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Democratic People's Republic of Korea (PRK)

Overview

NOCOlympic Committee of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
Flagbearers27

Participants

Olympic Games428
Youth Olympic Games22
Other competitors with PRK nationality12

Description

The Democratic People’s Republic (DPR) of Korea (often termed North Korea) proclaimed its establishment on 9 September 1948. DPR Korea applied to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) for recognition in June 1956 and received provisional IOC recognition in 1957, on the understanding that it would only be allowed to compete at Rome in 1960 as a combined team with theRepublic of Korea.

Originally, the IOC policy was for both Koreas to form a combined team, similar toGermany in 1956-1964. DPR Korea agreed to this, but South Korea said it was impossible. DPR Korea received full IOC recognition for its Olympic Committee in March 1962, and then competed at the Innsbruck Olympic Winter Games in 1964, but with a flag that did not conform with the IOC decision made in the 1963 session in Baden-Baden.

DPR Korea was to make its début at the Olympic Games in 1964 in Tokyo but withdrew. This was because, in November 1963, DPR Korea had competed at the Games of the New Emerging Forces (GANEFO). These were highly controversial games (seeThe Games of the XVIIIth Olympiad) that were not recognized by the IOC because GANEFO organizers refused admission toIsrael andTaiwan. All athletes competing in shooting, swimming, and athletics at GANEFO were banned by their international federations from competing at Tokyo in 1964. This included several athletes from DPR Korea, including its greatest athlete, 800 metre world-record holding runner Dan Sin-Kim. When these athletes were not allowed to compete, DPR Korea withdrew in protest.

GANEFO II was held from 25 November to 6 December 1966 and DPR Korea again competed at these games. Because of this, the track & field athletes from DPR Korea who had competed at GANEFO II were subsequently barred from the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, and the nation withdrew again, choosing not to send any athletes.

The 1968 withdrawal was also partly motivated by anger over a recent IOC decision. At the 68th Session in Mexico City shortly before the Olympics, the IOC decided that, after 1 November 1968, the nation would be referred to as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, but that at Mexico City, the nation would compete under its geographic name of North Korea. Precisely similar decisions were made with respect toEast Germany and Taiwan, who were forced by the IOC to compete at Mexico City under names they did not recognize, rather than their proper names of the German Democratic Republic and Republic of China.

DPR Korea has competed at the Olympic Games of 1972, 1976, 1980, and from 1992 to 2016, also skipping the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, the 1988 Seoul Olympics, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

DPR Korea withdrew from the 1984 Olympics in obvious sympathy with the Soviet Union’s boycott of the Los Angeles Olympics. DPR Korea withdrew from the 1988 Olympics in protest of the hosting of the Games by the rival government of the Republic of (South) Korea. Long political discussions were held from 1985 to 1988 between representatives of the National Olympic Committees of the two countries. These dealt with demands by the North Koreans to co-host the 1988 Olympics or at least host several of the events. The Korean Olympic Organizing Committee and the IOC were never able to satisfy the demands of the North Koreans and talks eventually broke off, resulting in the North Korean boycott.

DPR Korea did not compete at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, stating the reason was because of fear of COVID-19 and the safety of their contingent. Because of that withdrawal, the NOC of DPR Korea was suspended by the IOC at their Executive Board meeting on 8 September 2021. Due to this suspension, the status of DPR Korea competing at Beijing 2022 was in question. Eventually, they would not be present at the Beijing Winter Games.

At the 2000 Opening Ceremony in Sydney, a historic event occurred when the teams from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and the Republic of Korea marched into the stadium together, led by one flagbearer from each nation at the head of the combined contingent. This “athletic peace” was brokered by the IOC, and occurred at a time when the two Koreas were also beginning to have some political exchanges for the first time in decades. The flagbearer for DPR Korea at Sydney was the official,Pak Jung-Chul, while the Republic of Korea was led by basketball playerJeong Eun-Sun. This occurred again at the 2004 Athens Opening Ceremony, the 2006 Torino Opening Ceremony, and the 2018 PyeongChang Opening Ceremony.

The most successful North Korean athletes have beenKim Il-Ong who won gold in the1992 and1996 light-flyweight freestyle wrestling, andRim Jong-Sim who won golds in women’s weightlifting in both 2012 and 2016. JudokaKye Sun-Hui is the only athlete from this nation with three medals, one of each color.

DPR Korea made its first Olympic appearance at the Olympic Winter Games in Innsbruck in 1964. The nation has also competed at the Winter Games of 1972, 1984, 1988, 1992, 1998, 2006, 2010, 2014, and 2018. At the 2018 Olympic Winter Games, DPR Korea and the Republic of Korea had a joint ice hockey team, which had been arranged by the IOC.

