North Korea's Naegohyang Women's FC will face Suwon FC Women in the AFC Women's Champions League semifinals in Suwon on May 20. The visit marks the first by a North Korean team to South Korea under Kim Jong-un's leadership. Analysts express both hopes and doubts for inter-Korean dialogue.
The Korea Football Association (KFA) and South Korea's unification ministry announced on May 4 that Naegohyang Women's FC, based in Pyongyang, will travel to Suwon—30 kilometers south of Seoul—to face Suwon FC Women in the semifinals of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) Women's Champions League on May 20 at 7 p.m. at Suwon Stadium. Pyongyang notified the AFC of the decision on Friday, marking the first appearance by a North Korean athletic team on South Korean soil in more than seven years since five players competed in the 2018 table tennis event in Incheon.
Naegohyang, sponsored by the namesake manufacturing company, will bring 27 players and a 12-member staff, scheduled to arrive at Incheon International Airport via Beijing on May 17. The team blanked Suwon FC Women 3-0 in their group-stage match on November 12 in Myanmar and defeated Ho Chi Minh City Women's FC 3-0 in the quarterfinals, played in Laos as a neutral venue. Several players contributed to North Korea's wins at the 2024 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup and 2025 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup.
The visit comes amid North Korea's 'two hostile states' narrative declared by leader Kim Jong-un in late 2023, which he reaffirmed last month by calling South Korea "the most hostile nation." Kyungnam University professor Lim Eul-chul said, "This could be an opportunity for the Kim Jong-un regime to boost internal support by showcasing North Korean players as more capable than those of the enemy state."
A unification ministry official told reporters, "We see this as a purely international sporting event, a competition between clubs. It is not something the government should intervene in." The official pledged full support for a smooth event. University of North Korean Studies professor Yang Moo-jin advised, "While sports exchanges at times helped ease tensions, the government should take a more pragmatic stance given Pyongyang's hardening two-state policy."
Historically, sports have bridged the Koreas, such as North Korea's participation in the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics that paved the way for summits between then-President Moon Jae-in and Kim Jong-un.