Winter Olympic fears downplayed after North Korean missile tests
● Organisers left frustrated after struggling to spark enthusiasm
Just when South Korea thought it was finally creating a buzz for February’s Winter Olympics, North Korea fired its most powerful missile yet and re-ignited safety worries about the small mountain town that will host the games not far from the rivals’ anxious border.
The Pyeongchang Olympics probably will not in jeopardy because of Wednesday’s launch for a number of reasons, including that the North is unlikely to attack the more powerful, Us-backed South.
Still, the launch, which followed a 10-week lull, was a frustrating development for Pyeongchang’s organisers, who have only recently got on track after facing construction delays, controversies over cost and wary sponsors. They can also do little to calm international fears created by North Korea’s accelerating nuclear weapons and missile tests.
Shortly after North Korea fired the Hwasong-15 into the sea on Wednesday, South Korean President Moon Jaein convened a national security meeting where he ordered government officials to closely review whether the launch could hurt South Korea’s efforts to successfully host the Olympics, which begin on 9 February.
South Korea wants more than a million spectators for the Olympics, which will be held just 50 miles from the border, and expects 30 per cent of them to be foreign visitors.
Organisers have struggled for months to spark enthusiasm for the games locally, where the national conversation over the past year have been dominated by a massive corruption scandal that toppled and jailed the last president and North Korea’s flurry of weapons tests.
Sung Baikyou, an official from Pyeongchang’s organising committee, yesterday downplayed worries that North Korea would scare away athletes and visitors to Pyeongchang. Organisers and government officials have held briefings and site inspections for Olympics officials, members and sponsors to reassure them of South Korea’s security readiness.
The 92 nations that have so far registered to participate in the Pyeongchang Games represent the largest ever Winter Olympics field. After a slow start, organisers had managed to sell more than half of the available tick- ets by the end of November.
Sung said there hasn’t been any talk with the International Olympic Committee about moving or cancelling the games. It wouldn’t make sense for anyone to cancel tickets to Pyeongchang because of fears about North Korea. There’s no war; bombs aren’t being dropped on Pyeongchang.”
Hyun Jae-gyung, an official from Gangwon province, which governs Pyeongchang and nearby Gangneung, a coastal city that will host the skating and hockey events during the Olympics, said cancelations at hotels and other accommodation facilities in the areas have been few and sporadic and unlikely linked to security concerns.
But there’s nothing organisers can do if North Korea raises fears even higher with more tests. North Korea has conducted 20 ballistic missile launches just this year, and the tests are becoming increasingly aggressive.