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Close Siblings to Distant Cousins in 30 Years

In 1988, the last time South Korea hosted the Olympics, North and South Korea were more alike than different, separated by an arbitrary line yet joined by history, language and the bonds of family.

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By
MOTOKO RICH
and
CHOE SANG-HUN, New York Times

In 1988, the last time South Korea hosted the Olympics, North and South Korea were more alike than different, separated by an arbitrary line yet joined by history, language and the bonds of family.

Both Koreas had come a long way, emerging from colonial rule and rebuilding their economies after a devastating civil war.

But the Olympics in Seoul in 1988 ended up being a turning point. Over the past 30 years, the two countries have diverged sharply — economically, politically and culturally.

South Korea rapidly industrialized, growing at one of the fastest rates in the world. The North stagnated.

The South shed its military dictatorship and opened up to the world. The North remained isolated and authoritarian, and endured a devastating famine that killed an estimated 2 million people, according to some estimates.

South Korea now exports Samsung phones, Hyundai cars and popular soap operas. North Korea, hamstrung by sanctions, still relies on exports of coal, clothing and shellfish.

In 1988, North Korea did not even participate in the Seoul Olympics, and it mounted a deadly terrorist attack 10 months before the games. On Friday, its delegation will march under a single flag with the South Korean team at the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.

The display of athletic unity, however, belies the vast gap that has opened between the two countries in the three decades since the Seoul Games.

Other communist countries in Asia, including China and Vietnam, saw the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 as a warning, and they quickly reformed their economies and opened their markets. The North remained closed.

It pursued the development of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles, making it an international pariah. Although North Korea’s economy started to grow moderately in recent years, devastating sanctions imposed by the United Nations prohibit it from selling its leading exports, and the economy could be shrinking again.

When the Soviet Union collapsed, the North’s economy soon followed. Floods and drought compounded the situation, leading to a devastating famine. Food in the North is still rationed, with the best goods distributed only to a small group of elites with government connections.

By the time of North Korea’s famine, South Korea had become a booming cultural capital, exporting K-pop, its answer to American boy bands, to its former adversaries, China and Japan.

South Korea became Asia’s leading exporter of culture — producing music, movies and television dramas.

At one time, both countries could afford to build intricate subways beneath their capitals. But a decade after the Seoul Olympics, only one government could afford to keep its trains running regularly.

Built to showcase North Korean industry and double as atomic bomb shelters, the Pyongyang metro stations are decorated with revolutionary propaganda. The train cars, which have not been upgraded in decades, remain mostly empty.

Virtually all of North Korea’s early success — including its subway system — as well as its later misfortunes can be attributed to the country’s ruling family, the Kims.

The same family that ruled North Korea in 1988 rules it today. And the same authoritarianism pioneered by the country’s founder, Kim Il Sung, is continued by his grandson, Kim Jong Un.

At the time of the Seoul Games, South Korea had recently emerged from military dictatorship. Just eight years earlier, South Korean military forces massacred students and citizens protesting authoritarian rule.

When huge student and labor protests rocked South Korea again in 1987, the government deployed riot police officers and tear gas before eventually agreeing to democratic reforms.

Just over a year ago, protesters held candlelight vigils every weekend for months to demand the impeachment of the country’s president, Park Geun-hye. The protests, which eventually led to Park’s removal from office, were uniformly peaceful.

Central to the politics of each country in recent years has been the North’s steadfast pursuit of nuclear weapons, which has led to sanctions and isolation.

With the North participating in this month’s games, will the two Koreas now begin to converge — or is it too late?

Just a few weeks ago, the idea of the North participating in the Olympics would have been unthinkable. Kim spent much of 2017 developing and testing bombs and ballistic missiles in defiance of international demands.

Now, President Moon Jae-in of South Korea says he hopes the Pyeongchang Games could end a stalemate and propel the countries to talks.

In a sign of the easing tensions, the countries will not only march together during the opening ceremony but will also compete as a single unified team in women’s ice hockey.

Ultimately, two countries that appear so different, even from space — where the lights of the South far outshine those of the North — have a shared history much longer than the three decades between Olympics. These games may be a chapter in that history, but they are far from the last one.

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