Kuwait Times

Cheers as North Korea rookies finish last in Paralympic­s debut

Ma and Kim suffered serious leg injuries in car accidents

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PYEONGCHAN­G: Two North Korean rookie skiers finished last as they made their country’s Winter Paralympic­s debut in the South yesterday, but a flagwaving crowd cheered enthusiast­ically at the latest sign of an Olympics-fuelled rapprochem­ent. With spectators packing out the stands and waving the blue-and-white Korean unificatio­n flag, teenager Kim Jong Hyon and Ma Yu Chol-who both only started skiing three months ago-were the first over the start line in the cross-country race.

But they were no match for their more experience­d rivals in the men’s 15km sit ski category, and rolled in 26th and 27th, with Ma completing the course in 1hr 4min 57.3 sec, and Kim finishing in 1hr 12min 49.9sec. The gold medal winner, Ukraine’s Maksym Yarovyi, finished in around 41 minutes. There was a silver lining to their less than triumphant debut-while they finished last, a Georgian and a Belarusian failed to complete the course at all, meaning they did worse than the North Koreans.

Still, the North Koreans’ participat­ion was not so much about winning and more about extending a rapid rapprochem­ent between Seoul and Pyongyang that began with last month’s Winter Olympics.

The Olympics-driven detente has triggered a flurry of diplomatic activity, which culminated in the shock announceme­nt last week that US President Donald Trump had agreed to meet the North’s leader Kim Jong Un. It is a turnaround from last year, when tensions soared as the North fired missiles that could reach the US mainland and tested what it said was an H-bomb.

We were one country, we want reunificat­ion

‘STILL THE SAME PEOPLE’

In the stands of the Alpensia Biathlon Centre, spectators watching the North’s first Winter Paralympia­ns welcomed their presence as a sign of improving ties, and said they hoped the rapprochem­ent would last. Yun Mi-hyun, who was clutching the reunificat­ion flag that shows an undivided Korean peninsula, said that the easing of tensions with the North “warms my heart”.

“We have been separated by war and politics, but we are still the same people,” the 38-year-old property agent told AFP. Ahn Sunyong, 48, added: “We were one country before, and we want reunificat­ion some day.” Still there is much scepticism about the upcoming meeting between Trump and Kim, which is pencilled in for the end of May. The North has before dangled the prospect of halting its weapons programme before the US, only to backtrack later.

The background of the North’s athletes suggests their presence is part of Pyongyang’s political maneouvrin­g-the pair, both students, only started skiing in December, having previously played disabled table tennis, according to Games organisers.

Ma is 27 and Kim is 17, and both suffered serious leg injuries in car accidents. Pyongyang sent 22 athletes to last month’s Olympics, and teams from the North and South marched together under a unified flag at the opening ceremony.

Most of the North’s Olympic athletes also had humiliatin­g finishes, and a hastily-assembled joint women’s ice hockey team lost every one of its five matches, scoring just twice while conceding 28 goals. — AFP

 ??  ?? PYEONGCHAN­G: Ma Yu Chol (R) and Kim Jong Hyon (L) of North Korea attend a training session with their coach Ri Ung Chol (C) at the nordic skiing venue of the Pyeongchan­g Paralympic games, in Pyeongchan­g. — AFP
PYEONGCHAN­G: Ma Yu Chol (R) and Kim Jong Hyon (L) of North Korea attend a training session with their coach Ri Ung Chol (C) at the nordic skiing venue of the Pyeongchan­g Paralympic games, in Pyeongchan­g. — AFP
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