By AFP – Global Times Source:AFP - Global Times Published: 2014-6-24 23:28:01
The hangover goes around the globe like a Mexican wave - a trail of destructive and sometimes deadly celebration is left after every win and the World Cup "sickie" has become an epidemic.
The mayor of Bogota, capital city of Colombia, ordered a ban on alcohol sales during Colombia's World Cup matches after nine people died in fighting and car accidents sparked by the country's 3-0 win over Greece.
In France, migrant Algerian fans poured onto the streets of Paris and other big cities after their country beat South Korea 4-2 on Sunday. At least 28 people were arrested by police who fired flash balls to break up unruly crowds and in some cases were pelted with stones.
Alcohol is causing other World Cup tragedies. A drunken Mexican fan jumped off a cruise ship deck to his death after his country drew with Brazil. The ship was taking 3,500 Mexicans between the Brazilian cities of Fortaleza and Recife.
Hardly a country has escaped fallout from World Cup binge drinking.
Nepalese police have caught hundreds of fans drinking and driving after staying up all night to watch World Cup matches.
Police in the Himalayan nation's capital, Kathmandu, seized the licenses of more than 400 fans in one week, said Basanta Pant, spokesman for the Kathmandu Traffic Police Division. That is twice the weekly average.
Authorities have deployed 100 extra personnel to stand guard at main intersections until 4 am, ready to stop beer-fueled fans.
Some 5,200 cases of drunk driving were reported in China in the first three days of the World Cup, a 65 percent increase over the figure during the 2010 tournament, the official China Daily newspaper reported.
Traffic police will "conduct selective tests during daytime to keep hangover motorists off the roads," said the report.
A time difference of up to 12 hours between China and Brazil has also given Chinese wheeler-dealers a lucrative opportunity to sell fake sick notes to World Cup fans staying up all night.
A search on Chinese search engine Baidu showed thousands of results for vendors providing photocopies of hospital certificates with official stamps and doctor's signatures in their "product catalogue."
World Cup absenteeism - what the British famously call "throwing a sickie" - is a widespread problem around the world.
Shamsuddin Baradan, executive director of the Malaysian Employers Federation, which represents the employers of about a third of the country's private sector workforce, said employers were concerned about lower productivity and increased absences.
"The first week you may not feel anything but by the second, third and fourth weeks, we expect quite a high degree of negative impact," he told AFP, urging employees to be "selective" in the games they watch to reduce damage.
An earlier federation survey found that 56 percent of its members said they had been hit by absenteeism or productivity losses during the 2006 World Cup in Germany.
In Britain, the employment law specialists ELAS said that "'World Cup fever,' the mystery illness that strikes once every four years" could cost the country's economy up to 4 billion pounds ($6.8 billion).
Its survey of 1,500 workers revealed that 13 percent plan on "throwing a sickie" to watch matches and 43 percent would take planned or unauthorized time off.
In Australia most of the games are played in the middle of the night. Fans' feelings were expressed in one Twitter comment, "MESSAGE TO ALL EMPLOYERS: Please be patient with weary staff today. They have endured a night of sporting drama."