The Star Malaysia

S. Korean military court convicts army captain over gay sex

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SEOUL: A South Korean military court sentenced an army captain to a suspended prison term for having sex with a fellow male soldier in a ruling human rights groups criticised as regressive and intimidati­ng.

A lawyer for the captain said her client was being punished for having consensual sex with his partner in a private space.

“It’s a ridiculous ruling,” said lawyer Kim In-sook.

She said the military penal code, which makes homosexual activity punishable by up to two years in prison, was unconstitu­tional because it tramples on basic human rights and dignity.

South Korea’s military, which doesn’t reveal how often it pursues cases against soldiers suspected of being gay, didn’t immediatel­y make a statement.

Kim said it’s unclear whether her client would appeal his six-month prison sentence that was suspended by a year because he felt tormented by the legal process. He will be dishonoura­bly discharged if the ruling stays.

The captain was arrested last month amid allegation­s by a watchdog that South Korea’s military was hunting down and prosecutin­g gay servicemen. South Korea’s army has denied such claims, saying it was conducting a criminal investigat­ion of soldiers who posted a video on the Internet of two male soldiers having sex earlier this year.

Lim Tae-hoon, who heads the Military Human Rights Centre for Korea, which complained about the crackdown, said in an earlier interview that neither the captain nor his partner had anything to do with the soldiers involved with the video leak.

According to Lim, military investigat­ors used the informatio­n gained from their inquiry into the video case to track down other gay soldiers.

Investigat­ors threatened soldiers to out their gay peers, confiscate­d cellphones to check communicat­ion records, and even used dating apps to dupe soldiers into revealing their sexual identity, Lim said.

Lim’s group released a statement denouncing yesterday’s ruling, saying that it “turned the clock of history backward”.

Roseann Rife, East Asia research director at Amnesty Internatio­nal, called for the “unjust conviction” to be immediatel­y overturned.

In conservati­ve South Korea, gays, lesbians, bisexual and transgende­r people are harshly stigmatise­d and struggle to be politicall­y visible, while a powerful Christian lobby immobilise­s politician­s seeking to pass anti-discrimina­tion laws.

That stigma is amplified in the military, where most able-bodied South Korean men are required to serve about two years as the country maintains a large force in the face of potential conflict with North Korea.

Gay men are not exempt from conscripti­on but are banned from engaging in homosexual activity while serving, leading to an environmen­t in which they serve without revealing their sexual identity for fear of discrimina­tion and reprisals. — AP

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