Dayton Daily News

Korean team to have 22 athletes from North

North, South to compete together in women’s hockey.

- By Graham Dunbar

LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAN­D

A Korean unity deal for — the Pyeongchan­g Olympics will bring 22 North Korean athletes across the border to South Korea, where they will march as one under a unificatio­n flag at the opening ceremony and compete together in one sport.

In the most symbolic agreement approved Saturday, 12 North Korean women’s hockey players will join their neighbors in a united roster playing in special uniforms with a Korean song as their anthem.

North Koreans will also compete in figure skating, short track speed skating, Alpine skiing and cross-country skiing after being given exceptiona­l late entries by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

The North Korean delegation will also include 24 coaches and officials, plus 21 media representa­tives at the Feb. 9-25 Winter Games.

The government­s of North and South Korea were offered “sincere thanks” by IOC President Thomas Bach, who announced the agreement. An Olympic deal became possible after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said in a New Year’s speech that a team could cross the border to compete.

“Such an agreement would have seemed impossible only a few weeks ago,” said Bach, who did not take questions from internatio­nal media. Bach was flanked by Olympic and government officials from both countries at a brief news conference at the Olympic Museum after a 2½-hour meeting at IOC offices nearby.

North Korea’s delegation, including sports minister Kim Il Guk, did not stay to brief media after signing the agreement for the cameras.

South Korea’s sports minister, Do Jong-hwan, said through a translator that the accord “is very important for the Korean peninsula.”

When Do was asked if North Korea had given any guarantees not to use the Olympics for political reasons, the translator intervened to say, “I don’t think we can take that question.”

There has been skepticism about Kim Jong Un’s offer. Critics believe he may try to leverage the Olympics to weaken U.S.-led internatio­nal pressure and sanctions toughened due to North Korea’s prolonged program of nuclear tests and missile launches.

Bach said the IOC had talked with Olympic officials from both countries separately since 2014 to see if the Pyenong chang Games could be the catalyst for peace-making.

“This was not an easy journey,” said Bach, who competed in fencing at the Olympics for West Germany when it was divided from its neighbor to the east.

The deal confirmed Saturday built on a breakthrou­gh agreement reached Wednesday at the Korean neighbors’ shared border.

“The Olympic Games show us what the world could look like, if we were all guided by the Olympic spirit of respect and understand­ing,” Bach said.

The united women’s hockey team will be the first time the two Koreas have joined together in Olympic events. They will play under the Olympic code of “COR” — the French acronym for Korea — and hear the song “Arirang” as a pregame anthem.

The roster will include 12 players from the north and 23 from the south.

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