The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Courier columnist Eve Murhead, left with fellow Team GB women's curlers Anna Sloan, Lauren Gray and Kelly Schafer.

Peace: Joint march of the two Koreas was lauded as a ‘powerful message’

- FOSTER KLUG

The sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has shaken hands with South Korea’s president as the Winter Olympics began with an extraordin­ary and unexpected show of unity in Pyeongchan­g.

Kim Yo Jong greeted South Korean leader Moon Jae-in prior to a spectacula­r opening ceremony in the Olympic Stadium which told the story of the entire Korean peninsula.

US vice-president Mike Pence sat just a row ahead of Ms Kim and the North’s nominal head of state, Kim Jong Nam, as they watched the ceremony unfold.

Later, North and South Korean athletes entered the Olympic Stadium together, waving flags of unity – the long-time dream, at least in theory, of many Koreans in the North and South.

It was the rivals’ first joint Olympic march since 2007. Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach then handed the podium to Mr Moon, who declared the Olympics officially open.

In a reception ahead of the ceremony, Mr Moon said: “Athletes from the two Koreas will work together for victory, and that will resonate with and be remembered in the hearts of people around the world as a sign of peace.”

Mr Bach lauded the joint march of the two Koreas as a “powerful message”.

“We thank you,” he said. “We are all touched by this wonderful gesture. We all join and support you in your message of peace.”

The opening ceremony took place before a world watching the games not only for their athletic significan­ce and global spectacle, but for clues about what the political future of the peninsula could hold.

Performanc­es displayed the sweep of Korean history and culture. Members of a delegation from North Korea, part of an extraordin­ary Olympics partnershi­p between the two Korean rivals, watched from high in the stadium a performanc­e called “The Land of Peace”.

After a chaotic year of nuclear war threats and missile tests from the North, it was a striking visual moment.

There was a palpable excitement in this isolated, rugged mountain town, as one of the poorest, coldest and most disgruntle­d parts of an otherwise prosperous South Korea kicked off two weeks of winter sports, Olympic spectacle and, perhaps, reconcilia­tion between the North and South.

The rival Koreas, flirting with war just weeks ago, are suddenly making overtures toward the no-longer-quite-soabsurd notion of cooperatio­n.

The North has sent nearly 500 people to the Pyeongchan­g Games including officials, athletes, artists and cheerleade­rs after the Koreas agreed to a series of conciliato­ry gestures to mark the event.

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 ?? Pictures: Getty. ?? The North Korea and South Korea Olympic teams enter together under the Korean Unificatio­n Flag during the Parade of Athletes.
Pictures: Getty. The North Korea and South Korea Olympic teams enter together under the Korean Unificatio­n Flag during the Parade of Athletes.
 ??  ?? Performers during the opening ceremony in PyeongChan­g.
Performers during the opening ceremony in PyeongChan­g.

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