Cyprus Today

Two Koreas’ ‘one flag’ emblematic of once better ties

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NORTH and South Korea’s plan to march together under the same blue-and-white Korean peninsula flag at the Pyongchang Winter Olympics next month marks the revival of an emblem of warmer ties between the old foes from years past.

The two countries will be hoping for some of the same sort of “feel good factor” they enjoyed at the Olympics in 2000, when they were greeted by a standing ovation in Sydney’s Olympic Stadium after marching in under the unified flag for the first time.

The “Korean Unificatio­n Flag,” showing the Korean peninsula in blue against a white background, traces its origin to 1989, when North and South Korea agreed to use a new flag for a possible joint team in the 1990 Asian Games.

While plans for a joint team at those games fell apart, the flag made its first public appearance in 1991 when Seoul and Pyongyang formed a unified team to contest the world table tennis championsh­ip in Japan. When the unified Korean women’s team won gold there, the flag was raised in triumph, accompanie­d by Arirang, a traditiona­l Korean folk song played in lieu of the national anthem of either of the two.

The emotional scene later formed the basis of a popular movie in the South.

During the South’s “Sunshine” policy era of engaging North Korea between 1998 and 2008, athletes from both countries used the single flag to march together at several major games, including the 2004 Athens Summer Olympics and the 2006 Torino Winter Olympics in Italy, as well as the Sydney Olympics.

The two Koreas competed separately in the 2000 games with their own flags and national anthems, as well as in the subsequent Olympics.

In 2007, a large “unificatio­n” flag was displayed at the border when then-South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun walked into North Korea for a summit with former North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.

However, the flag has not been seen at a high-profile public event since 2008, when South Korea’s conservati­ve Lee Myung-bak administra­tion took power. Relations chilled dramatical­ly in 2010 after the sinking of a South Korean warship that the South blamed on the North. Pyongyang denied any involvemen­t, but the relationsh­ip has continued to suffer as the North accelerate­d its nuclear and missile programmes in defiance of UN sanctions.

Although the two Koreas have agreed to compete together and use the single flag at the Pyongchang Winter Olympics, the matter has not been finalised, an official from the games’ organising committee said.

South and North Korean representa­tives will discuss the matter with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) when they meet today in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d.

 ??  ?? North Korea’s Jang Choo Pak (left) and South Korea’s EunSoon Chung carry a flag bearing the unificatio­n symbol of the Korean peninsula during the opening ceremony of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games
North Korea’s Jang Choo Pak (left) and South Korea’s EunSoon Chung carry a flag bearing the unificatio­n symbol of the Korean peninsula during the opening ceremony of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games

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