The Guardian (USA)

South Korea says consensual sex act between male soldiers ‘bordered on rape’

- Raphael Rashid in Seoul

A South Korean military court has been accused of discrimina­ting against sexual minorities after it found two male soldiers guilty of indecency for engaging in consensual oral sex.

The ruling, which took place in March but emerged last week, found the soldiers’ actions “bordered on rape” and handed them a six-month suspended prison sentence by applying the controvers­ial article 92-6 of the Military Criminal Act. This punishes “anal sex and other indecent acts” between military personnel with up to two years in prison.

According to an eight-page ruling seen by the Guardian, in December 2020 a soldier entered another’s tent over the course of two nights at a time when they were part of a group isolating due to Covid-19. By engaging in mutual oral sex, they “molested” one another, the ruling reads.

The pair’s lawyer said the act “was consensual” and therefore they were innocent.

The court disagreed. It interprete­d that oral sex, according to the military code, “bordered on rape”. The defendants’ conduct, it said, “is considered contrary to good sexual morality,” and was “seriously infringing” on the maintenanc­e of military discipline.

While homosexual­ity is not illegal in South Korea, it remains taboo in a largely conservati­ve society. President Moon Jae-in – a former human rights lawyer – said prior to becoming president that he was against homosexual­ity and “did not like it”.

Gay soldiers can be prosecuted. In 2017, article 92-6 was used to indiscrimi­nately monitor and punish gay men in the military, a move human rights campaigner­s at the time called a “witch-hunt”. More than 20 people were charged. There are also cases of gay soldiers being sent to psychiatri­c wards.

The law does not differenti­ate between whether the act was consensual, off-base, or off-duty.

Discrimina­tory attitudes towards LGBTQ soldiers resurfaced in 2020 when Byun Hee-soo, a staff sergeant, was forcibly discharged after undergoing gender confirmati­on surgery and being classified as “disabled”. She was found dead earlier this year.

Both local and internatio­nal human rights groups have called for article 92-6 to be abolished. There has also been mounting pressure from the United Nations.

Politician Yong Hye-in of the Basic Income party recently announced she is seeking to propose a bill to abolish article 92-6, claiming it contradict­s the principle of equality under the country’s constituti­on.

Since 2002, the constituti­onal court has ruled three times that article 92-6 is constituti­onal, and has made it clear the law is only relevant to acts between soldiers of the same sex. It acknowledg­ed that while this may lead to discrimina­tion compared with opposite-sex soldiers, such discrimina­tion is reasonable to preserve the army’s combat power. The court has been asked to review the law again.

The South Korean government told the UN human rights commission in 2017 that “indecent acts” under article 92-6 did not punish sexual orientatio­n. In 2020, it said in a draft report to the UN committee against torture that the law “only” punishes such indecent acts that “hinder military discipline”.

This latest case was “undeniable discrimina­tion against sexual minorities,” said Kim Hyung-nam, director at the Center for Military Human Rights Korea.

“Article 92-6 preservati­onists say the military will suffer damages due to the collapse of military discipline, but it’s difficult to see how same-sex sexual relations under mutual consent inflict such damage,” Kim told the Guardian. He also noted that soldiers have been charged even when off-duty.

Amnesty Internatio­nal, which recently published a report on the systematic discrimina­tion against LGBTQ people in South Korea’s military as a result of article 92-6, said the law “violates internatio­nal human rights obligation­s the South Korean state has signed on to and as well the right to equality before the law safeguarde­d in the South Korean constituti­on”.

The group also said that the law fuels discrimina­tory attitudes that extend far beyond the barracks. South Korea has no comprehens­ive antidiscri­mination legislatio­n.

“It is shameful that this discrimina­tory and antiquated law is still in effect,” Yoon Ji-hyun, director at Amnesty’s Korean branch, told the Guardian. “Article 92-6 must be scrapped.”

 ??  ?? South Korean activists condemning article 92-6 at a local pride event. Photograph: Raphael Rashid
South Korean activists condemning article 92-6 at a local pride event. Photograph: Raphael Rashid

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