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Aa aerial diagram for an inter-Korean sports exchange center proposed by the SNKS
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South and North Korea Sports Exchange Association holds launch ceremony for implementation committee
South and North Korea are simultaneously pursuing the construction of inter-Korean sports exchange centers as privately operated facilities for use as bases for inter-Korean sports exchange and cooperation. The South and North Korea Sports Exchange Association (SNKS) announced on Sept. 4 that construction of inter-Korean sports exchange centers for joint competitions and training by South and North Korean athletes and the training of future athletes was being simultaneously pursued by South and North Korea. The group has held 22 regular inter-Korean youth soccer exchange matches to date, including reciprocal visits over land by South and North Korean squads last year. SNKS held a launch ceremony for the inter-Korean sports exchange center implementation committee at One Mount in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province, that morning and shared an aerial diagram of the South Korean center, project plan, and project fund procurement plan. The inter-Korean sports exchange center is to include an indoor multipurpose arena, outdoor stadium, sports venture business town, sports history museum, accommodations and amenities, and a nine-hole golf course. The site covers an area of 486,190 square meters, with anticipated project costs of 240 billion won (US$200.22 million). A full-scale effort to have a women’s soccer team from North Korea’s April 25 Sports Club participate in the South Korean women’s professional soccer league is to be pursued as a first project following the center’s completion. The association plans to acquire a site for the project within the year through bidding with local governments in the Greater Seoul area. It also plans to seek partial support for project funds from the Inter-Korean Cooperation Fund and National Sports Promotion Fund through discussions with the Ministry of Unification (MOU) and Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST). As a basis for soliciting support from government funds, the association cited regulations on the funds’ usage according to the Inter-Korean Cooperation Fund Act and National Sports Promotion Act. Article 4 of the management regulations for the Inter-Korean Cooperation Fund state that it is to provide “subsidization of all or some of the funds needed for cooperation projects in the fields of culture, art and science, and sports.” The association also cited the government’s previous use of the funds to subsidize costs for the Korea Football Association’s construction of the Paju National Football Center in Gyeonggi Province, which was completed in 2001. Of the 13 billion won (US$10.84 million) in total construction costs, the KFA procured 3.1 billion (US$2.59 million), with the remainder subsidized by MCST, the Korea Sports Promotion Foundation, and the Olympics Organizing Committee.
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The SNKS hosts a launch ceremony for the inter-Korean sports exchange center implementation committee at One Mount in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province, on Sept. 4.
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Kim Kyung-sung (left), head of the South and North Korea Sports Exchange Association (SNKS), appoints former professional baseball player Yang Joon-hyuk (right) as a member of a committee to build inter-Korean sports exchange centers. (all photos by Park Kyung-man, North Gyeonggi correspondent)
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