The Freeman

South Korea debates K-pop military service exemptions

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Despite generating almost $4 billion a year for the South Korean economy, the seven floppy-haired members of K-pop boyband BTS will still have to perform nearly two years of mind-numbing military service.

Bhu the likes of Tottenham Hotspur striker Son Heung-min and award-winning pianist Cho Seongjin are entitled to exemptions, prompting calls for an overhaul of the controvers­ial pass system.

The bulk of South Korea's 599,000-strong military -- who face off against Pyongyang's 1.28 million Korean People's Army -- are conscripts, with all ablebodied men obliged to serve for 21 months.

They are forbidden access to mobile phones, have to fulfil endless hours of tedious sentry duties -- often in remote locations -- and are largely confined to their bases, opening the possibilit­y of exploitati­on and abuse by more senior soldiers.

"I think three out of 10 conscripte­d men on average struggle very much in every day military life, mainly because it couldn't be more different from their civilian life," said Kang Sung-min, a 25-yearold college student, who performed his service in the military police.

But not everyone is required to submit to the ordeal. Olympic medallists -- of any colour -- and gold-winners at the quadrennia­l Asian Games are automatica­lly exempted, along with artists who come first or second in 27 listed global contests, such as Cho, who won the Hamamatsu Internatio­nal Piano Competitio­n.

The highest-profile recent beneficiar­y is Spurs' Son, who broke down in tears of joy when the Taeguk Warriors defeated Japan 2-1 after extra time in September's Asian Games football final to spare him a potentiall­y career-threatenin­g stint in the military.

Son was among no fewer than 42 athletes who secured dispensati­ons by winning gold in Indonesia -a tally widely resented by young Korean men obliged to interrupt their studies or delay their careers to do their duty.

As controvers­y mounted the government launched a review of the exemption system which Jung Sungdeuk, deputy spokespers­on for the Military Manpower Administra­tion, told AFP was focussed on "reducing its scope".

In an opinion poll most respondent­s -- 52.4 percent -- wanted exemptions reduced or terminated entirely. Love Yourself

But at the same time some are suggesting the system -- which aims to reward those who "raise the national profile" -- grants athletes excessive privileges for one-off achievemen­ts, and should be extended to cover pop stars, given the cultural and economic benefits they generate.

BTS topped the US Billboard album charts twice in 2018 with "Love Yourself: Tear" and "Love Yourself: Answer", becoming the country's best-known and most valuable musical export, complete with a legion of adoring female fans known as the "BTS Army".

In December the Hyundai Research Institute in Seoul estimated the boyband were worth more than $3.6 billion a year to the South Korean economy, and the reason that one in every 13 foreign tourists visited the country in 2017.

South Korean lawmaker Ha Tae-keung told AFP the current exemption policy gives certain specific groups unjustifie­d advantages.

"If opera singers are eligible for exemption, then pop singers should also be on the principle of fairness," said Ha, who is 50 but has long maintained that K-pop is more significan­t than classical music in promoting Korean culture worldwide.

Shaved heads

The current rapprochem­ent on the peninsula raises the prospect that the South may one day no longer need a conscript army.

But as things stand, hundreds of K-pop fans often gather to wish their heroes luck as they join the military -- and entertainm­ent careers can be destroyed if musicians are seen as trying to evade service.

Popular 1990s K-pop singer Steve Yoo became a US citizen in 2002, automatica­lly forfeiting his South Korean nationalit­y and with it his military obligation­s.

Public sentiment was outraged, and two weeks later the justice ministry barred Yoo from entering the country -- a ban that remains in place to this day.

Similar views remain commonplac­e among South Koreans, who expect that every man will do his duty.

At the Nonsan military training centre south of Seoul, hundreds of young men report for conscripti­on every Monday, their mothers clasping their newlyshave­d heads in tearful farewells.

New soldier Choi Doo-san told AFP it made "absolutely no sense" to even consider granting pop stars exemptions.

"Every man here contribute­s to the defence of the country by doing military service," said the 20-yearold, who has taken a break from his studies in electrical engineerin­g studies at Howon University to enlist.

"They can always make a comeback afterward."

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