The Borneo Post

N. Korea attack fears an ‘exaggerati­on’, says Games chief

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PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea: With little more than 100 days to go before the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea, chief organiser Lee Hee- Beom has dismissed fears of a potential attack by the nuclear- armed North as an “exaggerati­on”.

Severa l count r ie s h ave expressed concerns about the Pyeongchan­g Games, which will take place in February just 80 kilometres from the heavily fortified Demilitari­sed Zone ( DMZ) which divides the Korean peninsula.

North Korea carried out its sixth nuclear test in September – by far its most powerful yet – and has lobbed missiles over Japan into the Pacific, while trading insults and threats of war with Washington.

But Games chief Lee Hee-Beom told AFP that worries about a possible attack on Pyeongchan­g were overblown, and although contingenc­y plans are in place, he does not believe they will be needed.

“Korea was not d ivided yesterday, Korea was divided since 1945,” the president of the Pyeongchan­g Organising Committee for the Olympic Games ( POCOG) said in an interview.

The South has held several “very safe and secure sports events”, he said. “Pyeongchan­g is not the exception,” he added, calling fears of an attack “a kind of exaggerati­on”.

France, Germany and Austria have raised concerns over the safety of their athletes during the Games, while Britain has drawn up evacuation plans in case of an emergency.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Commit tee moved to quash speculatio­n that the event could be cancelled or moved by pledging its “full support” to the Games at a summit last week.

Lee pointed to previous major sporting events in the country, such as the 1988 Seoul summer Olympics and the 2002 World Cup, that passed off without a hitch – the latter despite a clash between the navies of North and South off the island of Yeonpyeong.

The United Nations will also pass an Olympic truce resolution in November calling for a cessation of conflicts before and during the Games, he added.

Pyongyang has been defying UN resolution­s against its nuclear weapon and ballistic missile programmes for years, but Lee said this situation was “quite different”.

“Nor t h Kor e a v iol at e d resolution­s against one country but if they do anything it’s a violation against all the world,” he said. — AFP

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