The Borneo Post

S. Korea court offers conscienti­ous objectors route away from army

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SEOUL: South Korea’s Constituti­onal Court yesterday upheld the jailing of those who evade the country’s military conscripti­on law, but ordered authoritie­s to provide conscienti­ous objectors with an alternativ­e form of national service.

Almost 65 years after the end of the Korean War, nearly every able- bodied South Korean man between the ages of 18 and 35 must still complete around two years of military service.

Anyone refusing the call-up usually ends up in prison for 18 months, and with no alternativ­e community service option some 19,000 conscienti­ous objectors have been jailed since 1950, most of them Jehovah’s Witnesses.

In a split decision, the court’s nine judges upheld a provision in the current conscripti­on law under which draft dodgers can be punished with up to three years in prison.

“It is legitimate to enforce military duty through criminal punishment,” the court said in its decision.

But it ruled that another phrase in the conscripti­on law that does not recognise any alternativ­e to military service is in breach of the constituti­on.

In a statement, the defence ministry said that it had been considerin­g alternativ­es to military service, and ‘will decide on a policy at the earliest possible date in line with the Court decision’.

South Korea’s armed forces rely heavily on conscripti­on and military service often involves postings to front-line positions on the border with North Korea.

In May 2010, a North Korean submarine torpedoed the South Korean naval vessel Cheonan, killing 46 sailors including 16 who were on military service.

In November the same year, the North shelled a South Korean border island, killing two marines — both of them young conscripts.

But tensions with Pyongyuang have drasticall­y eased this year, with the North scaling back confrontat­ion over its nuclear arsenal and holding summits with the South and the US, and calls for alternativ­e forms of service have been on the rise.

In several previous cases, the country’s top courts have backed conscripti­on, but Thursday’s verdict followed appeals from 28 objectors against the law, who cited the freedom of conscience guaranteed in the constituti­on.

Some 200 objectors are currently serving prison terms and 883 others have cases pending at various levels in the legal system — a number which has grown rapidly in recent months as judges delayed decisions, waiting for the Constituti­onal Court to rule. — AFP

 ??  ?? South Korean activists and conscienti­ous objectors to military service hold yellow banners reading ‘Conscienti­ous objection is not a crime’ during a rally outside the Constituti­onal Court in Seoul. — AFP photo
South Korean activists and conscienti­ous objectors to military service hold yellow banners reading ‘Conscienti­ous objection is not a crime’ during a rally outside the Constituti­onal Court in Seoul. — AFP photo

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