Yahoo – AFP,
Hwang Sunghee, January 17, 2018
Seoul (AFP) - The two Koreas agreed Wednesday to march together under a single flag at the Winter Olympics opening ceremony and field a united women's ice hockey team at the Games in a further sign of easing tensions on the peninsula.
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| The two Koreas will march together under a unification flag -- a pale blue silhouette of the whole Korean peninsula (AFP Photo/JUNG Yeon-Je) |
Seoul (AFP) - The two Koreas agreed Wednesday to march together under a single flag at the Winter Olympics opening ceremony and field a united women's ice hockey team at the Games in a further sign of easing tensions on the peninsula.
North Korea
also said it would send a 550-member delegation to the Winter Olympics and
Paralympics in the South, Seoul said, as the two sides met to discuss athlete
numbers in the latest in a flurry of cross-border talks.
Nuclear-armed
Pyongyang agreed last week to take part in next month's Pyeongchang Games which
are taking place just 80 kilometres (50 miles) south of the Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ) that divides the peninsula.
Seoul has
long sought to proclaim the event a "peace Olympics" in the face of
tensions over the North's weapons programmes -- which have seen it subjected to
multiple UN Security Council sanctions -- and the discussions represent a
marked improvement.
The two
Koreas will march together under a unification flag -- a pale blue silhouette
of the whole Korean peninsula -- at the opening ceremony for the February 9-25
Games, according to a press statement issued by the South.
They also
agreed to form a unified women's ice hockey team.
North
Korea, however, declined to discuss plans to send a high-level delegation to
the Games when the issue was raised by Seoul, the South's vice unification
minister Chun Hae-Sung said.
The
statement additionally said that the South will send skiers to the Masikryong
ski resort in the North for joint training with North Korean skiers. Chun
clarified these would be non-Olympic skiers.
![]() |
South Korea
has long sought to proclaim the Pyeongchang Games a "peace
Olympics"
amid tensions with the North (AFP Photo/JUNG Yeon-Je)
|
IOC
meeting
"The
South and North must continue working on remaining issues on the basis of
today's agreements," Chun told reporters following the meeting at the
southern side of the border truce village of Panmunjom.
"We
hope the South and North will be able to make the Pyeongchang Olympics a peace
Olympics," he added.
Three
officials from each side took part in the talks and the results will be
discussed by both Koreas with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in
Lausanne, Switzerland, on Saturday.
"This
will then enable the IOC to carefully evaluate the consequences and the
potential impact on the Olympic Games and the Olympic competitions," an
IOC spokesperson said.
"There
are many considerations with regard to the impact of these proposals on the
other participating (nations) and athletes," with final decisions to be
made on Saturday.
The IOC
must approve extra Olympic slots for the North's athletes after they failed to
qualify or missed deadlines to register.
The North
agreed to send 230 cheerleaders to support athletes from the two Koreas during
the Olympics and to form a joint cheering squad with the South.
A 30-strong
North Korean taekwondo delegation will also visit the South next month for
demonstrations in Pyeongchang and Seoul.
Pyongyang
also said it will send a separate 150-member delegation of supporters,
athletes, performers, journalists and delegates to the Paralympics in March.
The
statement said Seoul will "guarantee the safety and convenience of North
Korea's delegation", which Chun said referred to transportation,
accommodation and other necessary facilities.
South Korea
will need to find ways to accommodate the North Korean delegation without
violating UN Security Council sanctions, which block cash transfers to
Pyongyang.
![]() |
Kim Jong-Un
announced his willingness to take part in the Pyeongchang
Games in his New Year
speech (AFP Photo)
|
Any
blacklisted officials in the North's high-level delegation could be another
potential stumbling block.
A North
Korean delegation will visit the South next Thursday to inspect the facilities
at Pyeongchang.
In another
meeting on Monday, the two reached an agreement over a trip by a 140-member
North Korean orchestra to the South to hold concerts in the capital and in
Gangneung, one of the Games' venues.
Frosty
reception
The talks
come after North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un abruptly announced his willingness
to take part in the Games in his New Year speech.
The move
was seen as a bid to ease searing tensions on the peninsula and was rapidly
welcomed by Seoul.
Last year,
the nuclear-armed North tested missiles it said are capable of reaching the US
-- its "enemy" -- and Kim traded threats of war with President Donald
Trump.
Seoul's proposal
for a unified team in women's ice hockey has met a frosty reception in South
Korea, where critics accused the government of robbing some of its own players
of the opportunity to compete at the Olympics for the sake of politics.
Tens of
thousands have signed dozens of online petitions on the presidency's website
urging President Moon Jae-In to scrap the plan.
Chun
emphasised the need for IOC approval but added: "I think it is quite
meaningful to show the South and North in harmony."
South Korea
only qualified for the ice hockey tournament as hosts, rather than on merit,
and are not seen as medal contenders.
#UPDATE Two Koreas agree to march together under single flag at Winter Olympics opening ceremony, field united women's ice hockey team https://t.co/AFT0LCnNyu pic.twitter.com/3VtSLKYmAu— AFP news agency (@AFP) January 17, 2018



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