Exclusive: IOC boss to visit North Korea after winter Games
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[February 12, 2018]
By Karolos Grohmann
PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (Reuters) -
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Thomas Bach plans to
visit North Korea after the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, cementing
ties with the reclusive state which used the event to restart
political dialogue with South Korea.
Bach told Reuters in an interview on Monday he would make the visit
on the North's invitation as part of an agreement between the IOC
and both North and South Korea. The parties were still discussing a
convenient date, he added.
The Games in South Korea are due to finish on Feb 25.
"All the parties concerned have welcomed this invitation to North
Korea...," he said. "We are talking about this convenient date in
order to continue the dialogue on the sports side. We will see when
this is going to happen."
North and South Korean leaders swapped warm handshakes and smiles at
Friday's opening ceremony, enabling the IOC to present the Games as
enablers of peace and take the media spotlight away from a Russian
doping scandal that has plagued it for years.
Russian athletes marched under the Olympic flag, and in neutral
colors, at the ceremony, having been banned from competing formally
for their country by the IOC. Many critics had called on the IOC to
ban Russia outright.
North Korea agreed to participate in Pyeongchang after the South and
IOC encouraged the heavily sanctioned state to participate as a
gesture of peace.
Athletes from both sides, technically still at war, marched together
at the opening ceremony and have fielded a unified women's ice
hockey team, the first time an inter-Korean team has competed at any
Olympic Games.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in has been using the Games in his
efforts to break the ice with the North and pave the way for talks
over the North's weapons program.
"We can set the symbols, we can show that it is worthwhile sitting
down together discussing, negotiating, and that then you can come to
a good result," Bach said.
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Thomas Bach, the President of the International Olympic Committee,
is pictured during a Reuters interview at the Main Press Centre (MPC).
REUTERS/Leonhard Foeger
"For our side, for the sports side, this dialogue will continue..,"
he said, adding that the IOC was in constant dialogue with North
Korea's national Olympic committee.
The IOC and the two Koreas signed a tripartite agreement on Jan. 20
in Lausanne that set out the details of North Korea's Olympic
participation, including the number of athletes, the sports they
would take part in as well as their joint march.
The agreement was seen as a breakthrough given the Koreas had not
marched together at an Olympics for more than 12 years.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in hosted two of North Korea's most
senior officials at the opening ceremony, including North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un's sister. Moon warmly shook hands with her and
later held talks with her in Seoul.
Kim Jong Un has invited Moon for talks in Pyongyang, South Korean
officials said, setting the stage for the first meeting of Korean
leaders in more than a decade.
The thaw in relations has centered on the Olympics, with a senior
American member of the IOC calling for the joint ice hockey team,
which included 12 North Korean players, to be nominated for the
Nobel Peace Prize.
(Additional reporting by James Pearson; Editing by Mark Bendeich)
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