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Olympics: North Korean Cheerleaders Spark Fashion Envy

by Associated Press

   INJE, SOUTH KOREA --

   More than 200 sharply dressed North Korean cheerleaders decked out in
   expensive fur smiled and posed for the media and onlookers Wednesday
   after arriving in South Korea for the Pyeongchang Olympics.

   The 229 chic young women wore tailored knee-length scarlet coats with
   fur hats, fur collars, and matching cuffs to ward off the winter chill.

   "By the way, I love the North Korean cheering squad's outfit. It's
   quite something! I want that hat!" said one South Korea fan on Twitter.

   "I think they are very pretty," said a South Korean onlooker of the
   women who were part of a 280-member delegation who crossed the
   Demilitarized Zone that divides the two Koreas at a border post north
   of Seoul.

   They were immediately whisked away in a convoy to their hotel in Inje
   county, a small rural town located 120 kilometers from the Games venue
   in Pyeongchang.

   "I am happy to see you," said one cheerleader, beaming broadly but
   refusing to disclose their cheerleading routine.

   "You just wait. If I tell you now, it would be less exciting when you
   see it."

   The cheerleaders are reportedly the product of a careful selection
   process in North Korea, screened for their family backgrounds, looks,
   skills and loyalty to the ruling Workers' Party.

   The North has sent cheer squads to three international sports events
   hosted by the South -- the 2002 Asian Games in Busan, the 2003 Summer
   Universiade in Daegu and the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships in
   Incheon.

   One of those in the 2005 group, Ri Sol-Ju, went on to become the wife
   of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.

   "I don't want to say it but North Korea's cheering squad is quite
   pretty. You can throw stones at me but the truth is the truth," said
   another observer on Twitter.

   - 'Nice to meet you' -

   The young women were given a quick bathroom break at a rest area in
   Gapyeong, located about halfway to their hotel destination. They
   strutted past South Koreans onlookers, who snapped out their
   smartphones for photos of the rare sight.

   In the bathroom, the cheerleaders stood side by side in front of the
   mirror, each checking and fixing their make-up while chatting among
   themselves.

   Banners welcoming the North's Olympic participation in the February
   9-25 Olympics lined the hilly drive up to the Inje Speedium, a
   four-star luxury resort with a car racing theme park.

   Surrounded by mountains and seemingly secluded, the resort is seen as
   an ideal spot for enforcing tight security while at the same time
   maintaining close surveillance on the large group of Northerners.

   But hours before the arrival of the guests, the hotel was bustling with
   media and police officers who had put barriers up at all entrances to
   the resort.

   The cheerleaders got off the bus one by one and scurried past the
   media, who fired questions at the young visitors ranging from their
   health to the chilly weather.

   Most quickly walked into the building without saying a word but some
   occasionally smiled and waved at the camera, and said: "Nice to meet
   you."

   - Scallops and beer -

   At a dinner banquet hosted by South Korea, the cheerleaders -- in
   matching bright red two-piece jackets and skirts complete with Kim
   Il-Sung and Kim Jong-Il lapel pins -- were seen chatting among
   themselves at round tables.

   "A new era of reconciliation has been opened," said a North Korean
   delegate leading the cheer squads, referring to a thaw in North and
   South Korean relations ahead of the Games.

   The guests were served grilled scallops, shrimp wrapped in pickled
   radish, barbecued beef, beef stew, fruit and beer.

   With only 10 North Korean athletes competing for their country at the
   Games, and another 12 on the roster of a unified Korean women's ice
   hockey team, the cheerleaders will reportedly support South Korean
   athletes when none of their own are in action.

   The delegation, led by Pyongyang's sports minister Kim Il-Guk, also
   includes three other officials from the National Olympic Committee, 26
   taekwondo demonstrators and 21 journalists.

   The Olympics have triggered a rapid rapprochement on the divided Korean
   peninsula, after the nuclear-armed North's leader Kim Jong-Un expressed
   a willingness to participate in his New Year speech.

   The two Koreas held a rare high-level meeting last month and the
   North's ceremonial head of state is due to arrive Friday, the
   highest-level Pyongyang official ever to visit the South.

   South Korea's unification ministry said Kim Jong-Un's sister, Kim
   Yo-Jong, a senior member of the ruling Workers' Party, will also be
   part of the delegation.

   But critics in the South allege the North has been allowed to hijack
   the Pyeongchang Games, dubbing them the Pyongyang Olympics instead.