TWO KOREAS MAKE HISTORY MARCHING UNDER UNIFIED FLAG IN OLYMPICS OPENER
The nations, split by war,
are using the Winter Games as an opportunity to seek a rapprochement.
North Korean and South Korean athletes participating in the 2018 Winter
Olympics marched as one during Friday’s opening ceremony, gleefully entering
the ring as a unified team sharing a flag.
Spectators were visibly moved, HuffPost Korea reported, with some in the
audience tearing up at the sight. The unified flag shows the Korean peninsula
in blue, set against a white backdrop.
The only people in the VIP box who didn’t stand during the Korean team’s
entrance were Mike Pence, the U.S. vice president, and Fred Warmbier, father of
Otto Warmbier, the American student who died shortly after being released from
North Korean custody, The Washington Post’s Anna Fifield reported.
The games already have became a diplomatic feat as much as an athletic
one. The two Koreas have used the occasion to re-establish dialogue with one
another, spearheaded by South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s desire to deflate
tensions in light of the North’s growing nuclear prowess. Pence reportedly
seeks to damp the spirit of reconciliation, recommending that South Korea cut
ties with its neighbor after the games end.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister and North Korea’s nominal head
of state were both seated behind Pence in the VIP box.
Source: HuffPost
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