The Borneo Post

South Korean conscienti­ous objectors released on parole

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SEOUL: Dozens of South Korean conscienti­ous objectors were released from jail on parole yesterday after a landmark court decision that conscience is a valid reason to refuse mandatory military service.

The Supreme Court, South Korea’s top court, overturned earlier in November about five decades of precedents that punished conscienti­ous objectors, a change that is in step with shifting attitudes as relations with North Korea thaw.

An official from the Ministry of Justice said the ministry decided to release on parole 58 conscienti­ous objectors who had been in jail for six months or more.

That would reduce the number of conscienti­ous objectors in jail from 71 to 13, South Korean online media Money Today reported, citing an unidentifi­ed law enforcemen­t source.

The parolees will be doing community service, the justice ministry official said.

Among those released, eight clean- shaven young men, some dressed in suits, stood in front of Daegu Detention Centre to pose for media photograph­s.

The parolees were released from several detention centres around the country.

“I fully understand critical views on conscienti­ous objection, given that in South Korea we have a duty of national defence,” one of the men, a 26-year- old surnamed Kim, told Yonhap news agency.

“Whether it’s alternativ­e service or community service, we hope to diligently do the work given to us and change views from negative to positive,” he said.

The 58 released yesterday had been serving jail terms of up to three years under the Supreme Court’s previous interpreta­tion of the Military Service Act that said religious beliefs or conscience were not valid reasons to refuse mandatory service.

Conscienti­ous objectors were soon expected to have the option of alternativ­e service, although the period and type of service have yet to be decided.

South Korea’s defence ministry is holding its second public hearing on alternativ­e service on Friday, a ministry statement said.

The hearing is discussing whether requiring conscienti­ous objectors to serve 36 months of alternativ­e service is punitive or is needed to deter potential abuse of conscienti­ous objection to shirk mandatory military service.

The 36 months of alternativ­e service compares with 18 months of mandatory army service by 2022. — Reuters

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? South Korean conscienti­ous objectors celebrate after being released from Daegu detention center.
— Reuters photo South Korean conscienti­ous objectors celebrate after being released from Daegu detention center.

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