Pence avoids encounter with North Korean
official as Olympics begin
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[February 09, 2018]
By Christine Kim and Jane Chung
SEOUL/PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (Reuters) -
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence made only a brief appearance at a
reception marking the start of the Winter Olympics on Friday, avoiding a
potentially awkward encounter with the ceremonial leader of North Korea
attending the same event.
The reception hosted by South Korean President Moon Jae-in in the
mountain resort of Pyeongchang was the culmination of months of work by
Seoul, which seeks to use the Olympics to ease tension spurred by North
Korea's pursuit of nuclear weapons.
Ahead of the reception, South Korean media said Pence was expected to be
seated opposite Kim Yong Nam, North Korea's nominal head of state, at
the 12-seat head table.
However, South Korea's presidental Blue House said Pence had a meeting
scheduled with U.S. athletes and had only planned to stay briefly to
greet other officials.
Pence shook hands with other leaders, including close ally Japanese
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, but not Kim Yong Nam, according to a Blue
House pool report.
Earlier on Friday, Pence said Moon gave his backing to additional
measures the United States is planning to try to curb North Korea's
missile and nuclear programs.
Pence spoke after paying tribute at a memorial for 46 South Korean
sailors killed in the sinking of a warship in 2010 that Seoul blamed on
a North Korean torpedo attack.
Kim Yong Nam landed in South Korea on Friday along with leader Kim Jong
Un's younger sister, Kim Yo Jong, aboard her brother's private jet.
The white aircraft had the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North
Korea's official name, inscribed in black in Korean on its side,
followed by the North Korean flag.
Kim Yo Jong and her delegation were greeted by government officials,
including Unification Minister Cho Myong-gyon, before boarding a bullet
train to Pyeongchang. A special train had been prepared just for the
visitors, a Blue House pool report said.
Smiling and seemingly unfazed by cameras flashing during the airport
meeting, Kim Yo Jong wore a black coat, matching ankle boots and carried
a black purse. Dozens of South Koreans at the airport tried to snap
photographs of her on their mobile phones.
She is the first member of North Korea's ruling family to visit the
South, while Kim Yong Nam is the most senior North Korean official to
make a cross-border trip.
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U.S. Vice President Mike Pence shakes hands with South Korean
President Moon Jae-in before their meeting at the presidential
office Cheong Wa Dae, Blue House in Seoul, South Korea February 8,
2018. REUTERS/Kim Hee-chul/Pool
The pair will have lunch with Moon on Saturday, Moon's office said.
RIOTS AND GAMES
Pence had kept open the possibility for some contact with the North
Koreans in South Korea, while reiterating Washington's insistence
that denuclearization by North Korea is a necessary condition for
peace.
Pence, Kim Yo Jong and other world leaders will attend the opening
ceremony in Pyeongchang, just 80 km (50 miles) from the heavily
fortified border between North and South Korea, later on Friday.
Hundreds of anti-North Korea protesters scuffled with riot police
hours not far from the main stadium before the opening ceremony was
due to begin, with some of their banners reading "Moon regime is
leading Korea to destruction".
Thousands of spectators, including a squad of more than 200 North
Korean cheerleaders, filled the frigid stadium awaiting the start of
the opening ceremony, when the two Koreas will march together under
one peninsula flag for the first time in more than a decade.
"It is not as cold as I expected. It is a blessed day. I like the
reconciliatory mood and I have high expectations," said Kim
Sang-yoon, a 44-year-old businessman who drove nearly five hours to
see the opening ceremony with his wife and two sons.
Nearly 500 North Koreans have arrived in South Korea for the
Olympics, which run through to Feb. 25.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Christine Kim in SEOUL, Heekyong Yang
in INCHEON, Jane Chung and Hyunjoo Jin in PYEONGCHANG; and Linda
Sieg and Kaori Kaneko in TOKYO; Writing by Lincoln Feast; Editing by
Paul Tait and Nick Macfie)
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