DPR Korea has had 72 Winter Olympians, 32 men and 40 women. Of NOCs that have had both men and women compete at the Winter Olympic Games, this makes DPR Korea one of only three countries to do so with more women than men, along with China and Hong Kong, China. The nation’s Winter Olympians have competed in Alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, figure skating, short-track speed skating, and speed skating. DPR Korea has won two Olympic medals at the Olympic Winter Games: a silver byHan Pil-Hwa in 1964 women’s 3,000 metres speed skating, and a bronze byHwang Ok-Sil in 1992 women’s 500 metres short track speed skating.

Participations by edition

Olympic Games

EditionAsMenWomenTotal
1964 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea6713Results
1972 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea231437Results
1972 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea066Results
1976 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea36238Results
1980 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea39847Results
1984 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea336Results
1988 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea336Results
1992 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea362864Results
1992 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea91120Results
1996 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea15924Results
1998 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea268Results
2000 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea141731Results
2004 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea132336Results
2006 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea246Results
2008 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea213758Results
2010 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea112Results
2012 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea153752Results
2016 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea112031Results
2018 Winter OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea7310Results
2024 Summer OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea41014Results

Youth Olympic Games

EditionAsMenWomenTotal
2010 Summer Youth OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea5611Results
2014 Summer Youth OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea336Results
2018 Summer Youth OlympicsDemocratic People's Republic of Korea145Results

Participations by discipline

Olympic Games

Discipline (Sport)MenWomenTotal
Alpine Skiing (Skiing)325Results
Archery11415Results
Artistic Gymnastics (Gymnastics)182341Results
Artistic Swimming (Aquatics)066Results
Athletics171229Results
Boxing20323Results
Cross Country Skiing (Skiing)6511Results
Cycling Road (Cycling)033Results
Diving (Aquatics)51520Results
Figure Skating (Skating)8715Results
Football (Football)153146Results
Judo161430Results
Rhythmic Gymnastics (Gymnastics)022Results
Rowing606Results
Shooting24731Results
Short Track Speed Skating (Skating)5712Results
Speed Skating (Skating)101929Results
Table Tennis101626Results
Volleyball (Volleyball)01111Results
Weightlifting291140Results
Wrestling21627Results

Youth Olympic Games

Discipline (Sport)MenWomenTotal
Archery011Results
Athletics011Results
Diving (Aquatics)112Results
Judo112Results
Mixed Sports011Results
Rhythmic Gymnastics (Gymnastics)011Results
Rowing101Results
Swimming (Aquatics)112Results
Table Tennis224Results
Weightlifting246Results
Wrestling112Results

Medals by Games

EditionCompetition TypeGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1992 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games4059
2012 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games4037
2014 Summer Youth OlympicsYouth Olympic Games3205
2016 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games2327
2008 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games2226
1996 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games2125
1972 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games1135
2010 Summer Youth OlympicsYouth Olympic Games1135
1976 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games1102
2004 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games0415
1980 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games0325
2024 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games0246
2000 Summer OlympicsOlympic Games0134
1964 Winter OlympicsOlympic Games0101
1992 Winter OlympicsOlympic Games0011

Medals by sport

Olympic Games

SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Weightlifting58518
Wrestling32712
Artistic Gymnastics3003
Boxing2349
Judo2248
Shooting1023
Table Tennis0235
Diving0112
Speed Skating0101
Short Track Speed Skating0011
Volleyball0011

Youth Olympic Games

SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Weightlifting2215
Wrestling2002
Judo0112
Diving0011

Most successful competitors

Includes medals won as part of mixed teams.

Olympic Games

AthleteNatGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Kim Il-Ong PRK2002
Rim Jong-Sim PRK2002
Kye Sun-Hui PRK1113
An Kum-Ae PRK1102
Om Yun-Chol PRK1102
Choi Chol-Su PRK1001
Gu Yong-Jo PRK1001
Pae Gil-Su PRK1001
Li Ho-Jun PRK1001
Li Hak-Son PRK1001
Pak Hyon-Suk PRK1001
Hong Un-Jong PRK1001
Kim Un-Guk PRK1001
Ri Se-Gwang PRK1001

Youth Olympic Games

AthleteNatGoldSilverBronzeTotal
Kim Song-Chol PRK1001
Kim Son-Hyang PRK1001
Pak Jong-Ju PRK1001
Ri Se-Ung PRK1001
Hyon Song-Chol PRK0101
Jong Chun-Hui PRK0101
Ri Song-Gum PRK0101
Kim Kuk-Hyang PRK0011
Sin Ji-Hyang PRK0011
Ri Un-Ju PRK0011

IOC Members

Kim Yu-Sun1978—1994
Kim Yu-Sun1994—1996
Chang Ung1996—2018
Chang Ung2019—

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