Yahoo – AFP,
6 Oct 2014
![]() |
North
Korean athletes wave to well-wishers as they parade through Pyongyang, on
October 5, 2014, after their return from the Asian Games in Incheon, South
Korea
(AFP Photo)
|
North
Koreans lined the streets of Pyongyang to welcome home their Asia Games
athletes, state media said Monday, but there was no reported appearance by the
communist country's sports-fanatic leader.
Top
Workers' Party officials and military generals welcomed the athletes at the
airport Sunday, the state media said, but they made no mention of leader Kim
Jong-Un attending the event.
![]() |
North
Korean athletes arrive at Pyongyang
airport on October 5, 2014, after returning
from the Asian Games in Incheon, South
Korea (AFP Photo)
|
Hundreds of
thousands of citizens came out onto the streets to greet the athletes who took
part in the games in the rival South, the reports said.
The 150
athletes won 11 gold medals and 25 silver and bronze in their best Asian Games
performance since 1990.
The North
Koreans were widely cheered by South Korean crowds at the event in Incheon even
though the two sides remain technically at war.
Each
athlete left the plane at Pyongyang airport wrapped in a North Korean flag. The
party brass and generals stood in line to individually great each competitor.
The North's
women footballers who beat Japan 1-0 in the Asian Games final led the cavalcade
and were received with rapture, according to the reports.
"The players received fervent welcome from hundreds of thousands of citizens in Pyongyang who lined the streets," the Korean Central News Agency said.
'Stormy
cheers'
The mass
welcome lasted for more than 10 kilometres (six miles), according to KCNA,
adding that the "streets turned into a sea of flowers".
Nearly
everyone in the crowds was seen carrying a bouquet of flowers. Some families
keep plastic or paper flowers which they use when ordered to appear for such
events.
When the
parade reached the Keasonmun, Pyongyang's version of the Arc de Triomphe,
"the crowd raised stormy cheers", KCNA said.
All the
cars were emblazoned with portraits of Kim Il-Sung and Kim Jong-Il,
respectively the current leader's grandfather and father.
The
athletes laid wreaths and "paid tribute" at the huge statues of the
two Kims in the centre of the city, the reports said.
The ruling
party's official newspaper Rodong Sinmun gave heavy coverage to the athletes
with stories and pictures filling the first three pages of the paper.
"We
warmly welcome our proud sons and daughters who made the dignity and strength
of North Korean Juche well known," read the front-page headline. Juche is
the North's hardline ideology of self-reliance.
The Rodong
Sinmun attributed the country's Asian Games medals to Kim Jong-Un and his
policy of putting emphasis on sport.
Despite
their success at the Asian Games, North Korea's women footballers are banned
from taking part in next year's World Cup in Canada after five players failed
drug tests at the last World Cup in 2011.
North Korea
is also in trouble with the International Gymnastics Federation.
Two days
before the Asian Games started, the federation banned a North Korean gymnast
who had lied about her age. It said the Pyongyang government submitted a fake
passport for Cha Yong-Hwa.
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