North and South Korea annouce joint table tennis team at World Championships

Deutsche Welle
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The North and South Korean women’s table tennis teams have joined together to form a joint team at the Table Tennis World Championships. The move comes as diplomatic tensions between the two countries thaw.Less than a week after the historic meeting between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in at the military demarcation line on the Korean peninsula, the North and South Korean women’s table tennis teams have united to form a joint Korean team at the Table Tennis World Championships in Sweden – in the middle of the tournament.

After being drawn against each other in the quarterfinals of the tournament in the southwestern city of Halmstad, the two teams applied to merge and advance to Friday’s semifinal together, where a joint Korean team is now to face either Japan or Ukraine.

“When I informed the board of directors of the development, the representatives of the joint team stood up and applauded in a show of support for this historic step,” said Thomas Weikert, president of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).

Ryu Seung-min, the vice-president of the South Korean Table Tennis Federation and member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), praised the ITTF for its spontaneous decision.

“This is an important statement to promote peace between our two countries through table tennis,” said the 2004 Olympic champion.

Read more: Korean family reunions: Too little, too late?

This is not the first time that the political rapprochement between the two Koreas has been reflected in the sporting arena. At the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang in South Korea this past February, a joint Korean women’s hockey team took to the ice. Despite the fact that they lost all three group games and only scored one goal, the fact that the South Korean and North Korean women competed as one team seems to have contributed to the recent thaw in diplomatic tensions.

On April 27, Kim Jong Un and Moon Jae-in met in Panmunjom where they agreed to work towards the denuclearization of the peninsula and to reach a deal within the year to officially end to the Korean War, which has been in a state of ceasefire since 1953.

mf/pfd (SID/DPA)

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