Port Elizabeth – From deep in the Ghanaian bush to the palm-shaded beaches of Mozambique, Africans are glued to the first World Cup on the continent and nothing from power cuts to death threats will keep them away.
Even in anarchic Somalia, where hardline Islamists have killed people for defying a ban on watching the matches, African addiction to watching their favourite game is irresistible.
"The World Cup looks magic. My wife, children and I have been sleeping at midnight these days," Suleiman Olow told Reuters in Mogadishu, where residents have secretly put up makeshift satellite dishes.
Staring at television screens in shop windows, huddling around car radios or gathering at makeshift fan sites, Africans have come out in their thousands to see the action.
In capitals from Gaborone to Abidjan, restaurants and bars have erected large screens to draw crowds, who are still transfixed despite the poor showing by African teams.
"This is the year of Africa. Even if the cup is not won by an African team, it is already a victory for Africa. A victory for Nelson Mandela," said Maputo law professor Mouzinho Nicol's.
In poor townships, viewers swarm around tiny televisions or at fan sites with big screens in open fields.
In Pretoria, squatters, huddled in blankets against the bitter cold, watched one of the games in a church.
Complaints about workers
Employers have complained about workers not reporting for work during games, even though South African President Jacob Zuma asked companies before the cup started to be indulgent.
Six African teams qualified for the finals and even if most of them are already out, the locals have seen any successes as a victory for the continent, regardless of their nationality.
South Africans have blown their vuvuzela trumpets enthusiastically for any African side, not just Bafana Bafana, who are still being feted like heroes despite being the first host nation knocked out of the first round.
"This is a once in a life time African World Cup and I am enjoying every bit of it," said Martin Phiri, a football fanatic in a Malawi drinking den.
Power problems plague most of Africa, where many areas are off the national grid, but even that has not deterred the population from getting to see the games.
In rural Rwanda and Zambia, local authorities and the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef), set up inflatable screens and generators to enable residents watch some of the live broadcasts.
Malawi's president, like authorities in several other countries, has asked people to conserve power to limit the chance of blackouts.
Deep in the Ghanaian bush, solar generators allowed villagers to see a televised match for the first time in their lives, and crowds shouted when Ghana beat Serbia and became the first African winners at the 2010 tournament.
Car batteries
Elsewhere, farmers use car batteries to run their TVs.
"The villagers are happy to see the images. It helps us forget all of our problems," said Ivorian Magloire Gnankan.
Africans also hope that South African success in staging the huge logistical operation necessary for the World Cup will reverse stereotypes of hunger, Aids and crime and show the modern, changing face of a continent ripe for investment and development.
"Africa is teaching a lesson to the world that it can organise beautiful things. So, down with the sceptics!" said Amandio Cossa, a former telephone technician from Mozambique.
Organisers said Africa would benefit from the tournament's lasting legacy of tourism and investment, although the hosts' neighbours have lamented their own lack of a dividend.
Billed as a pan-African event, organisers also hope it will bring people together and help erase some ethnic and racial divides, especially in the host nation – still troubled 16 years after the end of apartheid.
In Rwanda, where thousands crammed into a stadium to watch the games, some said bringing youth together this way can help forge a sense of national identity and override the terrible legacy of the 1994 genocide, in which 800 000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were slaughtered.
"When you are fans of the same team, you forget you are Hutu and Tutsi," said 18-year-old Brazil-fan Bienfait Uwizeye.
Social and economic problems
But even the joy of hosting the world's most watched sporting even cannot hide the continent's deep social and economic problems.
South African critics, currently subdued amid a nationalistic tide of pride at staging the tournament, said the money should have been spent on tackling Africa's poverty, housing shortages HIV/Aids.
South Africa itself still has an army of poor and unemployed.
The Rwandan spectators were eerily silent through much of the game, and kept under control by police officers brandishing sticks.
Soldiers with Kalashnikovs patrolled the perimeter because of fears of a grenade attack, Unicef staff were told.
Rwanda has a presidential poll in August and rights groups have accused the government of a growing intolerance of criticism and dissent.
Residents in some parts of Somalia watch the tournament secretly, afraid of rebel Islamists who have already killed two and arrested dozens for breaking a ban on watching the games.
"My daughters and I listen to local radios that air the matches, but at low volume," said Halima Farah, a mother of 7
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