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Fri, September 22, 2023 | 00:06
ANNIVERSARYChefs to join Team South Korea in Tokyo Olympics
Posted : 2019-11-05 11:33
Updated : 2019-11-06 16:08
Kim Se-jeong
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President of Korean Sports and Olympic Committee Lee Kee-heung
President of Korean Sports and Olympic Committee Lee Kee-heung

KSOC president unveils measures to allay food safety woes, joint teams

By Kim Se-jeong

President of Korean Sports and Olympic Committee Lee Kee-heung
Chefs and food ingredients will accompany the South Korean team and delegation traveling to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics next year. The chefs will prepare food for the South Koreans using homegrown ingredients for the duration of the Games.

Korean Sports and Olympic Committee (KSOC) President Lee Kee-heung, also a member of the International Olympic Committee, unveiled the measures to allay fears over food safety which were raised after Japan announced it would use food products from Fukushima, a region hit hard by a 2011 tsunami and an ensuing meltdown at the nuclear power plant there.

"The KSOC is planning to expand the meal station for Korean athletes during the games to address the food safety issue," he wrote in a recent written interview with The Korea Times. "Korean food has superb nutritional value and we believe it will help the athletes perform at their best. We will also deliver lunch boxes to the stadiums so our athletes can focus on getting medals," Lee said.

Earlier, the Japanese Olympic Committee said it would serve athletes food made using ingredients from Fukushima, a region in which water and soil are feared to remain contaminated with radioactivity following the meltdown. South Korea banned rice and vegetable imports from the region immediately after the incident.

The Tokyo Olympics is not the first international sports event where the KSOC has dispatched chefs to prepare meals for athletes. During the 2012 London Olympics, the KSOC sent chefs and nutritionists from the national training center to cook for Korean athletes and staff who craved food from home.

Food safety is among other touchy issues at the Olympics.

The "Rising Sun" flag, a symbol for many in Asia of Japanese colonialism, is another pre-Olympics issue that some South Koreans find concerning. The issue has been raised by Seoul since September after relations with Japan deteriorated following it imposing trade restrictions on certain exports to Korea. In response, Japan said use of the flag does not violate the Japanese Constitution.

Lee said the KSOC has been working to make an Asian alliance to push Japan to not fly it.

"During the 24th Association of the National Olympic Committee (ANOC) General Assembly in Qatar earlier this year, I met with other Asian state representatives and discussed ways to address the issue together. On this issue, our effort to change Japan's policy will continue and with the support of the government," he said. ANOC has an annual meeting, and this year's congress took place in Doha.

Joint Korea team

Lee said he was cautiously optimistic about fielding a joint team between the two Koreas for the Tokyo Olympics, saying the KSOC has continued to talk with the North.

However, another high-level official, who didn't want to disclose his name because of the sensitivity of the issue, said a joint team may be a distant dream. "Considering what's going on in inter-Korean relations, it's difficult to move on a joint team," he said. He had taken part in negotiations with the North in the past.

A joint team for the 2020 Olympics was agreed in November 2018 at inter-Korean talks held in Gaesong in the North. That year, President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un held three summits.

The governments of the two Koreas agreed to form unified teams in female basketball, female hockey, judo and rowing. "The IOC approved this under one condition ― that is the unified teams would start from qualifying matches," the anonymous official said.

For all sports but basketball, qualifying matches are already underway. "Basketball qualifying matches will begin at the end of the year. Yet, if things go the way it goes now, unifying a basketball team will be out of the question," he said. But, he added hopes remain in judo. "In judo, individual athletes compete for qualification. We can consider making a joint team with qualified athletes."

However, the political situation will hold full sway over the joint team and the current circumstances are not very promising.

Last week, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un ordered the removal of all South Korean-built facilities at Mount Geumgang, including a hotel. North Korea's aggressive treatment of South Korean football players during their World Cup qualifying game also cast a shadow on the prospects for a joint team.

Despite this, there is still hope for a possible peace gesture during the Olympics.

The official said a joint march at the opening ceremony could still happen. "This has been done several times now, so we could continue to do it."

North and South Korean athletes have marched together at international sports events 11 times so far. The most recent being the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics in South Korea ― the Koreas also fielded a joint women's ice hockey team.

In addition to creating the joint team, the two Koreas also agreed to submit a joint bid to co-host the 2032 Summer Olympics, and President Lee said they have a very good chance.

"The Korean Peninsula can be a symbol of peace which will be something we can take advantage of in our campaign for the Olympics," Lee said, noting that South Korea will host the next ANOC General Assembly. "This will be also a good opportunity to show the sports community that the Koreas are qualified to host the Olympics."

As an IOC member representing Korea, Lee is at the center of sports diplomacy.

"Now, Korea has two IOC representatives, which has elevated its standing in global sports." Korea's sports diplomacy had its heyday in the 2000s when it had three IOC representatives, but in 2017, the number went down to one, raising concern that its standing had weakened."

Lee viewed the PyeongChang Winter Olympics as demonstrating Korea's success in sports diplomacy. "This helped Korea get two IOC representatives."

100th National Sports Festival

With regard to the centennial of the National Sports Festival, Lee said he was saddened by the decreasing public interest. "It will be my job to revamp the festival so that it will recover its lost popularity with bigger public interest and participation."

The festival started out as an act of resistance to colonial Japan in 1920. In the first year, only baseball was played but other sports were added over the century. This year saw 47 sports including trials of two new ones.

Over the century, the festival served as an incubator for world-class athletes. Figure-skater Kim Yu-na competed in the festival as did Swimmer Park Tae-hwan. The festival has also contributed to developing the infrastructure for Korean sports.

Born in 1955, Lee's background has been in business, not sports. His first step into the world of sports was with the Federation of the Modern Pentathlon where he served as vice president in 2000. Between 2004 and 2009, he was the president of the Korea Canoe Federation, followed by the Korea Swimming Federation between 2010 and 2016..

He headed the athlete's team in the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou in China and 2012 London Summer Olympics.


Emailskim@koreatimes.co.kr Article ListMore articles by this reporter
 
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