Ssirum in North Korea or Ssireum in South Korea has a history
stretching back around 1,800 years and draws huge audiences with
national and international contests broadcast on television.
The neighbors - still technically at war after their 1950-53
conflict ended in a truce not a peace treaty - initially
submitted separate bids to get the sport on the U.N. cultural
agency's list of so called "intangible assets".
But after months of shuttle diplomacy by UNESCO, both agreed to
a joint application which got approved at a ceremony in Port
Louis, Mauritius.
"The joint inscription ... becomes the opportunity to clearly
demonstrate that the Korean people is one nation of peace and
prosperity, once we join our ideas, powers and wisdoms," North
Korea's representative, Jang Myong Ho, said at the event.
"This is sending a common, joint symbolic message before the
international community. Two Koreas will work together to
consolidate peace and prosperity on the Korean peninsula," South
Korea's Lee Byong Hyun added.
The cultural diplomacy had to get round a few obstacles -
including a letter's difference in the transliteration of the
sport's name into English.
But the countries eventually settled on the classification:
'traditional Korean wrestling (ssirum/ssireum)' - with the
North's version listed first as it had made the first
application.
TENSIONS
The entry describes the sport as a contest in a circular ring,
where the wrestlers start by kneeling and grabbing a belt -
known as a satba or satpa - wrapped around the opponent's waist
and thigh.
The winner is the first to force "the other contestant to touch
the ground with any part of his body at knee level or higher,"
reads the officially agreed description.
Tensions over North Korea's tests of nuclear weapons and
ballistic missiles spiked on the Korean peninsular last year and
there were fears of a U.S. military response to North Korea's
threat to develop a weapon capable of hitting the United States.
Talks in June between U.S. President Donald Trump and North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un have allayed those concerns, and a
detente between Pyongyang and Seoul has opened the door to
closer ties.
"We're at a point where sanctions are still in place, we can't
move forward on economic questions and much remains blocked. So
in areas where UNESCO works, which aren't subjected to
sanctions, we can push ahead quickly and with determination,"
said a UNESCO source.
The two nations have indicated they want to focus on what they
can work together on, from heritage sites to education and
science to sport, the UNESCO official said.
"UNESCO is ready to play a supporting role," the source added.
(Reporting by John Irish; editing by Richard Lough and Andrew
Heavens)
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