Khaleej Times

Too late to form unified team, South tells N. Korea

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seoul — A leading North Korean sports official believes it is too late to consider South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s proposal to form a unified team for the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, saying that political tension must be resolved first.

At the opening of the World Taekwondo Championsh­ips in Muju on Saturday, Moon said he wanted the Koreas to compete as one team next year and highlighte­d the 1991 World Table Tennis Championsh­ips as an example of a previous merger.

However, North Korean Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) member Chang Ung ruled out the idea of a North-South team, telling the Dong-a Ilbo newspaper that it was an unrealisti­c aim in the present political climate.

“It took us 22 rounds of talks to set up that joint (table tennis) team for the 1991 games. It took us five months,” Chang, who is leading the North Korea delegation at the Taekwondo event in a city two hours south of Seoul, told the paper. “That’s the reality we face.” Chang also ruled out the possibilit­y of using venues in the North to co-host the Feb. 9-25 Winter Games and dismissed the notion that a unified team would help improve ties by saying: “The Olympics should not be used for a political aim.”

“As an expert of the Olympics, it is a little late to be talking about co-hosting. It’s easy to talk about co-hosting, but it is never easy to solve practical problems for that. It’s the same for forming a joint team for ice hockey,” Chang added.

Moon, who was a senior official in the liberal former South Korean government of Roh Moohyun in the 2000s, took office on May 10, winning an election on a more moderate approach to North Korea and a promise to engage Pyongyang in dialogue.

He believes engagement must be used as well as pressure to ease tensions between the rival states and convince the North to abandon its defiant nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.

South Korea’s sports officials said they remained receptive to the idea of competing together, however. “We are still open to possibilit­ies about forming a joint team,” said Chun Byongkeuk.

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