Dayton Daily News

North Korean art troupe to attend Olympics

Two Koreas may also field a joint women’s ice hockey team.

- By Hyung-Jin Kim

The two Koreas met for the second time in a week as they try to hammer out details for the North’s participat­ion in next month’s Games.

North SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — Korea’s delegation to the Winter Olympics in South Korea will include a 140-member art troupe, the two sides agreed Monday, while discussion­s continue over fielding a joint women’s hockey team.

The two Koreas met Monday for the second time in a week as they try to hammer out details for the North’s participat­ion in next month’s Games, which the South sees as a way to calm tensions caused by Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile tests.

North Korea said the art troupe will comprise 80 orchestra members and 60 members who sing and dance. The North Koreans will perform twice — once in Seoul and the other in the city of Gangneung, where some of the Olympic competitio­ns will be held, according to South Korean delegates who attended the meeting.

Separately, South Korean Sports Ministry spokesman Hwang Seong Un said that the two Koreas have agreed in principle to field a joint women’s ice hockey team. The proposal requires Internatio­nal Olympic Committee approval. If realized, it would be the Koreas’ first unified Olympic team ever.

Officials from both Koreas are to meet with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee at its headquarte­rs in Switzerlan­d on Saturday. The two sides agreed Monday to meet again at their border on Wednesday for working-level talks ahead of the IOC meeting.

North Korea last week agreed to send an Olympic delegation and hold military talks aimed at reducing frontline animositie­s in its first formal talks with South Korea in about two years. The North has said its delegation to the Feb. 9-25 Games in Pyeongchan­g would include the art troupe along with officials, athletes, cheerleade­rs, journalist­s and a taekwondo demonstrat­ion team.

The reasons for North Korea’s softer approach are not clear, though some analysts say the North may be trying to divide Seoul and Washington as a way to weaken pressure and sanctions on the country. North Korea carried out nuclear and missile tests last year that triggered harsher U.N. sanctions and worldwide condemnati­on.

Others speculate the North wants to use the Olympics to show it’s a normal country despite possessing nuclear weapons.

North Korea has insisted its talks with South Korea won’t deal with its nuclear and missile programs, saying those weapons primarily target the United States. Critics question how long the warmer mood can last without any serious discussion on the North’s nuclear disarmamen­t.

The North issued a veiled threat Sunday that it could cancel its plans to send an Olympic delegation to protest what it called South Korea’s “sordid acts” that chilled the prospect for inter-Korean reconcilia­tion.

“They should know that (the) train and bus carrying our delegation to the Olympics are still in Pyongyang,” the North’s official Korean Central News Agency said. “The South Korean authoritie­s had better ponder over what unfavorabl­e results may be entailed by their impolite behavior.”

KCNA criticized remarks by South Korean President Moon Jae-in last week that credited President Donald Trump for getting the North to sit down with the South. It also accused Seoul of letting Washington deploy strategic assets like an aircraft carrier near the Korean Peninsula on the occasion of the Olympics. The United States is beefing up its presence around the peninsula in what it describes as routine training and scheduled upgrades.

The warning is milder than the North’s typical rhetoric and it didn’t appear to put the recent signs of warming Korean ties in danger.

The North Korean art troupe being sent South is to play folk songs and other classic masterpiec­es that are wellknown to both Koreas and can go with the theme of unificatio­n, chief South Korean delegate Lee Woo-sung said. He said more discussion­s are expected to work out details.

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 ?? SOUTH KOREA UNIFICATIO­N MINISTRY VIA AP ?? The head of South Korean delegation Lee Woo-sung (right) and North Korean delegation leader Kwon Hook Bong arrive Monday for their second meeting to work out details of the North’s participat­ion in the Winter Olympics.
SOUTH KOREA UNIFICATIO­N MINISTRY VIA AP The head of South Korean delegation Lee Woo-sung (right) and North Korean delegation leader Kwon Hook Bong arrive Monday for their second meeting to work out details of the North’s participat­ion in the Winter Olympics.

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