The head of the North's popular girl band triggered a media frenzy during her two-day visit to South Korea this week to check potential venues for North Korean artistic performances during the Olympics, and another delegation from the North is coming this week to see accommodation facilities and the Olympic main stadium.
The Koreas are pressing ahead with a flurry of reconciliation efforts after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un abruptly expressed his wiliness to send an Olympic delegation.
South Korea's presidential office called for national unity for the success of the first Winter Olympics on South Korean soil and criticized conservatives who have said the government is making too many concessions to North Korea to help it steal the show at the Games.
"We don't understand why they label the Games as the 'Pyongyang Olympics,'" spokesman Park Su-hyun said in a televised statement. "The Pyeongchang Olympics is the Pyonghwa (peace) Olympics."
The two Koreas also reached their own agreements to hold joint cultural events at the North's Diamond Mountain and have their non-Olympic skiers practice together at the North's Masik ski resort before the Pyeongchang Games.
The South Korean team is to visit those places in North Korea from Tuesday to Thursday.
But in a reminder of their bitter relations, North Korea had a harsh rhetorical response to a protest in Seoul in which South Korean conservatives burned Kim's photo and a North Korean flag when the Moranbong Band leader, Hyon Song Wol, passed by them during her visit Monday.
"If these traitors and psychopaths defaming the dignified Korean nation are allowed to go scot-free, the national reconciliation, unity and the building of a reunified powerful country will be delayed so much," he said.
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