Winter
Olympics 2018: IOC Hails Two Koreans as 'Historic Moment'. South Korean
President Moon Jae-in spotted shaking hands with Kim Yo-jong, younger sister of
the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, and Kim Yong-Nam, North Korea's ceremonial
head of state.
Winter Olympics 2018: IOC Hails Two Koreans as 'Historic Moment'
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Saturday said that
representatives of the two Koreans shaking hands at the opening ceremony of the
PyeongChang Winter Olympics were a "historic moment." He arrived in
the VIP sitting area at the Olympic Stadium in PyeongChang, 180 kilometers of
east of Seoul, for the opening ceremony of the 23rd Winter Games on Friday,
reports Yonhap news agency. "It was a historic moment," IOC spokesman
Mark Adams said during a press conference in PyeongChang. "The Olympic
Games are about sports, but yesterday was a great symbol and great indications
of how things can be." The IOC has been working to arrange North Korea's
participation in the PyeongChang Olympics, the first Winter Games in South
Korea.
The IOC also allowed the South and the North to have a joint march at the opening ceremony under the Korean Unification Flag. Although Adams emphasized the Olympic Games are not for politics, he said the opening ceremony for the PyeongChang 2018 had symbolic moments, adding that the ceremony itself was "spectacular" to watch. "I don't think the Olympic Games, or the IOC, or the Olympic Movement would think they can solve the problems of the world in an opening the," he said. "But the Olympic Games are the symbol of how things might be in the world if people who compete can get together and build bridges together. So, it was a great moment," he added.
The IOC also allowed the South and the North to have a joint march at the opening ceremony under the Korean Unification Flag. Although Adams emphasized the Olympic Games are not for politics, he said the opening ceremony for the PyeongChang 2018 had symbolic moments, adding that the ceremony itself was "spectacular" to watch. "I don't think the Olympic Games, or the IOC, or the Olympic Movement would think they can solve the problems of the world in an opening the," he said. "But the Olympic Games are the symbol of how things might be in the world if people who compete can get together and build bridges together. So, it was a great moment," he added.
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