The Borneo Post

N. Korea’s ‘army of beauties’ set to invade South

-

SEOUL: With their good looks and sharp moves, North Korea’s female cheerleade­rs are a marked contrast to the regime’s menacing nuclear ambitions.

Dubbed the “army of beauties” in South Korea, the young North Korean women – mostly in their late teens or early 20s – have attracted huge publicity whenever they have been sent to the South.

North Korean leader Kim Jong- Un’s future wife Ri SolJu was among the group who attended the 2005 Asian Athletics Championsh­ips in Incheon.

The cheerleade­rs are set for their fourth appearance in the South after Pyongyang agreed this week to send a delegation to next month’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, just 80 kilometres south of the Demilitari­sed Zone that splits the peninsula in two.

North and South have been totally separated since the end of the Korean War in 1953, with no direct telephone or postal links between them.

Any North Korean delegation­s to its neighbour are carefully chosen by Pyongyang, and their movements are tightly controlled in the South. According to reports, the Winter Olympics group could be accommodat­ed on a cruise ship moored in Sokcho, making it easier to monitor them.

An Chan-Il, a defector researcher who runs the World Institute for North Korea Studies, said the cheerleade­rs are cherry- picked by the regime based on tough criteria.

“They must be over 16 3 centimetre­s (5ft 3ins) tall and come from good families,” An told AFP. “Those who play an instrument are from a band and others are mostly students at the elite Kim Il- Sung University.”

The Kor eas’ s epa rat ion makes citizens of the North an object of some fascinatio­n for Southerner­s.

The cheerleade­rs made their f irst appearance at the 2002 Asian Games in Busan, hitting the headlines when nearly 300 of them arrived on a ferry dressed in colourful hanboks – traditiona­l Korean dresses – and waving socalled unificatio­n flags, a pale blue silhouette of the whole Korean peninsula.

Hundreds of Busan residents lined the port to greet them, with several homes also f lying unificatio­n flags.

With their tight choreograp­hy – sometimes using props such as fans – the cheerleade­rs were lavished with attention as they sang and danced in the stands.

In 2005, former North Korean cheerleade­r Cho Myung-Ae – whose good looks had gained her a huge following in the South – appeared in a television commercial for a Samsung mobile phone with South Korean pop star Lee Hyo-Ri.

The supporters have always proven to be a major ticket draw, and their attendance is good news for the Pyeongchan­g Games organisers.

“It will help with ticket sales,” said Pyeongchan­g Organising Committee spokesman Sung BaikYou. “It will fulfil our desires for a peace Olympics.”

When North Korean teams have played in the South without accompanyi­ng supporters, prounifica­tion South Koreans have turned out to support them, such as at a women’s ice hockey match last year in Gangneung, an Olympic venue.

“A joint cheering squad would be phenomenal,” said Lee Sun-Kyung, who organised the group.

It will fulfil our desires for a peace Olympics. Sung Baik-You, Pyeongchan­g Organising Committee spokesman

“A joint cheering squad would be phenomenal,” said Lee SunKyung, who organised the group.

But the Northerner­s’ presence also has potential to create some diplomatic headaches.

There are concerns that South Koreans may not be as welcoming as in the past, given their opposition to North Korea’s nuclear programme and its increasing­ly belligeren­t behaviour.

And displaying the North Korean f lag and playing its anthem are illegal in the South, where they are regarded as symbols of sedition under Seoul’s national security laws, hence the use of the unificatio­n f lag at past inter - Korean matches.

When a North Korean f lag was draped over a railing at a North- South football game during the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon it was removed by officials.

The rule will not be enforced within the Olympic venues, where IOC protocol applies, but could become an issue elsewhere.

The two teams marched behind the uni fication f lag when they entered the stadiums together for the opening ceremonies of the 2000 and 2004 Olympics in Sydney and Athens, and the 2006 Winter Games in Torino.

But if they do so again at the opening ceremony on Feb 9, it would mean the South’s emblem would not appear on the stadium floor at its home Olympics.

How could the South accept that reality, the Chosun Ilbo newspaper asked in an editorial Wednesday, having secured the Games “through tearful efforts after two failures”?

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP photo ?? This picture taken in 2005 shows a woman (right) believed to be North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un’s current wife Ri Sol-Ju among a group who attended the 2005 Asian Athletics Championsh­ips in Incheon.
— AFP photo This picture taken in 2005 shows a woman (right) believed to be North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un’s current wife Ri Sol-Ju among a group who attended the 2005 Asian Athletics Championsh­ips in Incheon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia