Published : Feb. 6, 2018 - 09:32
A North Korean art troupe is set to arrive in South Korea by ferry Tuesday on a rare trip for performances to celebrate the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.
The 140-member Samjiyon art troupe aboard the North Korean ship Mangyongbong-92 is scheduled to arrive at the South's Mukho port on the east coast around 5:00 p.m., according to Seoul's unification ministry.
North Korean vessels are not allowed to visit South Korea under Seoul's unilateral sanctions banning inter-Korean exchanges, which were imposed on May 24, 2010 to punish the North's sinking of a South Korean warship.
This photo carried by North Korea`s state-run news agency on Feb. 6, 2018, shows a North Korean art troupe leaving Pyongyang for a trip to South Korea to hold performances to mark the PyeongChang Winter Olympics. (For Use Only in the Republic of Korea. No Redistribution)(Yonhap)
But the government has decided to make the art troupe's sea travel for the Winter Games an exception to the sanctions.
The two Koreas have engaged in a flurry of sports diplomacy after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un extended a rare olive branch to Seoul in his New Year's message after a year of tensions sparked by the North's nuclear and missile provocations.
The ferry crossed a de facto maritime border in the East Sea around 9:50 a.m., sailing at its maximum speed of 13 knots or about 24 kilometers per hour, according to the ministry.
The North's art troupe, which includes an orchestra, dancers and singers, plans to perform in Gangneung, a sub-host city of the Feb. 9-25 Winter Games on Thursday and in Seoul on Sunday.
Hyon Song-wol, the head of the all-female Moranbong Band, will lead the Samjiyon art troupe. The band was created by an order of Kim Jong-un and features Western-style music and outfits, but it is not known whether other members of the band are included in the art troupe.
Hyon, an alternate member of the central committee of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea, visited the South last month to check performance venues in the two cities.
North Korea's state-run radio station reported Tuesday that the art troupe left Pyongyang a day earlier for the eastern port city of Wonsan to travel to the South on the ferry.
Wearing red coats and black fur hats, female members of the group showed up at a train station in Pyongyang, a photo released by North Korea's news agency showed.
The report said the group was greeted by senior party officials including Kim Yo-jong, the younger sister of Kim Jong-un, and Pak Kwang-ho, the director of the WPK's propaganda and agitation department.
"The government sees Kim Yo-jong as a vice director at the WPK's propaganda and agitation department," said an official at Seoul's unification ministry, referring to the No. 3 post at the department.
A local media report previously showed that Kim may have been promoted to first vice director of the department, the No. 2 post.
The Mangyongbong-92 is a 9,700 ton cargo-passenger ferry that is named after a hill in Pyongyang near the birthplace of late founder Kim Il-sung.
It transported the North's cheering squad for the 2002 Asian Games in Busan, the South's southern port city. It was also used to accommodate the cheerleaders.
The ferry will be used as the art troupe's accommodation when it holds the concert in Gangneung.
South Korea's unification ministry said that the government is likely to provide food, fuel and electricity to the North after the ship anchors at the port.
"The South will offer the necessary conveniences (to the Mangyongbong-92) based on the precedent of the 2002 Busan Asian Games," said the government official.
It is said that Seoul would make sure US food ingredients were not included in meals in a bid to prevent a possible violation of US sanctions that ban the delivery of American goods and services to North Korea.
The official said that the Mangyongbong-92 is not a ship blacklisted by the US, but Seoul has consulted with Washington to confirm that the ferry is not subject to Washington's sanctions.
Details of the performances have not been made public, but the North informed the South last week that many South Korean songs will be included in the programs.(Yonhap)