Olympic Partner Samsung Electronics has donated some 4,000 Galaxy Note 8 phones for athletes and officials at the International Olympic Committee so that they can document every moment and share their memories with the world.
But the Winter Olympic Games organizer is in limbo whether giving the device that costs at least USD 1,000 to North Koreans would violate global sanctions designed to punish their government's nuclear ambitions. It's also unclear if the phones would work on networks inside North Korea.
The United Nations sanctions ban supplying or transferring luxury items to North Korea or to North Korean nationals.
The International Olympic Committee has advised the organiser that North Korean athletes can use the phone during the Olympics that open Friday but must return them before their departure.
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Even after the IOC's response, the Pyeongchang Organizing Committee is still unsure what to do.
"Somebody should make a clear call but there is no one who can," said Sung Baik-yoo, the committee's spokesman. "So we have not given the phone (to North Koreans) and we cannot give the phone until we confirm this is not a violation of the UN sanctions."
Other Olympians receive the Samsung phone upon their arrival at the Olympic Village.
The phone is one of the sticking issues that South Korea is dealing with as it conducts a careful dance of welcoming North Koreans for the Olympics to send a message of peace while trying to avoid causing any frictions with its allies worried about the North's nuclear weapons.
In order to accommodate North Korean artists arriving by sea, South Korea's government had waived its own sanctions imposed against Pyongyang that bans entrance of North Korean vessels to the South.