N. Korea’s ‘guerrilla’ campaign for Games gold
PYONGYANG: For isolated North Korea, the Olympic Games offer a rare opportunity to take to the global stage and compete for applause and prestige rather than censure and condemnation.
A virtual pariah state due to its nuclear weapons programme, the North has made international sporting success a strategic priority, with leader Kim JongUn as cheerleader-in- chief.
North Korean athletes will compete in judo, wrestling, table tennis and other events in Rio, but their best hope of medals will come in the weightlifting.
While rival South Korea is an international sporting success, the North’s sporting record has largely failed to fulfil its aspirations.
Its brightest moment in the global spotlight came way back at the 1966 football World Cup when it pulled off a stunning upset by defeating Italy 1- 0 on the way to the quarter-fi nals.
North Korea has competed in nine summer Olympics since Munich in 1972, but taken home only 14 gold medals.
The four golds it won in 2012 in London – three in weightlifting and one in judo – equalled its best- ever tally. Since taking power following the death of his father Kim Jong- Il in late 2011, Kim Jong-Un has pushed for sporting progress with an at times militaristic fervour.
In an open letter to the nation’s athletes last year, Kim urged them to adopt “guerrilla- style” tactics to boost the nation’s underwhelming impact on the global sporting stage.
Lamenting the fact that North Korea was “trailing behind the world”, he promised to turn it into a sports powerhouse “within a few years”.
Andray Abrahamian, a North Korea specialist at Australia’s Macquarie University, said the country’s highly structured society with its emphasis on participating in organisational life was primed for grooming top- class athletes.
“The system is very good at spotting talent, which can then be developed at specialised sports academies and clubs. The best of the best are then very well resourced indeed,” Abrahamian said.
Sporting accomplishment is seen as a valuable propaganda tool and investment is very selective, focusing on sports and events with a high global profi le and a commensurate chance of success. In 2013 the Pyongyang International Football School opened – a modern, well-equipped facility with Korean and foreign coaches and a 200-strong roster of 8-15 year- old, live-in students – hand-picked from schools and clubs across the country.
The brightest prospects are sent overseas, some of them to elite academies in Italy and Spain. Six members of the North Korean team that won the 2014 Asia Under-16 championship – with a 2-1 victory over South Korea in the fi nal – had trained in Europe. — AFP