Japan warns football fans not to go to North Korea for World Cup qualifier
Japan has warned football fans not to attempt to travel to "hostile" North Korea for next week's World Cup qualifier in Pyongyang.
Japan fans at the Asian Cup in Qatar last month. Photo: © Giuseppe CACACE / AFP
Tokyo (AFP): Japan has warned football fans not to attempt to travel to "hostile" North Korea for next week's World Cup qualifier in Pyongyang.
The Tokyo foreign ministry "strongly requests the general public to refrain" from attending the match on March 26, the first for the two sides in North Korea since 2011.
"As you know, North Korea takes a hostile view of Japan and travel is not recommended for the general public," it said on X, formerly Twitter.
Japan and North Korea play in Tokyo on Thursday as part of qualifying for the 2026 World Cup, before the return fixture next week.
Japan's long-standing advice for its nationals is not to travel to North Korea but it does not expressly forbid them from doing so. The two countries do not have diplomatic relations.
It was unclear how many fans, if any, would try to travel. They would need a North Korean visa to do so.
Fourteen government officials will however accompany the Japan team for the match as well as a small number of media outlets, Japanese broadcaster NHK reported.
The first leg of their women's playoff for the Paris Olympics was switched from the North Korean capital to neutral ground in Saudi Arabia last month.
Relations have long been dogged by issues including compensation for Japan's brutal occupation of the Korean peninsula between 1910 and 1945 and more recently by Pyongyang's firing of missiles over Japanese territory.
The abduction by North Korean agents of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s -- forced to train spies in Japanese language and customs -- has also long been a major point of contention.
Thursday's match in Tokyo was expected to see a sizeable contingent of North Korean supporters from among Japan's long-standing ethnic Korean community of about 300,000 people.
Most are descendants of civilians taken from their homes during Japan's colonisation of the Korean peninsula.
-
Toxicology tests show Liam Payne had 'multiple' drugs in system: reports
2024-10-22 -
US infant mortality spiked after right to abortion overturned: study
2024-10-22 -
World lags on 2030 nature goals headed into UNCOP16 talks
2024-10-21 -
'Nature is on the brink of burnout,' WWF warns as COP16 biodiversity summit opens
2024-10-21 -
World Cup winner Kerr thanks 'grandmas' for T20 inspiration
2024-10-21 -
UN biodiversity summit kicks off with call for significant funding
2024-10-21 -
Messi's Inter Miami to play in FIFA's Club World Cup in 2025
2024-10-20 -
UN biodiversity conference: what's at stake?
2024-10-20 -
G7 defence summit convenes as conflicts rage
2024-10-19 -
Jane Goodall warns on 'false promises' at UN biodiversity meet
2024-10-19