The Star Malaysia

Only for ‘naughty girls’

Stigma lingers after South Korea abortion ban overturned.

- By BEH LIH YI

SOUTH Korea is set to legalise abortion after a decades-long ban was struck down, but women’s rights campaigner­s have warned those who undergo the procedure will still be “punished in the eyes of society”.

In a landmark verdict last week, a South Korean court ruled the ban – which dates from 1953 – unconstitu­tional and asked the government to legalise abortion by the end of 2020.

Under the ban, as it currently stands, women who have abortions can be jailed for up to a year and get a fine, while doctors who perform the procedure at the woman’s request can face imprisonme­nt of up to two years.

The ruling was lauded as a victory for gender equality, but women’s rights activists said conservati­ve values mean women – even doctors – would still face stigma, hampering access to abortion.

“Even if women are no longer criminals under the law for abortion, they will still be punished in the eyes of the society,” Jiann Woo, who has organised protests against the ban since 2016, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“Abortion is still seen as immoral here – it is only something that the ‘single, naughty girls’ would do,” added the 25-year-old student, co-founder of Femidangda­ng, a Seoul-based women’s rights group.

South Korea became one of the last developed countries where abortion is a crime after Ireland voted in a referendum last year to overturn its highly restrictiv­e abortion laws.

A survey by polling firm Realmeter this month showed more than 58% of South Korean respondent­s favour scrapping the ban, but a little over 30% wanted it retained.

The court ruling comes amid a burgeoning feminism movement in South Korea after tens of thousands of women took to the streets last year to protest against illicit filming of women – so-called “spycam porn”.

But society’s traditiona­l, patriarcha­l views on women and their sexuality are still deeply rooted in the East Asian country which ranked 115 out of 149 countries in the World Economic Forum’s 2018 Global Gender Gap report.

“Abortion is still a huge taboo because our society has strict views on women’s sexuality,” said Yong, a South Korean student living in Germany who underwent an abortion in March.

“I made a stupid mistake but I knew I had options.

“Many friends back home who had abortions had a very different reaction – it was like the end of the world for them,” said the 27-yearold, who asked not to be named in full to protect her privacy.

Exemptions under current South Korean law allow abortions within 24 weeks of pregnancy in cases involving rape, hereditary disease or danger to a mother’s health.

Abortion numbers have been dropping in South Korea, with nearly 50,000 estimated for women between 15 and 44 in 2017, down from some 340,000 in 2005, as birth control measures spread and the population of women in that age range falls, said the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs.

But campaigner­s say the ban had driven women to turn to black-market abortion drugs, and pushed the cost of surgical abortion prohibitiv­ely high with the fees for a late-term terminatio­n averaging about $5,000 (RM20, 713).

In many cases, women must also give a written promise that they will not implicate the doctor.

The constituti­onal court challenge stemmed from the case of a doctor who was charged with conducting nearly 70 illegal abortions.

The Roman Catholic Church, with five million adherents – out of a population of 51 million in South Korea – has taken a firm stance against the ruling. Beyond the Catholic Church, some of the world’s largest megachurch­es and church-affiliated groups in South Korea have led the protest against making abortion legal.

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Korea has said the ruling denied embryos’ rights to life, while a group calling itself the National Alliance Against Abolition of Abortion decried the procedure as an “act of murder”.

The issue is divisive among the medical fraternity, too.

Gynaecolog­ist Yoon Jung-won, who has conducted hundreds of abortions for rape survivors, said some doctors have called for the right to not perform the procedure after the court lifted the ban.

“Some doctors don’t want to perform abortion simply because it is a stigmatise­d job. It’ll take time and effort,” said Yoon, who works in a private hospital in Seoul that specialise­s in sexual assault cases.

“Law and policy change is the first (step) – culture and social change is the last and the most difficult one.”

At the hospital where she works, Yoon has had to turn away many women over the years – from teenage girls who become pregnant, to women who feel they are too poor for another child to those who are trapped in an abusive relationsh­ip.

The government has said it would respect the court’s decision and take steps to comply, however some campaigner­s like Woo fear the 2020 deadline would give religious groups time to lobby for restrictio­ns.

President Moon Jae-in, a Catholic and a liberal, has not stated clearly if he supports abortion, but has called for more discussion­s to build consensus.

Ryu Min-hee, a lawyer in the legal team that mounted the successful court challenge, said the onus is now on the government to ensure abortions are accessible to women and doctors are adequately trained.

“It’s the government’s duty to implement the ruling,” said Ryu, adding “It’s not a crime, it’s women’s rights.”

 ??  ?? Standing up: Pro-life supporters rally against the lifting of the ban on abortion in front of the constituti­onal court in Seoul last week. - Reuters
Standing up: Pro-life supporters rally against the lifting of the ban on abortion in front of the constituti­onal court in Seoul last week. - Reuters
 ??  ?? Fighting for their rights: Protesters demonstrat­ing against South Korean abortion laws in Gwanghwamu­n Plaza in Seoul last year. - AFP
Fighting for their rights: Protesters demonstrat­ing against South Korean abortion laws in Gwanghwamu­n Plaza in Seoul last year. - AFP

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