Nothing is ever easy for the rival Koreas, even that most ubiquitous and usually innocent of Olympic interactions, the selfie.
Like dozens of athletes at the Rio de Janeiro Games, gymnasts Hong Un-jong of North Korea and Lee Eun-ju of South Korea met on the sidelines during competition and training.
The 17-year-old Lee, who is at her first Olympics, on Thursday last week posed for a smiling selfie with Hong, a 27-year-old veteran. That friendly encounter and others between the two were captured by journalists and immediately took on larger significance for two countries still technically at war.
Such meetings are not illegal in South Korea, but they are complicated by the two countries’ long history of animosity and bloodshed.
HISTORIES
Hong became the first female gymnast from North Korea to win a gold medal in 2008, when Lee was nine and living in her native Japan. Lee moved to South Korea in 2013 because her South Korean father wanted her to learn more about the country’s culture.
Lee and Hong met again Sunday while on the floor at the same time during preliminary competition. Lee was eliminated, while Hong is to compete in the vault final.
International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach described the selfie as a “great gesture.”
“Fortunately, we see quite a few of these gestures here during the Olympic Games,” Bach said on Tuesday.
BRIGHT SPOT
Photographs of their warm moments delighted many South Koreans and provided a rare note of concord in otherwise abysmal relations between the rivals.
It was unclear whether the gymnasts’ interaction was seen in the North.
The Korean Peninsula is still technically in a state of war because there has been no peace treaty signed to officially end the 1950 to 1953 Korean War.
A web of laws, most left over from the days when the South was ruled by a dictatorship, govern how South Koreans are supposed to interact with North Koreans. Travel and communication are severely restricted; even praising the North is illegal in the South.
LAWS
South Koreans are required by law to obtain government permission for any planned meeting, communication or other contact with North Koreans.
This requirement is waived for spontaneous interactions with North Koreans that can happen during foreign travel, but South Koreans must still provide an account of what happened to the South Korean Unification Ministry, which handles inter-Korean issues, within seven days, according to the laws.
The Unification Ministry said that South Korean athletes at international sporting competitions like the Olympics are not required to submit reports about their encounters with North Koreans, because it is obvious that their purpose of participating in the events has nothing to do with meeting North Koreans.
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