The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Seoul says North Korea’s Olympic participat­ion will aid peace, ease tensions

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SEOUL: Seoul welcomed confirmati­on by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) that 22 North Korean athletes would compete in next month’s Winter Olympics, saying yesterday it would aid peace and the easing of tensions on the Korean peninsula.

In the first of a series of preparator­y visits, North Korean music and arts officials arrived in South Korea yesterday to inspect sites for performanc­es during the Olympics.

“North Korea’s participat­ion in the Olympics will be a catalyst for building peace and easing tensions on the Korean peninsula,” said South Korea’s presidenti­al Blue House in a statement released yesterday.

The visit to the South marks the first by North Koreans since South Korean President Moon Jae-in took office in May last year and sought to re-engage with the North.

“President Moon has previously stressed that the Pyeongchan­g Olympics should be an important turning point in solving North Korea’s missile issues,” the Blue House statement said.

The seven-member North Korean delegation, led by musician Hyon Song-wol, will check venues for performanc­es by a 140-strong art troupe at the Olympics.

The officials are scheduled to spend two days inspecting art centres in Seoul and Gangneung city, which will also host several of the Olympic events.

South Korean broadcaste­r YTN reported the delegation had arrived in Seoul early yesterday under a heavy police presence, then boarded a train to Gangwon province, where the Olympics will be held from Feb 9-25.

Pyongyang said yesterday it also plans to send another team of sports officials to inspect Olympic venues and accommodat­ions from Jan 25-27, South Korea’s unificatio­n ministry said.

In a diplomatic breakthrou­gh after a year of escalating tension over the North’s nuclear and missile programme, the IOC announced on Saturday that North Korea will send 22 athletes to the Winter Games and compete in three sports and five discipline­s.

Until the IOC confirmati­on, a figure skating pair were the only North Koreans to have secured a spot at the Games through the convention­al qualifying competitio­n, although they lost their place after failing to register.

Yesterday’s North Korean delegation had been scheduled to visit on Saturday but cancelled just before the visit with no explanatio­n. Officials from both Korea’s used a cross-border hotline to quickly reschedule the visit.

Also yesterday, South Korean officials said Pyongyang had accepted proposals for South Koreans to travel to North Korea for joint athletic training at the Masikryong Ski Resort and a cultural event at Mount Kumgang, a once popular tourist area.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Hyon Song Wol, head of North Korea’s Samjiyon Orchestra, waves to South Koreans as she arrives at a railway station in Gangneung, South Korea.
— Reuters photo Hyon Song Wol, head of North Korea’s Samjiyon Orchestra, waves to South Koreans as she arrives at a railway station in Gangneung, South Korea.

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