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FIFA president Gianni Infantino wants friendly between North and South Korea

SWANSEA, WALES - MARCH 05:  New FIFA President Gianni Infantino thumbs up prior to the Barclays Premier League match between Swansea City and Norwich City
Image: Gianni Infantino hopes a friendly between North and South Korea will help ease tensions

FIFA president Gianni Infantino wants to set up a friendly between North and South Korea as a way of easing tensions on the divided peninsula.

On a visit to South Korea which coincided with a recent upsurge in tensions between Seoul and Pyongyang, Infantino said such a match would highlight the spirit of football as a game "beyond borders" that can unify rather than divide.

"We should bring everyone together around a football pitch... I'm ready to help and assist in whatever way is necessary," Infantino said.

Military tensions have been running high on the peninsula following North Korea's nuclear test in January and a ballistic missile test staged a month later.

North Korea's state media releases still photographs of its leader Kim Jong-Un observing what they say was a successful test of a new engine for an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).
Image: North Korea's leader Kim Jong-Un

Cross-border relations have sunk to their lowest level in years, with almost all official communications cut off.

The two Koreas last held a friendly match in Seoul in 2005. Before that they played two consecutive games in October 1990, in Seoul and Pyongyang, under the title "Inter-Korea Unification" matches.

Sporting exchanges have virtually halted, along with other ties, as relations soured.

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"Sometimes imagination can come true. Sometimes dreams can come true. These things can become a reality," Infantino said.