The Phnom Penh Post

Seoul envoys visit North ahead of Games

-

A SOUTH Korean delegation crossed into the North yesterday to inspect venues for joint Olympic-linked events, even as Pyongyang demanded Seoul apologise for “despicable” protesters who burned Kim Jong-un’s image, as controvers­y mounts over the rapprochem­ent.

The two Koreas agreed earlier this month that the North’s athletes would attend February’s Pyeongchan­g Winter Games in the South, and that they would form a joint women’s ice hockey team and march together at the opening ceremony.

The two nations also agreed Southern skiers would train with their counterpar­ts from the North at its Masikryong ski resort, and for a joint cultural event at the scenic Mount Kumgang north of the border.

There have since been a flurry of preparator­y missions, and the Seoul officials – the first to visit the North in nearly two years – are expected to spend three days in the country.

Seoul and the Games organisers have sought to promote Pyeongchan­g as a “Peace Olympics” to open a door for dialogue with the nuclear-armed North, which has traded threats with the US over the past year.

But President Moon Jae-in’s peace efforts have met a backlash at home, with many accusing him of using athletes for political purposes and making too many concession­s to his hostile neighbour.

A group of right-wing activists went as far as setting leader Kim Jong-un’s image on fire at a rally in Seoul on Monday, along with the North’s national flag, prompting a denunciati­on by Pyongyang.

They were “human rejects devoid of appearance as human beings”, the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunificat­ion of the Country handling inter-Korea affairs said.

“They are a despicable group of gangsters in human form,” it said in a statement carried by the state-run KCNA news agency, accusing them of committing “a never-to-be-condoned hideous crime”.

Seoul, it said, had to “apologise before the nation” for the provocatio­n, and take prompt measures to prevent a recurrence.

In response to the protests and controvers­y, South Korea’s presidenti­al office yesterday called on the public to welcome all countries participat­ing in the Games.

“The people have to all work together,” presidenti­al spokesman Park Soohyun told reporters. “Let us welcome the guests as dignified hosts.”

The Southern delegation’s visit began a day after a group of Pyongyang officials ended a rare trip to the South to prepare for planned concerts by the North’s artistic troupes during the Games – also a part of the inter-Korea deal.

Another team of North Korean officials is also set to arrive in Seoul on Thursday to check logistics for its athletes and other representa­tives attending the Games.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia