South Korea Removes Banners At Olympic Village After IOC Ruling
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) South Koreas Olympic committee said Saturday it has removed banners at the Olympic athletes village in Tokyo that referred to a 16th-century war between Korea and Japan after the International Olympic Committee ruled it was provocative.
In agreeing to take down the banners, the South Koreans said they received a promise from the IOC that the displaying of the Japanese rising sun flag will be banned at stadiums and other Olympic venues. The flag, portraying a red sun with 16 rays extending outward, is resented by many people in South Korea and other parts of Asia who see it as a symbol of Japans wartime past.
The South Korean banners, which drew protests from some Japanese far-right groups, had been hung at the balconies of South Korean athletes rooms and collectively spelled out a message that read: I still have the support of 50 million Korean people.
This borrowed from the famous words of 16th-century Korean naval admiral Yi Sun-sin, who according to historical lore told King Seonjo of Koreas Joseon Kingdom I still have 12 battleships left before pulling off a crucial victory against a larger Japanese fleet during the 1592-1598 Japanese invasions of Korea.
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