Woo Sang-hyun (R), head of W Hospital, raises the transplanted arm of Sohn Jin-wook during a press conference on the first anniversary of the successful transplant at the hospital in Daegu, 302 km southeast of Seoul, on Feb. 2, 2018. Woo performed the country’s first arm transplant a year ago. (Yonhap)
It is pretty amazing how Kim Jong-un has taken over the 2018 Winter Olympics. There is very little in the Korean media about South Korean athletes while the North Korean athletes are surrounded by media attention:
North Korean figure skater Ryom Tae-ok waves as she enters Gangneung Olympic Village in Gangneung, Gangwon Province, on Feb. 1, 2018, to get ready for the PyeongChang Winter Olympics. Ryom is one of 22 North Korean athletes set to participate in the competition. (Yonhap)
North Korean Olympic athletes checked in to their living quarters for the upcoming PyeongChang Winter Games amid tight security on Thursday.
Pyongyang’s vice sports minister Won Kil-u led a delegation of 32, including 10 athletes, to Gangneung, a sub-host city for all ice events during the Feb. 9-25 Olympic Games. They’d landed at Yangyang International Airport on a South Korean chartered plane earlier Thursday, and traveled about 50 kilometers south to reach Gangneung Olympic Village.
Gangneung’s village, built for those in ice sports, is one of two athletes’ residential areas for the Olympics. PyeongChang Olympic Village will house competitors in snow events.
The 10 athletes that arrived here Thursday are three alpine skiers, three cross-country skiers, two figure skaters and two short track speed skaters.
Ryom Tae-ok, a pairs figure skater, was the center of attention from the moment she appeared at the airport. The petite athlete, who turns 19 on Friday, was one of the few who showed any semblance of emotion, flashing a sheepish grin at cameras as flashbulbs exploded around her both at the airport and the village.
Asked to comment on her visit, Ryom simply said, “I don’t talk before competitions.”
An ambulance company operator and eight drivers are accused of profiting from the transportation of singers who were running late, police said Thursday.
They are suspected of having carried — with sirens and lights on — two unidentified trot singers to concert venues and airports in Ulsan and surrounding areas dozens of times between June 2015 and November 2017
It is illegal for ambulance drivers to turn on emergency alarms and transport healthy people.They are also suspected of driving the ambulances beyond the designated business area of Ulsan without permission. [Korea Times]
A birthday party takes place for North Korean ice hockey players at the national training center in Jincheon, some 90 kilometers southeast of Seoul, on Jan. 28, 2018, in this photo provided by the Korean Sport & Olympic Committee the next day. South and North Korea have decided to field a joint women’s team for the Feb. 9-25 PyeongChang Winter Olympics. (Yonhap)
"…These days, younger South Koreans in particular are far more likely to see the idea of reintegrating their prosperous capitalist democracy with the impoverished, totalitarian North as unrealistic and undesirable." https://t.co/2psntumP2P
Via a reader tip comes this story of how former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder is getting hitched to Korean woman he met at conference in South Korea:
Gerhard Schroder visited Cheong Wa Dae on Sep. 12, 2017, to meet South Korean President Moon Jae-in and present his biography, translated into Korean by Kim So-yeon. / Korea Times file
It was love at first sight that bound them together.
German news outlet Bunte broke the story earlier this month that former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder will marry his South Korean interpreter Kim So-yeon. The report triggered a media frenzy in Seoul. Reporters captured the moments the pair dated at Changdeokgung royal palace in Seoul and dined together at Korean restaurants in the city and Kreuzberg, Berlin.
The couple held a press conference at the Press Center in Seoul, Thursday, admitted their romance and announced they will marry this year.
Schroder, 73, and Kim, 47, did not seem uncomfortable in front of the Korean press as Kim faithfully interpreted Schroder’s opening speech and answers to journalists’ questions. And Schroder didn’t shy away from tugging her close to him in front of tens of photographers. Whenever they smiled at each other, cameras flashed to capture the moment.
“We have met each other’s family members who agreed to our engagement,” Kim said. “And we will move back and forth between Hanover and Berlin, where Gerhard lives, and Seoul after marriage.” [Korea Times]
I guess the Kim regime was not happy that the Moon administration did not do enough to censor the ROK media:
North Korea has called off a joint cultural event scheduled to be held in its country to celebrate the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in South Korea, Seoul officials said Monday.
The abrupt notification came in a telegram sent to South Korea at 10:10 p.m., saying the North was canceling the event scheduled to be held Feb.4, according to Seoul’s unification ministry.
The communist state was known to have cited what it claimed to be “biased” media reports about the upcoming event.
The unification ministry said the North also took issue with South Korean reports about its “internal event,” apparently referring to reports about a possible military parade marking the 70th anniversary of its military on Feb. 8, one day before the start of the Winter Olympic Games.
The Seoul government expressed disappointment, noting the North’s decision may undermine what it earlier called a “hard-earned” chance to improve inter-Korean relations.
“It is very regrettable that an event agreed by the South and the North will not be held due to North Korea’s unilateral notification (decision),” the ministry said in a statement. “What has been agreed must be implemented under the spirit of mutual respect and understanding as the South and the North have only taken a hard-earned first step toward improving the South-North relationship.” [Yonhap]
We all knew that the Kim regime was going to use the Winter Olympics as a means to circumvent United Nations sanctions and they are not even trying to hide it:
The government is agonizing over whether it should send refined petroleum products to North Korea for upcoming joint cultural events in the midst of tough international sanctions over Pyongyang’s missile tests, officials said Sunday.
“We told the North to take charge of supplying the electricity necessary to hold the joint cultural events but received an answer that it is difficult to stably supply power to the facility built by the South Korean side,” a senior government official said, requesting not to be named. “In the end, we are the ones who should solve the electricity problem.”
The official noted that it is more difficult than ever to ship refined petroleum products to North Korea because of new sanctions that have been imposed by the United Nations and the United States.
The two Koreas agreed last week to hold cultural events at Mount Kumgang on the North’s east coast before the Winter Olympics opens in South Korea’s alpine city of PyeongChang on Feb. 9. The joint events are most likely to be held at a 620-person cultural hall in the mountain resort.
The likelihood is that a diesel-fueled electric generator will be in use for the events, as that is what Hyundai Asan, the South Korean company that operated the long-suspended package tours to the scenic North Korean mountain, did in the past.
The United Nations resolution adopted in December, however, imposes a cap of 500,000 barrels of refined petroleum that can be shipped to the isolated communist country.
Officials expect that 10,000 liters (2641.7 gallons) of diesel oil will be needed for the upcoming events.
“We believe it won’t be a problem if we send the diesel oil to the North and report this to the UN Security Council later,” a government official said. [Joong Ang Ilbo via a reader tip]
No matter how little the use of the oil is this will set a precedent that can be followed to continue to circumvent sanctions. When the Moon administration likely comes back later to reopen Mt. Gumgang tours, start tours to the Masiki Ski Resort, or reopen the Kaesong Industrial complex in North Korea they can power all these projects using oil brought in from the South. This bringing in the oil for the cultural performance in North Korea is almost like a proof of concept of how the Moon administration, if it wants to, can circumvent sanctions to start these inter-Korean projects.
Young Koreans respond to Moon Jae-in's plea for anti-anti-North Korean self-censorship by burning pictures of Kim Jong-un. 자유 만세! 2030 ´김정은 사진 불태우기´ 릴레이 https://t.co/AeYp6iYEgc