Home Sports 'Pyongyang Olympics!' Protests over joint Korean hockey team

'Pyongyang Olympics!' Protests over joint Korean hockey team

0
394

Park Yoon-Jung (C) of the Unified Korean team clashes with Sweden's Sabina Kuller (2nd R) in front of the Korean goal during a women's ice hockey practice match between Sweden and a Unified Korean team in Incheon on February 4, 2018 ahead of the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games. The Unified Korean women's ice hockey team had their first and only practice match against Sweden at Incheon ahead of the start of the Games. KIM HONG-JI / POOL / AFP

Organic Creame

Angry demonstrators stamped on a picture of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un as a joint North and South Korean women’s ice hockey team came together for the first time, losing 3-1 to Sweden in a practice match.

The unified team for the Pyeongchang Olympics is a product of a landmark deal between the two rivals following a year of high tensions over the nuclear-armed North’s weapons ambitions.

But the addition of North Korean players has provoked controversy in the South, with accusations that Seoul is depriving some of its own players of the chance to compete at a home Olympics for political purposes.

The joint team of North and South Korean female hockey players tested the ice for the first time in a warm-up match against Sweden, five days before the Winter Games officially open.

The capacity 3,000 crowd roared as the team — including four North Koreans — glided onto the ice at the Seonhak International Ice Rink in Incheon, wearing blue and red uniforms with KOREA emblazoned across their chests.

But outside the arena, security was tight as protesters faced off with supporters of the joint team.

Those in favour of the North Korean presence chanted “Peace Olympics”, while protesters just across the street shouted “Pyongyang Olympics,” suggesting the North had been allowed to hijack the Pyeongchang Games.

Dozens of protesters yelled criticisms of the North into speakers, trampling on a picture of leader Kim and ripping up blue and white unification flags.

The practice match against Sweden was the first — and only — match for the unified team since 12 North Koreans joined the southerners on January 25.

“Maintaining peace between the North and South is the most urgent issue,” said Park Cheol-Hyun, 44, who came to Sunday’s game with his family.

“It’s important to achieve that through the Olympics and I think the unified team is very meaningful,” Park added.

The unification flag hung next to the Swedish flag in the arena and the Korean folk song “Arirang”, which dates back more than 600 years, blared from the speakers instead of the national anthems of the two Koreas before the game.

Since the division of the peninsula the two Koreas have only competed as unified teams in 1991, when their women won the team gold at the world table tennis championship in Japan, and their under-19 footballers reached the world championship quarter-finals in Portugal.

The South Korean public has been heavily divided on the issue of the unified team, hitting the popularity of President Moon Jae-In, whose approval ratings have dipped below 60 percent — the lowest since he took office last May.

Source: G Sport

Latest News
Kill Terrorists, Bandits Instantly, Defence Minister Urges Security Agencies, Says Insecurity To Become History SoonRethinking How Nigeria Supports SME GrowthFrom Nutrition To National Security: A Governance Lesson In Coordination & OwnershipStanbic IBTC Capital Named Nigeria's Best Investment Bank at 2026 Global Banking and Finance Review AwardsNNPC Seals Six Gas Deals To Boost Industrialisation, Energy SecuritySenate Queries N943m Allowances Paid to North-West Development Commission BoardStanbic IBTC Bank's Economic Forum Charts Nigeria's Path Through A Shifting Global EconomyTHE YEWA AWORI SOCIO-ECONOMIC BLUEPRINTS FOR THE YAYI ERA AND BEYONDEMHF Opens Heritage Event Hall, Unveils Vision For Africa’s Premier Music Heritage CentreNigeria’s Youngest Chartered Accountant, 16-Year-Old Danielle Osasere, Honoured At MFM Prayer CityThe Kick Of A Dying Horse: Rejecting The Retrogressive Agents Of Darkness In YEWA-AWORI LandNigerians Must Embrace Production, Entrepreneurship To Become Great- Emir of DutseTASFUED Holds Formal Investiture Ceremony for Sixth Substantive Vice-ChancellorOlodo Uprising: Carter Efe mirrors our collective disaster“I’m No Fraudster” — Adeyemi Fires Back at Presidency Over PFIPC Controversy