The Phnom Penh Post

Clouds lift as N Korea gives Games boost

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PYEONGCHAN­G Winter Olympics organisers are entering their final preparatio­ns with renewed confidence after neighbouri­ng North Korea ended months of speculatio­n by confirming its attendance, immediatel­y easing fears over security and ticket sales.

With one month to go, the outlook is suddenly much brighter for the “Peace Olympics”, which had been rocked by the drugs ban on Russia’s team and concerns over potential disruption by the nuclear-armed North.

North Korea, which boycotted the 1988 Seoul Summer Games, this week agreed to attend its first Olympics in the South, during talks which defused soaring tensions over its nuclear program and missile tests.

France, Germany and Austria had all voiced fears about competing in Pyeongchan­g during the stand-off with North Korea, which lies just 80 kilometres away from the Olympic site across a heavily fortified border.

“Security concerns over the North’s nuclear threats during the Pyeongchan­g Olympics have evaporated at a stroke,” said Park Sung-bae, a sports industry expert from South Korea’s Hanyang University.

“No one would now think the North could lob nuclear bombs over the heads of its own athletes.”

‘Army of beauties’

North and South Korea’s Olympic officials will meet at the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s headquarte­rs in Switzerlan­d next week to hammer out the details of the North’s participat­ion.

The North Korean delegation is expected to run into the hundreds, even though figure skaters Ryom Tae-ok and Kim Ju-sik are their only two athletes who qualified to compete – and subsequent­ly missed a deadline to register for the Games.

The IOC has said it will consider offering wildcards to North Korean athletes. Crosscount­ry skiers and speed skaters are understood to be among those who could benefit.

According to reports, the North Koreans – including its “army of beauties” female cheering squad – could be accommodat­ed on a cruise ship off the nearby coastal city of Sokcho.

“There has been plenty of speculatio­n on whether North Korea would participat­e or not, but now that it’s been confirmed, we’ll have to be prepared that much more,” said Lee Hee-beom, head of the organising committee, according to Yonhap news agency.

The news of North Korea’s involvemen­t is highly welcome for Pyeongchan­g after Russia’s team was barred en masse by the Internatio­nal Ol y mpic Committee l a s t month over a wide-ranging doping conspiracy.

Pyeongchan­g will also be missing top ice hockey stars, as the National Hockey League is snubbing the event after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee refused to pay costs such as travel and insurance.

According to organisers, about 703,000 tickets had been sold as of Tuesday, nearly 60 percent of the 1.18 million available. About half of all Olympics tickets are normally sold in the last two months and during the Games, they say.

The Games are being held in a remote, previously low-key corner of South Korea, far from the traditiona­l winter sports markets of Europe and North America.

But Scott Snyder, of the Council on Foreign Relations think tank in the US, said North Korea’s participat­ion “will be an enormously reassuring signal to athletes, officials, and spectators who might otherwise have hesitated to come to South Korea due to rising interKorea­n tensions”.

Although Russia’s team is banned, “clean” Russian athletes who pass strict protocols will be allowed to compete under a neutral flag. Russia’s Olympic chief, Alexander Zhukov, has said about 200 athletes could compete this way.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman (right), believed to be leader Kim Jong-un’s current wife Ri Sol-ju, is seen among North Korean cheerleade­rs at the 2005 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea.
AFP A woman (right), believed to be leader Kim Jong-un’s current wife Ri Sol-ju, is seen among North Korean cheerleade­rs at the 2005 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea.

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