Porterville Recorder

IOC: More initiative­s coming to promote Korean unity

- By JAMEY KEATEN

LAUSANNE, Switzerlan­d — Olympics organizers on Friday welcomed an agreement between North and South Korea to unite athletes at the upcoming Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, and promised that “much more exciting initiative­s” promoting Korean unity will emerge this weekend.

“Watch this space,” Internatio­nal Olympic Committee presidenti­al spokesman Mark Adams told The Associated Press in an interview, a day before a crucial meeting of Korean delegation­s at Olympics headquarte­rs in Lausanne. He declined to elaborate, saying the decisions would come Saturday.

Referring to a detailed peace-making agreement between the rival countries announced Thursday by South Korea’s Unificatio­n Ministry, including a joint team in the women’s hockey tournament, Adams said it was “great ... but these are discussion­s” — meaning the IOC had not yet given the deal the final green light.

“I can tell you that there will also be some much more exciting initiative­s coming through as well tomorrow,” he added.

Provided that the IOC finalizes the deal, it would mark the first time the two national Olympic committees would be competing together in a single team.

Some have questioned the fine print of the agreement announced by the two Koreas, saying it gives the combined hockey squad a far larger roster than any other national team.

Asked how the IOC planned to maintain the integrity of the sport, Adams said: “People would say that these are exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, and we need exceptiona­l measures.”

“This is about the Olympic spirit,” Adams added. “And the Olympic spirit is about nations competing, athletes competing, and we will do our best make sure that it sends a signal that sport can improve the world.”

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