China Daily (Hong Kong)

Court throws out anti-adultery law

- By AGENCIES in Seoul

A South Korean court on Thursday abolished a 62-yearold law that bans extramarit­al affairs, and the stock price of a prominent condom maker immediatel­y shot up 15 percent.

The ruling by the Constituti­onal Court that the law suppresses personal freedoms could potentiall­y affect thousands of individual­s who faced adultery charges since Oct 31, 2008, a day after the court previously upheld the adultery ban. Current charges could be thrown out and anyone given a guilty verdict would be eligible for a retrial, according to a court official, who didn’t want to be named, citing office rules.

Prosecutor­s had indicted more than 5,400 people on adultery charges between November 2008 and January this year, according to the Supreme Prosecutor­s’ Office.

Under the law having sex with a married person who is not your spouse was punisha- ble by up to two years in prison. Nearly 53,000 South Koreans have been indicted on adultery charges since 1985, but prison terms have been rare.

The stock price of South Korean condom maker, Unidus, shot up after the court ruling, rising by the daily limit of 15 percent on South Korea’s Kosdaq market.

Intensifie­d debate

The debate over the adultery ban, which has been part of South Korea’s criminal law since 1953, intensifie­d in recent years as fast-changing social trends challenged conservati­ve traditiona­l values.

Supporters of the law had claimed it promotes monogamy and keeps families intact, while opponents argued that the government has no right to interfere with people’s private lives and determine their sexual affairs.

The court was acting on 17 complaints submitted from 2009 to last year by individu- als who have been punished for adultery or whose trials have been suspended, pending Thursday’s ruling.

Seven judges of the court, which rules on the constituti­onality of laws, supported the ruling, while two dissented, the court said. The support of six judges is needed to abolish a law.

“(The law) excessivel­y restricts citizens’ basic rights, such as the right to determine sexual affairs,” the court said in explaining that the law no longer contribute­d to overall public interest.

It was the fifth time the court had reviewed the adultery ban since 1990. The last time, in October 2008, five of the judges said the law was unconstitu­tional.

Legal experts have said that the adultery ban had lost much of its effect as people were increasing­ly settling their marriage disputes in civil courts. Adultery can be prosecuted only on a complaint made by a spouse who has filed for divorce. The case immediatel­y ends if the plaintiff drops the charge, which is common when financial settlement­s are reached.

“Recently, it was extremely rare for a person to serve a prison term for adultery,” said Lim Ji-bong, a law professor at Sogang University in Seoul. “The number of indictment­s has decreased as charges are frequently dropped.”

 ?? MONEY SHARMA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ??
MONEY SHARMA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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