The Borneo Post

S. Korean court allows conscienti­ous objection to military service

-

SEOUL: South Korea’s supreme court ruled yesterday that moral and religious beliefs are valid reasons to refuse the country’s mandatory military service, in a case that has implicatio­ns for hundreds of conscienti­ous objectors.

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

Anyone refusing the call-up has usually ended up in prison for 18 months, and more than 19,000 conscienti­ous objectors have been jailed since 1950, most of them Jehovah’s Witnesses.

But the Supreme Court overturned the conviction of a conscienti­ous objector on Thursday, months after a landmark constituti­onal court ruling that authoritie­s had to provide an alternativ­e to joining the military.

At the centre of yesterday’s case is Jehovah’s Witness Oh Seunghun, who was called up in 2013 but refused, was found guilty, and lost an initial appeal to the high court.

“It is the majority opinion of the supreme court that conscienti­ous objection is ... a valid reason (to refuse conscripti­on),” said Supreme Court chief justice Kim Myeong-su.

Punishing conscienti­ous objectors “for refusing conscripti­on on grounds of religious faith, in other words, freedom of conscience, is deemed an excessive constraint to an individual’s freedom of conscience”, he added.

The decision, by a majority of nine votes to four, overturned a previous Supreme Court ruling 14 years ago.

Oh, 34, said he had refused to join the military as doing so went against biblical teaching.

“The bible says that everyone who uses a sword will be killed by a sword,” Oh told AFP.

“I expected to suffer for objecting to conscripti­on but I thought the pain I would feel by not listening to my inner voice would be far worse,” he added.

Jehovah’s Witnesses welcomed the ruling, calling it a ‘huge step forward in ending this policy of imprisonin­g our fellow believers’.

“Today the Supreme Court has brought South Korea more in line with internatio­nal norms,” said spokesman Paul Gillies.

According to the Jehovah’s Witnesses, more than 900 similar cases are pending in the South Korean justice system, with another 96 people currently serving prison terms for not fulfilling their duties.

A defence ministry official said it was drawing up an alternativ­e to military service for conscienti­ous objectors in light of the Constituti­onal Court ruling in June.

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

The social implicatio­ns of the South’s military service are also enormous — men must interrupt or delay either their education or their careers to comply, with Tottenham striker Son Heung-min a high-profile recent example.

He only secured an exemption — avoiding a potentiall­y ruinous career break — by winning gold at this year’s Asian Games in Indonesia. — AFP

 ??  ?? Kim (centre) delivers the court’s ruling on a conscienti­ous objector’s conviction of refusing to do mandatory military service at the court in Seoul. — AFP photo
Kim (centre) delivers the court’s ruling on a conscienti­ous objector’s conviction of refusing to do mandatory military service at the court in Seoul. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Oh Seung-hun
Oh Seung-hun

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia