one million dollar plant in the northern town of
Bogra, which is aimed at producing nutritious food products targeted at
people on low-incomes.
Bangladesh, which has a population of 144 million, is one of the world’s
poorest countries. Yunus and the Grameen Bank he founded were jointly
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last month. Since 1976, the bank has been
credited with lifting millions out of poverty and the concept has been
replicated in more than 40 countries.—Agencies |