Figure Skating: Korean skaters skip a line to avoid stepping on
Japanese toes
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[February 07, 2018]
By Jane Chung and Elaine Lies
SEOUL/GANGNEUNG (Reuters) - A South
Korean figure skating pair competing in the Winter Olympics will
perform to a popular Korean folk ballad with a couple of words cut
to avoid offending Japan over a reference to disputed islands, South
Korean officials said on Wednesday.
South Korea, which is hosting the games, had asked the International
Olympic Committee to decide whether the song's content was
acceptable, but officials decided to make the cuts themselves while
the IOC was still deliberating.
"We told the skaters to prepare for a version without the lyrics to
avoid political controversy and to perform while we wait for the
IOC’s decision," a spokesman for the Korea Skating Union said.
The IOC was not immediately available for comment
But, skaters Min Yura and Alexander Gamelin told reporters after a
practice session on Wednesday that they had no problem with the
change, as only a couple of words from the song would be omitted
without any change to the music.
“Our concern was just not to step on any toes,” said Gamelin at the
figure skating rink in Gangneung. “I think especially with
unification, this whole theme is just coming together, peacefully.”
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is scheduled to attend the Games
opening ceremony in the city of Pyeongchang on Friday, when
delegations from North and South Korea will march together under a
single flag, and their athletes will compete as a single team in
some sports.
The two Korea's efforts to achieve a thaw in relations have
introduced a new dynamic to the region's complicated diplomacy.
While South Korea and Japan have worked together with the United
States to try to persuade the North to abandon its nuclear and
missile programs, the two Koreas both harbor bad memories of Japan's
occupation of the peninsula from 1910-1945.
Japan has already complained to South Korea about fans waving a
Korean peninsula flag at a friendly women's ice hockey match on
Sunday between the combined North and South Korean team and Sweden.
The flag depicted a map of the undivided Korean peninsula, including
the disputed islands -- known as Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in
Japanese - located in the Sea of Japan, known to Koreans as the East
Sea.
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Yura Min and Alexander Gamelin of Korea compete. REUTERS/Michael
Dalder
In response to that complaint, South Korea's unification ministry
said that the joint Korean team would only use a version of the
unified flag, approved by the IOC, which does not show the disputed
islands.
This latest diplomatic irritant comes during an awkward phase in
relations, as South Korea's government has criticized a 2015
agreement that a previous administration struck with Japan for an
apology and compensation for former "comfort women" forced to work
in Japan's wartime military brothels.
Sensitivities over the islands could have potentially flared again
during the ice dance competition as these Olympics will be the first
Winter Olympics to feature figure skaters performing to music with
lyrics.
The South Korean ice skaters will dance to the song "Arirang Alone",
performed by Korean singer Sohyang.
The song's reference to the islands is contained in the final line
of the verse;
"Far into the East Sea lies a lonely island A strong wind will be
blowing today again As you are facing the wind with your small face
Dokdo, last night did you sleep well?"
A Korea Skating Union spokesman said the words "Dokdo, last night"
will be erased.
During the London Olympics in 2012, the IOC prohibited the Korean
footballer from the bronze medal ceremony for showing a sign which
read "Dokdo is our territory," after South Korea's victory, although
he received his medal later.
(Reporting By Jane Chung and Elaine Lies; Additional reporting by
Soyoung Kim, Karolos Grohmann and Linda Sieg in TOKYO; Editing by
Amlan Chakraborty & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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