North
Korean orchestra serenades South Koreans amid protest
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[February 08, 2018]
By Jane Chung
GANGNEUNG, South Korea (Reuters) - A
137-strong North Korean orchestra kicked off its first performance
in South Korea on Thursday, serenading hundreds of South Koreans
with familiar tunes while dozens of protesters blasted their own
music outside, to the beat of drums.
The Samjiyon Band's performance comes a day before South Korea opens
its first Winter Olympics, amid a thaw in ties with North Korea
highlighted by the first visit by its leader Kim Jong Un's sister,
who is set to arrive on Friday.
Performing in the coastal city of Gangneung, the art troupe played
songs from both North and South Korea, as well as a medley of
Western tunes, including one from Broadway musical 'Phantom of the
Opera'.
"We came because it's a historic moment and perhaps the only
opportunity for exchanges between North and South Korea," said South
Korean Choi Kyung-in, 54, standing beside her daughter.
The band is Pyongyang's main art troupe and has previously been seen
performing pieces from American animation movies such as "Beauty and
the Beast," and "The Lion King."
The performance is the first by North Koreans in the South since
2000, when another orchestra crossed the border for a joint concert
to mark Korea's Liberation Day on Aug. 15.
Confusion and arguments over some designated seats in the audience
caused a 10-minute delay in the Gangneung Arts Center.
More than 150,000 South Koreans entered a lottery for tickets to the
two performances the North Korean troupe will hold in South Korea. A
random selection saw 780 winners receive two tickets each, the
government said in a statement.
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A total of 812 people attended Thursday's show, among them 252
special invitees picked separately by the government.
About five minutes away from the concert hall, 80 protesters staged
a demonstration in sub-zero temperatures, blasting out songs
opposing the Pyeongchang Olympics and beating on drums.
A barricade of about 100 police kept the protesters away from the
performance site.
"They are here to make fools of South Koreans, and I cannot accept
that," said 71-year-old Kwon Oh-seok, adding that he had traveled
from Seoul, the capital, to protest against the performance.
South Korea temporarily lifted a ban on North Korean ships to allow
the Mangyongbong 92 ferry, carrying the troupe to enter the eastern
port of Mukho on Monday.
The North's orchestra will stage its second and last performance in
Seoul on Sunday.
(Reporting by Jane Chung; Editing by Christine Kim and Clarence
Fernandez)
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