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Rodman’s ex-NBA team arrives in NKorea for game

Former NBA basketball star Dennis Rodman, right, and fellow U.S. basketball players arrive at a hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. Rodman arrived in the North Korean capital with a squad of former basketball stars in what he calls "basketball diplomacy," although U.S. officials have criticized his efforts. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

PYONGYANG, North Korea (AP) — Dennis Rodman arrived in North Korea on Monday with a team of fellow former NBA players for an exhibition game on leader Kim Jong Un’s birthday, after saying he wants to show that North Korea isn’t so bad.

Former NBA basketball star Dennis Rodman, right, and fellow U.S. basketball players arrive at a hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea Monday, Jan. 6, 2014. Rodman arrived in the North Korean capital with a squad of former basketball stars in what he calls “basketball diplomacy,” although U.S. officials have criticized his efforts. (AP Photo/David Guttenfelder)

The flamboyant Hall of Famer arrived in the North Korean capital from Beijing with a squad of a dozen former basketball stars including Vin Baker and Cliff Robinson in what Rodman calls “basketball diplomacy,” although U.S. officials have criticized his efforts.

“It’s about trying to connect two countries together in the world, to let people know that, do you know what? Not every country in the world is that bad, especially North Korea,” Rodman told The Associated Press in an interview in Beijing before his flight to North Korea.

“People say so many negative things about North Korea. And I want people in the world to see it’s not that bad.”

The U.S. is at odds with North Korea over its nuclear weapons program, and Rodman has been faulted for not talking about North Korea’s human rights record, described as one of the world’s worst by activists, the U.S. State Department and North Korean defectors.

Defectors have repeatedly testified about the government’s alleged use of indiscriminate killings, rapes, beatings and prison camps holding as many as 120,000 people deemed opponents of authoritarian leader Kim Jong Un, the third generation of his family to rule.

The U.S. players are to compete in an exhibition game against a North Korean team on Wednesday, Kim’s birthday.

“Somehow we have to get along, and no matter what disagreements or what discrepancy we have in life,” Rodman said. “It’s like saying: Why do we have the Olympics? When everyone comes together in the Olympics, there’s no problems. That’s what I’m doing. That’s all I’m doing.”

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