North Korea to send orchestra to Winter Olympics

North Korea to send orchestra to Winter Olympics

BBC World News, January 15th, 2018

North Korea has agreed to send a 140-member orchestra to the Winter Olympic Games in South Korea next month.

The two sides are discussing plans for the North's delegation at Panmunjom village in the demilitarised zone (DMZ), also known as the truce village.

North Korea announced last week that it would send a delegation to the Games in the South - easing months of tensions.

Relations have been strained between the two Koreas over the North's missile tests and nuclear programme.

North Korea has participated in several Olympic Games before, but never in South Korea. It boycotted the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul.

Details of the diplomatically complicated plan are still being ironed out.

Monday's talks were thought to be focused on details including the number of performers, their travel route and their schedules, according to South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

Four delegates from each side were expected to attend, with the North's delegation including Hyon Song-wol, the leader of the popular all-female pop group, the Moranbong Band.

Moranbong: Pyongyang's propaganda girl band

  •   Formed in 2012, all band members are reportedly hand-picked by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un himself.


  •   Their music is a synthesiser-heavy mix of Western classics and Pyongyang propaganda songs including "We Call Him Father" - an ode to Mr Kim.


  •   The changing line-up consists of singers and multi-instrumentalists, playing anything from electric guitars to synthesiser, violin and saxophone.


  •   In 2015, the band was wrongly rumoured to have been purged, even executed, when the members vanished from public view for several weeks.


Monday's meeting was for working-level talks - with lower-ranking officials - rather than the breakthrough high-level talks of last week.

At last week's high-level inter-Korean talks, the first in more than two years, Pyongyang said it wanted to send athletes, cheerleaders, an art troupe and a taekwondo team to the Winter Olympics taking place from 9-25 February in Pyeongchang.

On Saturday, both sides will also meet at the International Olympics Committee in Switzerland, to discuss the details of North Korea's involvement.

Only two North Korean athletes currently qualify for the Games - figure skaters Ryom Tae-ok and Kim Ju-sik.

The North's involvement in the Games is seen as a good public relations opportunity for both sides, and a chance to lower geopolitical tensions between the two neighbours.

South Korea has proposed that athletes from both the North and South march jointly together in the opening ceremony. North Korea is said to be "positively" considering this.

The South has also suggested a unified Korean team for the women's hockey tournament.

Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon said the North was "expected to respond to the proposal soon".

'Big credit'

The two Koreas are still technically at war, as the 1950-53 Korean War ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.

Tensions have also been high due to North Korea's frequent ballistic missile tests.

The latest test, on 28 November, sparked a new series of measures from the UN, targeting petrol shipments and travel for North Koreans.

US President Donald Trump and North Korea's Kim Jong-un have also conducted an increasingly bitter feud, with the US leader dubbing Mr Kim "Rocket Man" and both boasting about their nuclear capabilities.

Last week, Pyongyang criticised South Korean leader Moon Jae-in after he said Mr Trump deserved "big credit" for the North-South talks.

It indirectly threatened to pull out of the Olympics, with state media outlet KCNA saying: "[South Korea] should know that train and bus carrying our delegation to the Olympics are still in Pyongyang."

"The South Korean authorities had better ponder over what unfavourable results may be entailed by their impolite behaviour."



My response:

It seems like a strange thing for two countries to argue over and even stranger way to work towards peace. It seems to be a good thing that North Korea is reaching outside of seclusion at all. That they are bringing a propaganda band is interesting, what are they going to sing? Why are they letting this group travel if they don’t really want their citizens to see any of the outside world? There has to be so many more motives at play. It seems like a safe and easy thing to happen, but as the article said, it sounds very diplomatically complicated. I would also be very interested to see how a truce village works and plays itself out as they hold meetings. Their idea of a safe zone doesn't sound too friendly. The article does a good job of showcasing the situation, also in giving us more details, such as what the band is.

Though no one is ever completely without bias, the article looks to be in favor of the talks without standing in Trump's corner or anybody else's too much. It applauds North Korea and South Korea's stepping out, but also seems to slightly ridicule North Korea and its actions. Just that North Korea threatens to pull out over "impolite behaviour" doesn't make much sense. The North Korean government could use it as evidence against the world, saying how North Korea stepped out in goodwill and how horrible the rest of the world treated them. It also slightly ridicules Trump in how he calls Kim Jong- Un “Rocket Man” with all his boasting. With the Winter Olympics still a month away, North Korea could still feel snubbed and pull out. Whatever happens in the agreements between these two countries, the world will be watching. 

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