A series of extremely rare inter-Korean flights will bring several hundred North Korean athletes and officials south for this month’s Asian Games — where Pyongyang hopes to make an equally rare international sporting mark.
One of the most isolated countries in the world, North Korea is a marginal figure on the global sports scene, but leader Kim Jong-un seems determined to push it into the spotlight and the 17th Asian Games which open in Incheon on Friday next week offer the chance to showcase the reclusive nation’s sporting prowess in a country with which it remains technically at war.
About 150 North Korean athletes, and almost an equal number of coaches and officials, will attend the Games, arriving on half-a-dozen special flights across the border.
Photo: AFP
The delegation will be headed by North Korean Sports Minister Kim Yong-hun, who will be the highest-ranking official to step on South Korean soil for five years.
The North’s participation in the Games was only confirmed after months of tortuous, heated negotiations that coincided with a spike in military tensions.
Arguments over the size of the North Korean flag and Seoul’s refusal to foot the entire North Korean delegation’s bill saw Pyongyang threaten a boycott over the South’s “arrogance.”
In the end, the North agreed to send its athletes, but — in a blow to the organizers — withdrew the proposed participation of a large group of female cheerleaders.
The cheerleaders, known as the “army of beauties,” had taken part in three previous international sporting events in the South — including the 2002 Asian Games in Busan — and proved a major draw each time.
A busload of cheerleaders attending the 2003 Universiade in Daegu made headlines after “rescuing” a rain-soaked street placard with an image of the then leaders of the North and South, Kim Jong-il and Kim Dae-jung, shaking hands.
Tearfully protesting at the “disrespect” of allowing an image of Kim Jong-il to become rain-damaged, the cheerleaders removed the placard and took it away in their bus.
Sports and politics are often inseparable on the divided Korean Peninsula.
Concerned that protesting anti-Pyongyang activists might vandalize North Korean flags flying near the venues, the organizers have removed all national flags from the streets and replaced them with those of the Olympic Council of Asia.
In 2008, the North refused to let South Korea play its national anthem and fly its flag at a 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifier scheduled to be held in Pyongyang. Eventually the venue was moved to Shanghai.
The North’s women’s soccer team walked off the pitch at the 2012 London Olympics when the South Korean flag was mistakenly displayed on the giant screen as the players were being introduced.
Kim Jong-un, who took over as leader following the death of his father Kim Jong-il in 2011, is known as something of a sports fan and has taken steps to try to raise the nation’s sporting profile.
Precious funds have been pumped into new sports facilities, including a top-class ski resort.
Yang Song-ho, a senior North Korean sporting official, claimed last month that “thousands” of new facilities had been built to “realize the goal of sports development set by the state.”
Attempts to attract international sporting events have had mixed success.
Pyongyang holds an annual international marathon and recently former Chicago Bulls star Denis Rodman took a group of NBA stars to play an exhibition basketball match to mark Kim Jong-un’s birthday.
South Korean sports pundit Choi Dong-ho said he expected a reasonably strong showing by the North.
“They did quite well at the London Olympics, winning four golds,” Choi said. “They are very strong in weightlifting, women’s judo and women’s football. They also have world-class gymnasts and wrestlers, so I expect the North to rank within the top 10 with about 15 gold medals.”
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