Los Angeles Times

Transgende­r soldier booted

- By Victoria Kim

SEOUL — For many South Koreans, the mandatory two-year military service required of all men is an onerous obligation born of the country’s precarious reality of abutting North Korea and its million-man army. Many try to postpone their service, apply for plum assignment­s or seek to avoid it altogether.

Not Byun Hui-su. Byun sought out a specialize­d, farfrom-home high school for future military officers, and in March 2017 joined the ranks of South Korea’s army as an officer.

On Wednesday, the army decided Byun could no longer serve in South Korea’s military because of “mental and physical disability.” Byun, a 21-year-old staff sergeant, recently underwent sex reassignme­nt surgery to become female.

The army’s swift decision to boot the transgende­r soldier from its ranks came despite protests from advocates and a national human rights commission recommenda­tion that the case be given more time for considerat­ion.

It has ignited fierce debate in a country that remains largely socially conservati­ve, in part because of a vocal and zealous evangelica­l Christian population, and where military service is a perennial point of contention in gender issues because women are not conscripte­d. Women who voluntaril­y enlist account for more than 10,000 members of the military.

Byun’s unpreceden­ted case in South Korea thrusts the country into the forefront of an issue that has been controvers­ial in the U.S. and other nations. President Trump, via a 2017 tweet, abruptly reversed an Obama administra­tion decision to begin allowing transgende­r individual­s to enlist and serve openly, a move that’s being challenged in the courts.

The U.S. has 8,980 active service members who are transgende­r, according to Department of Defense statistics cited by the Palm Center. It’s not known how many of South Korea’s 600,000 troops — about 464,000 of whom are with the army — may be transgende­r.

Byun and her attorneys said they would file appeals to the human rights commission and pursue legal action to allow her to continue to serve.

“I’m going to fight to the end, until the day I return to the army,” a tearful Byun said during a news conference in Seoul on Wednesday afternoon. She said her unit and superiors were aware and supportive of her decision to proceed with the surgery and had knowingly signed off on her travel to Thailand for the procedure.

South Korean authoritie­s said that while the military has no specific regulation­s banning transgende­r service members or concerning their transition, it considers the removal of genitals a disability necessitat­ing the discharge decision. A female lieutenant colonel was dismissed from the army in 2006 under the same regulation for getting a double mastectomy when she had cancer in one breast; she successful­ly challenged her discharge.

In the case of gay individual­s, Korea’s military does not preclude them from serving but has been accused of rooting out gay service members under a law banning sodomy, in some cases for consensual sex that took place off-duty and off-base. Four soldiers identifyin­g as gay are challengin­g their discipline and prosecutio­n under the law before South Korea’s supreme court, alleging discrimina­tion.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has said the sodomy law “institutio­nalizes discrimina­tion, reinforces systematic disadvanta­ges for gay, bisexual and transgende­r people and risks inciting or justifying violence against them inside the military and in the broader society.” Several transgende­r women have also been prosecuted for evading military service, accused of using their gender identity as an excuse.

Byun said part of her interest in the military came from wanting to suppress the femininity she sensed in herself, but also a strong wish to serve her country. She said she initially planned on completing her time in the military as a man, putting off transition­ing, but suffered from deepening depression because of gender dysphoria.

She said that after receiving counseling and mental health treatment through the military, she began receiving hormonal therapy the spring of last year. In August, she came out to superiors in her unit, realizing she needed to be honest with herself and those around her to be a good soldier, she said.

It was after deciding to be forthcomin­g about her gender identity that she began excelling at her role as a tank operator, receiving high marks and earning awards, she said.

Byun said that with the blessing of her superiors, she traveled to Thailand in December for sex reassignme­nt surgery.

The army’s review board met for about an hour to hear from Byun and her attorney before reaching the decision to order her discharge, according to the Center for Military Human Rights, which has been advocating on her behalf.

Byun said that South Korea’s military was changing in many other ways — allowing soldiers to have smartphone­s and phasing out certain types of punishment­s — and that she believed its treatment of LGBTQ individual­s could also evolve.

She said she wanted the opportunit­y to serve her country on the front lines, at the border with North Korea.

“I would like to be a great precedent,” she said.

 ?? Ahn Young-joon Associated Press ?? “I’M GOING to fight to the end, until the day I return to the army,” Byun Hui-su said at a news conference in Seoul. In dismissing her from the army, South Korea cited her “disability” after sex reassignme­nt surgery.
Ahn Young-joon Associated Press “I’M GOING to fight to the end, until the day I return to the army,” Byun Hui-su said at a news conference in Seoul. In dismissing her from the army, South Korea cited her “disability” after sex reassignme­nt surgery.

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