The News (New Glasgow)

North Korea to join Winter Games in South Korea

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The rival Koreas took steps toward reducing their bitter animosity during rare talks Tuesday, as North Korea agreed to send a delegation to next month’s Winter Olympics in South Korea, hold talks on lowering tension along their border and reopen a military hotline.

The meeting, the first of its kind in about two years, was arranged after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made an abrupt push for improved ties with South Korea following a year of elevated tensions with the outside world over his expanding nuclear and missile programs. Critics say Kim may be trying to divide Seoul and Washington in a bid to weaken internatio­nal pressure and sanctions on the North.

“I think we took an important first step toward the developmen­t of South-North relations,” chief South Korean delegate Cho Myoung-gyon said after the talks, according to media footage from the border village of Panmunjom, the venue.

Cho’s North Korean counterpar­t, Ri Son Gwon, read a joint statement in which the two Koreas agreed to “actively cooperate” in the Pyeongchan­g Olympics to “enhance the prestige of the Korean people.”

He said North Korea will send a delegation of officials, athletes, cheerleade­rs and journalist­s and South Korea will provide necessary services for the delegation.

“I believe that North Korea’s participat­ion in the Pyeongchan­g Games will provide us with a chance to reduce tension on the Korean Peninsula,” said Cho, whose official title is unificatio­n minister.

During an earlier era of interKorea­n detente, athletes from the two Koreas paraded together at internatio­nal sports events such as the Olympics and fielded a unified Korean team. The government of current South Korean President Moon Jae-in wants the two Koreas to agree to similar reconcilia­tory steps at the Feb. 9-25 Pyeongchan­g Games.

North Korea is weak in winter sports and a pair of figure skaters, Ryom Tae Ok and Kim Ju Sik, earlier became the only North Korean athletes to qualify for the Pyeongchan­g Games before the North missed a confirmati­on deadline. The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said Monday it has “kept the door open” for North Korea to take part in the games.

North Korea also agreed to hold military talks with South Korea aimed at reducing animosity along their tense border and to restore a military hotline communicat­ion channel, according to Cho and Ri.

The restoratio­n of the hotline was the second in about a week. All major inter-Korean communicat­ion channels had been shut down amid animosity over the North’s nuclear program in recent years.

Cho said South Korea also called for talks at an early date on denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula to promote peace. He said the two Koreas would continue high-level talks but didn’t say when the next meeting would take place.

South Korean officials earlier said they also suggested resuming temporary reunions of families separated by war. But the joint statement didn’t mention such reunions.

The countries have a long history of failing to follow through with rapprochem­ent accords. In 2015, negotiator­s met for nearly 40 hours before announcing a deal to pull back from a military standoff caused by land mine blasts that maimed two South Korean soldiers. But animositie­s flared again several months later after the North’s fourth nuclear test.

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