Seoul: North Korean Olympians have not received Samsung smartphones, unlike athletes from other countries, the IOC told AFP on Thursday, hours after Seoul suggested that providing them the phones could violate UN sanctions against the nuclear-armed North.
South Korea's tech giant Samsung Electronics, an official partner of the Olympics, earlier announced it was providing an Olympic edition of its advanced smartphone, the foldable Galaxy Z Flip6, to "all approximately 17,000" athletes participating in the Paris Games this year.
The company and the International Olympic Committee have promoted "victory selfies" in Paris, in which medallists on the podium take group selfies using the Galaxy Z Flip6.
North Korean table tennis silver medallists participated in one such group podium selfie last week alongside South Korean bronze winners - a rare inter-Korean encounter that went viral.
But the South Korean government said Thursday that providing Samsung smartphones to North Korean Olympians could violate United Nations sanctions related to Pyongyang's weapons programme, following a report by US-funded outlet Radio Free Asia that North Korea, like other nations, had received the phones for its athletes.
But the IOC told AFP in a statement late Thursday that North Korean Olympians "have not received the Samsung phones".
The IOC did not give any further details.
Relations between the two Koreas are at one of their lowest points in years.
Seoul's foreign ministry said earlier Thursday that a UN Security Council resolution bans "direct or indirect supply, sale or transfer to North Korea of all industrial machinery".
"Smartphones are considered prohibited items under this resolution," it said.
The ministry added that Seoul was "making diplomatic efforts in coordination with the international community" to ensure resolutions against the North were "thoroughly implemented".