South Korea will go ahead with other Winter Olympics projects with North Korea despite Pyongyang calling off a joint cultural performance that was less than a week away, a South Korean government official said on Tuesday.
North Korea called off the joint cultural performance, which had been scheduled for Feb. 4, late on Monday, blaming South Korean media for encouraging “insulting” public sentiment. However, the North and South were still in negotiations over details regarding sending South Korean athletes to train at North Korea's Masikryong ski resort, an official at the Ministry of Unification in Seoul told Reuters .
There seemed to be no problems regarding plans for the joint training programme, said the official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter. However, given the North's decision on Monday, the official said it was unlikely that any joint performance would be held before the Winter Olympics begin in Pyeongchang on Feb 9. The Unification Ministry was expected to send its formal response to North Korea's decision some time on Tuesday.
Many South Koreans have complained that the unified women's hockey team - the only such joint team to be formed - was unfair to the South Korean players. More than a hundred petitions against the unified team have been sent to the presidential Blue House's website.
Government and opposition parties criticised Pyongyang's decision to call off the performance on Tuesday, with Moon's Democratic Party saying in a statement “frequent promise-breaking leads to fatigue. It's North Korea's responsibility to show its sincerity. It's no help flipping on agreements like one would flip their hand,” the party said.