Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

S. Korea ruling narrows gay ban

Two soldiers’ record cleared after off-duty, off-base sex

- CHOE SANG-HUN

SEOUL — The Supreme Court of South Korea issued a landmark ruling against the military’s decades- old ban on homosexual activities Thursday, striking down guilty verdicts for two male soldiers who were indicted on a charge of having consensual sex while off their base.

South Korea’s Military Criminal Act calls for up to two years in prison for “anal intercours­e or other indecent acts.” Until now, soldiers who engaged in such activities had been punished under that law regardless of whether there was mutual consent or where the conduct took place. Rights groups have long condemned the law, saying it permits a “witch hunt” against gay soldiers.

In its ruling Thursday, the Supreme Court said that the law should not apply to consensual sex away from a military setting.

The two accused men, a first lieutenant and a master sergeant, were indicted on charges of breaking the military code after they were found to have had sex in a private house during off-duty hours in 2016. Lower military courts sentenced the lieutenant to four months in jail and the sergeant to three months; the sentences were suspended.

Punishing the two soldiers for this violated “their sexual autonomy” and “the constituti­onally guaranteed right to equality and human dignity, as well as their right to pursue happiness,” the top court said Thursday, sending the case back to a lower military court.

Human- rights groups hailed the verdict, calling it “a major step forward” or “a huge victory” for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and intersex people.

“This groundbrea­king decision is an important triumph in the fight against discrimina­tion faced by LGBTI people in South Korea,” Boram Jang, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s East Asia researcher, said in an emailed statement. “The criminaliz­ation of consensual same-sex sexual acts in South Korea’s military has long been a shocking violation of human rights, but today’s ruling should pave the way for military personnel to freely live their lives without the threat of prosecutio­n.”

Lim Tae-hoon, head of the Seoul-based Center for Military Human Rights Korea, urged the country’s Constituti­onal Court to follow up by ruling the military code that outlaws gay sex unconstitu­tional. The court has ruled the law constituti­onal three times since 2002, and it is deliberati­ng on the question for a fourth time.

The South Korean military did not immediatel­y comment on Thursday’s ruling. In the past it has said that it was not discrimina­ting against gay soldiers. But it said it wanted to root out illegal homosexual activities and protect morale and discipline among soldiers.

Rights groups have long lamented what they called the “archaic and discrimina­tory” military code and a pervasive stigmatiza­tion faced by LGBTI people in the country in general and in the military in particular. The two soldiers were among a score of gay soldiers rounded up in 2017 on the suspicion of having same-sex relationsh­ips.

South Korea maintains a 620,000-strong military as a bulwark against North Korea, with which it remains technicall­y at war.

South Korea operates a conscripti­on system, which obliges all eligible men to serve about 20 months.

In South Korea, same-sex marriage is not recognized and the rights of sexual minorities are a largely taboo and politicall­y unpopular subject.

Officials have argued that sex among gay soldiers would spread AIDS in the South Korean military and undermine its readiness to fight North Korea.

 ?? (AP/Newsis/Chung Byung-hyuck) ?? South Korean Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Kim Myeong-su (center), sits with other justices upon their arrival Thursday at the Supreme Court in Seoul, South Korea.
(AP/Newsis/Chung Byung-hyuck) South Korean Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Kim Myeong-su (center), sits with other justices upon their arrival Thursday at the Supreme Court in Seoul, South Korea.

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