Cape Times

Koreas embark on basketball diplomacy

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SEOUL, South Korea: The rival Koreas yesterday began two days of friendly basketball games in Pyongyang in their latest goodwill gesture amid a diplomatic push to resolve the nuclear stand-off with North Korea.

Players from North and South Korea were mixed into two teams that competed against each other at the North Korean capital’s Ryugyong Jong Ju Yong Gymnasium.

A capacity crowd of 12 000 applauded as the two women’s teams – dressed in white jerseys that read “Peace” and green jerseys that read “Prosperity” – marched onto the court holding hands. Team Prosperity defeated Team Peace 103-102, with North Korea’s Ro Suk Yong scoring 18 points. The game between the men’s mixed teams that followed ended in a 102-102 tie.

The South Koreans will again play against the North Korean men’s and women’s teams today before returning home tomorrow.

The games precede a visit to North Korea by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for meetings over the future of the North’s nuclear programme. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, a noted basketball fan, didn’t appear at the gymnasium yesterday. It wasn’t clear whether he would attend today.

“Once they started playing, the players showed quick chemistry and I was proud of them,” said Lee Moon-kyu, the head coach of South Korea’s women’s team.

Lee will lead a combined Koreas team at the Asian Games next month in Indonesia. He also plans to bring two or three North Korean players to the Asian Games.

He said he was impressed with “No 9 and No 7 on Team Peace”, referring to North Korea’s Ri Jong Ok and Jang Mi Kyong.

North Korea’s sports minister, Kim Il Guk, said the games reflected the “revered determinat­ion of the leaders of North and South Korea to bring forward the future of a self-reliant unificatio­n”.

The South Korean delegation, including 50 players and government officials, arrived in Pyongyang on Tuesday on two military aircraft.

“It feels like the first time I came here all over again,” said Hur Jae, head coach of South Korea’s men’s national team, who previously visited Pyongyang for a joint game in 2003. Hur, a former guard whose two sons are among the players who travelled to the North, talked about his friendship with retired North Korean player Ri Myong Hun, a 2.35m centre who anchored the country’s national team during the 1990s and early 2000s.

“There was a buzz when I shared a glass of soju and talked with Ri Myong Hun in 2003,” Hur said.

Ri did not attend a dinner reception for South Korean players on Tuesday, and it wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether he was at the games yesterday.

The exchanges are the latest result of a diplomatic outreach to the South that Kim announced during his annual New Year’s speech. That led to the North’s participat­ion in the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics in February and two summits between Kim and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Kim has also met China’s President Xi Jinping and US President Donald Trump.

The inter-Korean summits have facilitate­d a string of goodwill gestures between the Koreas, which have also agreed to field combined teams at the Asian Games.

Basketball diplomacy has something of a history in North Korea.

Former NBA player Dennis Rodman arranged a game in Pyongyang in 2014 for Kim’s birthday.

South Korea’s Hyundai business group built a basketball stadium in Pyongyang during a previous era of rapprochem­ent between North and South Korea, and a joint game was played there in 2003.

Inter-Korean basketball games were also played in 1999.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? South and North Korean players of Team Peace, in white, and Team Prosperity play a friendly basketball game in Pyongyang, North Korea.
PICTURE: AP South and North Korean players of Team Peace, in white, and Team Prosperity play a friendly basketball game in Pyongyang, North Korea.

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