Tuesday, June 15, 2010

N.Korea secures World Cup broadcast deal: TV union

North Korea has secured legal rights to air World Cup matches live, Asia's broadcasting union said Tuesday, denying the reclusive state had pirated a recording of the opening fixture.


According to South Korean broadcaster SBS, the North's Korean Central Broadcast Service (KBS) aired Friday's opening 1-1 draw between hosts South Africa and Mexico without permission.

But the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union said North Korea -- whose team is competing at the World Cup for the first time in 44 years -- had used legal footage "right from the start" following a deal between the union and FIFA.

KBS is a member of the TV union, which has agreed with football's world governing body to air the tournament live in six other impoverished countries -- East Timor, Laos, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.


"We have signed a contract with FIFA on June 11, just before the opening game started, to broadcast the matches live in North Korea," a spokeswoman at the Kuala Lumpur-based broadcasting union told AFP.

"It's not true to say they have broadcast a pirate recording for the opening match. Right from the start, North Korea has been using the feeds from FIFA legally," she said, while declining to detail the terms of the agreement.

South Korea are also competing in South Africa, and SBS says it holds the broadcast rights for the entire Korean peninsula.

North Korea, whose national side open their campaign later Tuesday against five-time champions Brazil, wanted the South to provide free footage, as it had done for the 2006 tournament in Germany.

But SBS said last week that negotiations with North Korea over a fee had broken down. It said the talks had been coloured by tensions between Seoul and Pyongyang over the sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

Despite the tensions, a pro-Pyongyang newspaper reported Tuesday that North Koreans were united in cheering South Korea's 2-0 victory over Greece in their first group match on Saturday.

"Who would like to see a nation with the same bloodline lose'" one North Korean who watched the game on TV said, according to the Chosun Sinbo, which is published in Tokyo and normally reflects official thinking.

"What we detest is not the South Korean people" but their conservative government, the person was quoted as saying.

Four years ago, South Korea's then-liberal government spent 150 million won (132,600 dollars) subsidising World Cup broadcasts to North Korea.

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