Asian
Games organizers have taken down the flags of competing nations in South Korean
streets following protests about the inclusion of North Korean flags, officials
said yesterday, as the first batch of the North’s delegations to the games were
heading south, AP reports.
National
flags of the 45 countries participating in the Games had flown in streets of
Incheon and nine nearby cities since last Friday. But they were replaced by
flags of the Olympic Council of Asia and flags bearing the games’ emblem
following complaints about the flying of North Korea’s colours, according to
the games’ organizing committee.
North
Korea is sending a 273-member delegation to the games, which includes athletes,
coaches and judges, with 94 of them due to fly to South Korea from Pyongyang
yesterday. The North has cancelled its previous plans to dispatch cheerleaders
in protest at what it calls Seoul’s hostility.
North
Korea boycotted the 1986 Asian Games and the 1988 Summer Olympics, both in
Seoul, but has since attended several other major sports events held in the
South.
North
Korean flags were hoisted along with other countries’ flags on South Korean
streets during the 2002 Asian Games in Busan and the 2003 University Games in
Daegu when South Korea was ruled by liberal governments supporting greater
reconciliation with North Korea.
Relations
between the Koreas remain strained, with North Korea conducting a slew of
rocket and missile test-launches and South Korea rejecting the North’s calls
for improving ties, citing the lack of sincerity.
The Korean Peninsula is
divided along the world’s most heavily fortified border and remains in a
technical state of war since the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice,
not a peace treaty.
No comments:
Post a Comment