Ski lift: North Korea may capitalize on
joint Olympics training visit
Send a link to a friend
[January 22, 2018]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea's offer to
send athletes to a North Korean ski resort for joint training ahead of
next month's Olympics risks giving leader Kim Jong Un's regime
legitimacy and some much needed cash, North Korean defectors and experts
say.
Already facing criticism for plans to march under a unity flag and field
a combined Korean ice hockey team, the administration of South Korean
President Moon Jae-in may come under further pressure if it is seen to
be endorsing Kim's luxury getaway on North Korea's east coast.
"The idea of joint training could be used as a propaganda tool to
rationalize how far-sighted Kim Jong Un was in making what was actually
an anachronistic decision to build the ski resort at a time when
ordinary citizens are starving to death", said Kim Sung-han, a former
South Korean vice foreign minister.
North Korea's participation in the Olympics was a goal for Moon, who
hopes to use the event to defuse tensions and break a months-long
standoff over the North's nuclear and missile tests.
The two Koreas agreed during rare talks last week to hold joint training
sessions at the North's Masik Pass resort ahead of the Games in
Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Seoul officials are scheduled this week to inspect the resort's
facilities and the newly built Kalma Airport nearby that may be used to
fly in the South Korean skiers, who are not expected to attend the
Games.
SKI RUNS AND MISSILE LAUNCHES
Launched by Kim in late 2013, Masik Pass is near the seaside city of
Wonsan, where the third generation leader is developing a luxury resort
including hotels, an aquarium and a golf course.
Wonsan and Kalma Airport are also important defense areas, used for
large scale artillery drills and as the launch site for dozens of
missile tests in recent years.
Masik Pass was meant to rake in hard currency from not only foreign
tourists but also a growing number of North Koreans who have built
wealth from an increasingly market-based economy.
Kim visited the construction site on multiple occasions, taking test
rides and chastening workers to speed up construction, which gave birth
to a new propaganda slogan, "Masikryong Speed".
State media extolled the resort as a gift from the people-loving leader
to raise the standard of living.
But the resort has been criticized by former South Korean officials as
an emblem of the Swiss-educated leader diverting scarce resources to
satisfy his own lavish lifestyle while average North Koreans suffer.
North Korea's state-run KCNA news agency on Sunday criticized some South
Korean politicians and media who have questioned Pyongyang's motives
regarding the Olympics detente.
"There is no doubt about the sincerity and authenticity of (North Korea)
to improve the North-South relations and to ensure successful Olympics,"
KCNA said.
SANCTION CONCERNS
Kang Eung Chan, a defector who had lived in Wonsan, said he took a
three-day trip to the ski resort in 2013.
At around $100 per day including food and ski rentals, the holiday was
far too expensive for most North Koreans to enjoy - even to a successful
businessman like Kang, who ran a quasi-private clothing factory for
Chinese clients.
"We paid everything in U.S. dollars. It is not that cheap by North
Koreans' standard," Kang told Reuters.
North Korea does not release any official statistics, but experts
estimate the country's average monthly salary at around $30-$40.
[to top of second column]
|
Flags of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the Republic of
Korea (ROK), the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), and
the PyeongChang 2018 Organising Committee (POCOG) are seen at the
IOC headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland, January 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Pierre Albouy
Tourism is one of the North's last remaining sources of foreign
currency yet to be hit by United Nations Security Council sanctions.
Experts point to possible issues around sanctions if South Korea
ends up paying any fees to use the resort or providing costly new
equipment to facilitate the ski training.
South Korea's Unification Ministry said no decision has been made on
the visit yet.
"We're aware that there is some view that we may dilute sanctions by
offering financial support to the North Korean delegation", ministry
spokeswoman Lee Eugene told a news briefing on Friday.
"Our position remains unchanged that we will continue global
cooperation on sanctions and pressure ... and we will make sure
there will be no problem by consulting closely with the
international community and the U.N. expert panel".
A United Nations panel monitoring sanctions on North Korea said in a
report last year it had included ski lift equipment in its
regulations after cable-car systems produced by an Austrian firm
were spotted at Masik Pass.
James Kim, a research fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy
Studies in Seoul, said South Korea would need a "very
well-thought-out plan" to address the sanctions concerns.
"The Moon administration's goal here is to reduce tension and use
the Winter Games as a springboard for a peaceful resolution to the
North Korean nuclear issue", he said.
"But I think the critics are right to point out that we may want to
think about the means by which Seoul wishes to achieve this
objective."
UK embassy officials in Pyongyang who visited the site said last
year children had been mobilized to remove snow and polish up the
resort, calling the practice "deeply concerning".
"It's well known that forced labor is regularly used on both large
and small infrastructure projects in North Korea, and this includes
required labor by students, meaning that child labor is used as
well", said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights
Watch.
"There is no reason that the Masik ski resort would be any different
from this established model".
With the two Koreas planning a host of Olympic-related functions
including a joint cultural event in the North's Mount Kumkang
resort, concerts in both countries and a Taekwondo demonstration in
the South, there was a risk the events may overshadow the Games,
said the former diplomat Kim.
"The Olympics per se is a non-political sport event, but if other
auxiliary events get too large, the Games' pure identity could be
tarnished and politicized", said Kim, who now teaches at Korea
University in Seoul.
"I just hope we step back for a moment and take it easy."
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Josh Smith and
Ju-min Park; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|