North Korean Soccer Team Faces Criticism Session

Once again, this is why North Korea should be banned from FIFA play pending further investigation and monitoring of how it treats its players and coaches:

The team and coach Kim Jong Hun were summoned to a meeting at the People’s Palace of Culture in Pyongyang on July 2, the U.S.-financed Radio Free Asia reported Monday. Sports Minister Pak Myong Chol was among some 400 government officials, athletes and others at the six-hour-long closed-door session, the report said. Team members were forced to reprimand their coach at the end of the gathering, the report said. [….]

The report cited two unidentified sources in North Korea and a Chinese businessman named Yu, described as knowledgeable about North Korea affairs. [AP]

Of course, these “criticism” sessions are a part of everyday life for all North Koreans, and hopefully, this doesn’t necessarily mean the players or the coach will suffer a darker fate. It just raises an obligation for FIFA not to look the other way.

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5 Responses

  1. I’m sure the Swiss fat-cats will get right on that. As soon as they rebuild the South African school system.

  2. http://www.businessinsider.com/why-the-shaming-of-the-north-korean-soccer-team-is-actually-a-really-big-story-2010-7

    Reports claim coach Kim Jong-Hun was made to work on a building site and expelled from the Workers’ Party of Korea. He was blamed for “betraying the trust of Kim Jong-Un”

    Pretty interesting stuff. I’m reading “Under the loving care of the fatherly leader” by Bradley Martin and I think basically anyone could lay out the entire sequence of events coming up dealing with the succession issue based on how it went down with Jong-il. Only this time I don’t know if Jong-un will be enlarging his father’s personality cult, and I really wonder how much true loyalty to the party exists today in the country.