Yahoo – AFP,
Jung Ha-Won, January 15, 2018
Seoul (AFP) - A 140-member North Korean orchestra will perform in South Korea during next month's Winter Olympics, the two sides announced Monday, amid a tentative rapprochement after months of tensions over Pyongyang's nuclear programme.
Seoul (AFP) - A 140-member North Korean orchestra will perform in South Korea during next month's Winter Olympics, the two sides announced Monday, amid a tentative rapprochement after months of tensions over Pyongyang's nuclear programme.
The North
agreed last week to send athletes, high-level officials and others to the
Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.
The two
sides agreed an artistic troupe would be part of the delegation, and four
officials from each country met Monday at the border truce village of Panmunjom
to thrash out details of that visit.
The 140
members of the Samjiyon Orchestra will hold concerts in the capital Seoul and
the eastern city of Gangneung close to Pyeongchang which is hosting the Games,
said a joint statement after the talks.
"The
South will ensure the safety and convenience of the North's performing squad to
the utmost extent," it said, without elaborating on the dates for the
concerts.
The
concerts, if they go ahead, would mark the first time that a North Korean
artistic troupe has performed in the capitalist South since 2002, during a
previous rare period of rapprochement.
The North's
then-leader Kim Jong-Il sent dozens of state singers, dancers and musicians to
Seoul to perform at a political event when South Korean President Kim Dae-Jung,
known for his reconciliation policy, was in office.
The North's
delegates at Monday's meeting included Hyon Song-Wol, the leader of Pyongyang's
famed all-female Moranbong music band, raising expectations the band would
perform in the South.
Monday's
joint statement however did not mention it.
The South's
delegates to Monday's talks included senior officials from the state-run Korean
Symphony Orchestra, raising the prospect of groups from both sides of the
border performing together.
The two
nations also agreed on Monday to hold talks at Panmunjom on Wednesday on
logistics and details for the visit by the North's athletes.
The Koreas
are set to hold talks with the International Olympics Committee in Lausanne,
Switzerland, on Saturday over the number of the North's athletes.
South Korea
has proposed a joint march for the opening ceremony and a unified women's ice
hockey team, reports quoted a minister as saying last week.
![]() |
This
handout photo provided by the South Korean Unification Ministry shows North
Korea's chief delegate Kwon Hyok-Bong (L) greeting South Korea's chief delegate
Lee Woo-Sung (R) (AFP Photo/Handout)
|
'Corn
without teeth'
The South
Korean government and Olympic organisers have been keen for Pyongyang -- which
boycotted the 1988 Summer Games in Seoul -- to take part in what they have been
promoting as a "peace Olympics".
The North
remained silent on the offer until current leader Kim Jong-Un said in his New
Year's speech that it could participate, a move seen as aimed at easing
military tensions with the US.
Tension has
been high as the North staged a flurry of nuclear and missile tests since last
year and Kim traded threats of war and personal attacks with US President
Donald Trump.
Kim's
declaration triggered a rapid series of moves, while Seoul touted talks last
week -- the first inter-Korea meeting for two years -- as a potential first
step to bringing the North into negotiations over its nuclear arsenal.
South
Korean President Moon Jae-In, who advocates dialogue with the North but remains
critical of Pyongyang's weapons drive, said last week he was willing to have a
summit with Kim "under the right conditions", but added that
"certain outcomes must be guaranteed".
In a
setback for such hopes, Pyongyang on Sunday slammed Moon as "ignorant and
unreasonable" for demanding preconditions -- possibly a step towards
denuclearisation -- for a summit.
"The
south Korean chief executive should not be dreaming," the state-run KCNA
news agency said in an editorial, accusing Moon of "brownnosing" the
United States.
KCNA added
that the North could still change its mind about taking part in the Olympics.
"They should know that train and bus carrying our delegation to the
Olympics are still in Pyongyang," it said.
A spokesman
for Seoul's unification ministry played down the editorial, attributing it to
"internal reasons and circumstances".
But on
Monday, a senior North Korean journalist warned the South's media against
criticising Pyongyang
"Tongue
may bring calamity and miswritten pen may become a sword beheading oneself,"
Kim Chol Guk said in an essay published by KCNA.
"The
South Korean authorities may find the wedding ceremony turning into a mourning
ceremony if they fail to hold tight control of media and of their own
tongue."
North and South Korea begin talks on appearances by performers from Pyongyang's state-run artistic troupes at next month's Winter Olympics in the South, after the North agreed to attend the Games pic.twitter.com/k9iipxKm33— AFP news agency (@AFP) January 15, 2018


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