First gold to North Korea’s Kim as Olympics set to open

Members of the Finland Olympic Team gather during a welcome ceremony inside the Gangneung Olympic Village prior to the 2018 Winter Olympics in Gangneung, South Korea on Wednesday.
Members of the Finland Olympic Team gather during a welcome ceremony inside the Gangneung Olympic Village prior to the 2018 Winter Olympics in Gangneung, South Korea on Wednesday.
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AFP, Pyeongchang :
The 23rd Winter Olympics open Friday to a sudden thaw in ties between North and South Korea, while athletes shiver in sub-zero temperatures and Russia’s doping scandal causes confusion and irritation on all sides.
Barely a month after rumblings of war on the Korean peninsula, with
Pyongyang leader Kim Jong-Un threatening to rain nuclear destruction on the United States, North Korean athletes will march into the opening ceremony alongside South Koreans for what is touted as the “Peace Olympics.”
When the Olympic flame is lit in Pyeongchang, a previously little-known corner of South Korea, around 3,000 athletes from all over the world will compete for a record 102 gold medals in 15 sports until February 25.
Expectations are sky-high for an array of stars including American skiers Mikaela Shiffrin and Lindsey Vonn, while the big question in figure skating centres on whether Japan’s “Ice Prince” Yuzuru Hanyu can recover from injury to retain his crown.
Behind the scenes, Olympic officials are still scrambling to deal with the endless ramifications of Russia’s state-sponsored doping scandal, which has already blighted two Olympic Games.
After banning the entire team over the doping conspiracy, the IOC opened a loophole to allow more that 160 ‘clean’ athletes back in — and now more
Russians are trying to force their way in through legal appeals.
But the welcome mat has been layed out for the North Koreans. In a gold-medal diplomatic performance, after months of silence on the issue, Pyongyang said it would be happy to send a delegation to the Games.
North and South have been divided by the Cold War’s last frontier since the 1950-1953 Korean war. Hostilities have never officially ceased, and occasional cross-border incidents punctuate a 70-year ceasefire.
However, a North Korean Olympic charm offensive is underway, spearheaded by its “army of beauties” all-female cheering squad, glamorous young women who stole Southern hearts when they first came over the border for the Busan Asian Games in 1992.
Since then, North Korea has gone nuclear, and sentiment among some South Koreans has hardened against the Pyongyang propaganda drive.
For the Olympics in Pyeongchang, 229 cheerleaders and other North Korean delegates crossed the border Wednesday and are registered to stay at a remote luxury hotel about two hours’ drive from the Olympic Stadium.
Many South Koreans support the thaw with the North, but protesters insist that the South has been too generous, saying North Korea’s Kim has been allowed to hijack the Games.
Demonstrators call them the “Pyongyang Olympics”, in a derisive reference to North Korea’s capital.
“We are at a state of war and we are inviting the prostitutes of our enemy,” one demonstrator at an anti-North Korean rally told AFP.

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