South Korean football players head to North
SEOUL: More than 150 South Korean athletes, journalists and officials left for Pyongyang on Friday for a football tournament, in the latest effort at sports diplomacy between the neighbours.
The two Koreas, who agreed to increase sports exchanges at a landmark summit between the South’s President Moon Jae-in and the North’s leader Kim Jong Un in April, held a friendly basketball match in Pyongyang last month.
The delegation — including 84 young footballers — will travel by bus to Pyongyang for their 10-day visit, marking the first overland trip by South Korean civilians to the North’s capital in nearly seven years.
Two South Korean U-15 teams — FC Gangwon and Yeoncheon Miracle — will compete in the Ari Sports Cup, a youth football tournament that runs from August 13
to 18 and also includes China, Russia, Uzbekistan and Belarus.
A South Korean coach said the “rare opportunity” to play football in the North´s capital would be a “great experience” for his players regardless of the end result.
“Rather than obsessing about the score, we will try to serve as a peace delegation with a mission to advance South-North sports exchange,” Lee Sung-keun of FC Gangwon said.
As the South Korean delegation travelled north, 64 North Korean workers arrived in Seoul for a football match slated for Saturday.
Waving mini white and blue “unification” flags — a pale blue silhouette of the Korean peninsula — the head of the North Korean group, Ju Yong Gil, said the football game will “create momentum for reunification throughout all classes”.
It will mark the fourth such football match between North and South Korean workers, with the last game taking place in Pyongyang in 2015.
All civilian communication between the two countries — which remain technically at war after the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice instead of a peace treaty — is banned unless approved by the governments.
Sporting cooperation helped spark the current diplomatic thaw, after the North sent a high-level delegation, athletes, cheerleaders and performers to this year’s Winter Olympics in the South.
The two Koreas will also field joint teams at the Asian Games later this month and march together at the opening and closing ceremonies in Indonesia.
-
Selma Blair Explains Why Multiple Sclerosis 'isn't So Scary' -
Will Smith Surprises Wife Jada Pinkett With Unusual Gift On Valentine's Day -
Shamed Andrew Has Paid Royal Favours With ‘national Scandal’ -
Prince William Ticked Off By How Andrew ‘behaved With Staff’ -
Prince William Questions Himself ‘what’s The Point’ After Saudi Trip -
James Van Der Beek's Friends Helped Fund Ranch Purchase Before His Death At 48 -
King Charles ‘very Much’ Wants Andrew To Testify At US Congress -
Rosie O’Donnell Secretly Returned To US To Test Safety -
Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Spotted On Date Night On Valentine’s Day -
King Charles Butler Spills Valentine’s Day Dinner Blunders -
Brooklyn Beckham Hits Back At Gordon Ramsay With Subtle Move Over Remark On His Personal Life -
Meghan Markle Showcases Princess Lilibet Face On Valentine’s Day -
Harry Styles Opens Up About Isolation After One Direction Split -
Shamed Andrew Was ‘face To Face’ With Epstein Files, Mocked For Lying -
Kanye West Projected To Explode Music Charts With 'Bully' After He Apologized Over Antisemitism -
Leighton Meester Reflects On How Valentine’s Day Feels Like Now