A signal of rapprochement between the two Koreas: first women’s match after years of separation
At a time when political dialogue channels remain frozen, football is opening a rare window of contact between South Korea and its northern neighbor.
On Wednesday, for the first time, women’s football teams from the two Koreas met on South Korean soil, in a cross-border encounter that attracted significant attention beyond the sports community.
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The North Korean women’s team Naegohyang defeated its South Korean counterpart Suwon in the AFC Women’s Champions League semi-final held in Suwon, about 30 kilometers south of Seoul, according to Yonhap News Agency.
In the final scheduled for next Saturday in Suwon, Naegohyang will face Japan’s Tokyo Verdy Beleza. The total prize money for the tournament amounts to one million US dollars.
The match between Suwon and Naegohyang took place in front of a large crowd, marking the first-ever women’s club football match between the two Koreas on South Korean territory.
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Historic match
In statements reported by the agency prior to the match, South Korean Minister of Unification Chung Dong-young said his ministry’s role in this historic event would be to “ensure the smooth running of the match and set a positive precedent for inter-Korean relations.”
The minister noted that he would not attend the match in person, citing the Asian Football Confederation’s position that the game should remain a purely sporting event, separate from political and diplomatic circumstances.
He added: “In respect of this principle, the Minister of Culture and Sports will attend the match on site, while I will not be present today.”
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In an implicit political dimension, the minister welcomed the initiative of forming a supporter group by South Korean civil organizations, considering it could serve as a “positive precedent” for reopening communication channels between the two Koreas after what he described as years of de facto rupture in relations.
He concluded: “We need steps to rebuild trust.”









