North, South Korea won't march together at Paralympics amid flag row
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[March 08, 2018]
By Dahee Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - South and North Korea
will not march together at the opening ceremony of the Winter
Paralympics, as they did at the Olympics last month, because they
cannot agree on a united flag that erases islands disputed with
Japan, officials said.
Japan complained to South Korea about fans waving the Korean
peninsula flag at a friendly women's ice hockey match in the
Olympics between the combined North and South Korean team and
Sweden.
The flag depicts a map of the undivided Korean peninsula, including
the disputed islands - known as Dokdo in Korean and Takeshima in
Japanese - in the Sea of Japan, known to Koreans as the East Sea.
North Korea's delegation to the Paralympics said on Thursday it
"does not accept the fact that Dokdo cannot be marked due to
political issues held in Korea", according to the statement from the
Korea Paralympic Committee.
In response to the North's claim, the International Paralympics
Committee said the two Koreas will march individually as the flag
cannot be changed.
The athletes from both Koreas entered together at the opening of the
Pyeongchang Olympics on Feb. 9 under the united flag.
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The delegation and the team of North Korea arrive at The Paralympic
Village in Pyeongchang, South Korea, March 8, 2018. OIS/IOC/Thomas
Lovelock/Handout via Reuters
The Pyeongchang Paralympics start on Friday and will run until March
18.
North Korea's controversial participation in the Olympics helped
ease tensions between the North and the United States, and Japan,
over its nuclear and missiles programs which it conducts in defiance
of U.N. Security Council resolutions and sanctions.
Reclusive North Korea and the rich, democratic South are technically
still at war because their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a
peace treaty.
(Reporting by Dahee Kim; Additional reporting by Jane Chung; Editing
by Nick Macfie)
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