Free tickets for Chinese fans to cheer N. Korea at World Cup
A GROUP of Chinese soccer fans, dubbed the "fans volunteer army," have been given tickets for the World Cup finals by North Korea so they can support their neighbors in South Africa.
China has plenty of football fans but no team to support, while North Korea has qualified for the June 11-July 11 tournament.
The North Korean sports ministry liaison office in Beijing has given 1,000 tickets to the "Chinese Star Football Team," a cheerleading group of famous actors, comedians and singers.
"For Chinese and even Asian fans, North Korea qualifying for the World Cup finals has special meaning," Wang Qi of ticketing agency CSIG told the Xinhua news agency.
Relations between China and North Korea are very close - North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il visited last week - and millions of Chinese, technically volunteers, fought alongside their eastern neighbors in the Korean War of the 1950s.
The new "Chinese fans volunteer army" will leave for South Africa in June and cheer on the North Korea team.
"The passion of the People's Volunteer Army of the 1950s still exists in our hearts, so we should support North Korea at the World Cup," wrote Qi Ge, a columnist at the Oriental Sports Daily.
"The revolutionary heroism and romanticism from that time are exactly what we Chinese fans need for a World Cup," Qi said.
North Korea has been drawn with Brazil, Portugal and Ivory Coast for their second appearance at the World Cup finals, and it will be a huge surprise if they reproduce their 1966 run to the quarterfinals.
This is just the second time North Korea has qualified for the World Cup. The country shocked the world in 1966 when it beat Italy and reached the quarterfinals.
Broadcaster APTN in Pyongyang, capital of North Korea, reported yesterday that the national team received a festive send-off last Saturday, with residents waving North Korean flags outside the airport as the players arrived. Footage showed women waving flowers as the team boarded the plane.
North Korean coach Kim Jong Hun promised "a great success."
China qualified for the World Cup just once in 2002, returning home from South Korea and Japan in ignominy, failing to score a single goal in three defeats.
China has plenty of football fans but no team to support, while North Korea has qualified for the June 11-July 11 tournament.
The North Korean sports ministry liaison office in Beijing has given 1,000 tickets to the "Chinese Star Football Team," a cheerleading group of famous actors, comedians and singers.
"For Chinese and even Asian fans, North Korea qualifying for the World Cup finals has special meaning," Wang Qi of ticketing agency CSIG told the Xinhua news agency.
Relations between China and North Korea are very close - North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il visited last week - and millions of Chinese, technically volunteers, fought alongside their eastern neighbors in the Korean War of the 1950s.
The new "Chinese fans volunteer army" will leave for South Africa in June and cheer on the North Korea team.
"The passion of the People's Volunteer Army of the 1950s still exists in our hearts, so we should support North Korea at the World Cup," wrote Qi Ge, a columnist at the Oriental Sports Daily.
"The revolutionary heroism and romanticism from that time are exactly what we Chinese fans need for a World Cup," Qi said.
North Korea has been drawn with Brazil, Portugal and Ivory Coast for their second appearance at the World Cup finals, and it will be a huge surprise if they reproduce their 1966 run to the quarterfinals.
This is just the second time North Korea has qualified for the World Cup. The country shocked the world in 1966 when it beat Italy and reached the quarterfinals.
Broadcaster APTN in Pyongyang, capital of North Korea, reported yesterday that the national team received a festive send-off last Saturday, with residents waving North Korean flags outside the airport as the players arrived. Footage showed women waving flowers as the team boarded the plane.
North Korean coach Kim Jong Hun promised "a great success."
China qualified for the World Cup just once in 2002, returning home from South Korea and Japan in ignominy, failing to score a single goal in three defeats.
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