Домой GRASP/Korea The Pyongyang Games? Backlash deepens against South Korea’s outreach to North ahead...

The Pyongyang Games? Backlash deepens against South Korea’s outreach to North ahead of next month’s Olympics

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Only four out of 10 respondents said they favour the plan to march together under a flag symbolising a unified Korea, according to a survey released on Thursday
An agreement between South and North Korea to march under a unity flag and field a joint ice hockey team at next month’s Olympics was met sharp criticism by many in the South on Thursday, highlighting changing attitudes toward the country’s northern neighbour.
The controversy reveals a South Korean public far less wedded to the idea of inter-Korean unity than previous generations, analysts say, a changing dynamic that may shape South Korean President Moon Jae-in’s efforts at reconciliation with the isolated North.
North Korea’s participation in the Olympics has been seen as a win for Moon, who hopes to use the event to make a diplomatic breakthrough in the stand-off over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programme. It also eases public concerns the North might upstage the Games with yet another weapons test.
Watch: North Korea will send athletes to Winter Olympics
But Moon’s specific moves to integrate the two Koreas at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics have sparked a sharp backlash that goes beyond his traditional conservative detractors to include his main support base of younger South Koreans upset an unchastened North Korea is stealing the spotlight.
“North Korea was all about firing missiles last year, but suddenly they want to come to the South for the Olympics? Who gets to decide that?,” Kim Joo-hee, a 24-year-old translator said during a coffee break on a chilly Seoul afternoon. “Does North Korea have so much privilege to do whatever they want?”
Moon’s office declined to comment beyond saying the two countries would be coordinating logistics for the Olympics, which begin on February 9.
Opinion polls released since the plans became public have shown limited support for some of Seoul’s proposals.
Only four out of 10 respondents said they favour the plan to march together under a flag symbolising a unified Korea, according to a survey released on Thursday by the South Korean pollster Realmeter.

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