Go Practice Adultery, Korean Court Legalizes Cheating

This follows a ruling by a South Korean court abolishing a 62-year-old law criminalizing extra-marital affairs.

The Constitutional Court ruled that the law suppressed personal freedoms and this could affect many of the over 5,400 people who have been charged with adultery since 2008 when the court upheld the legislation.

"The precondition of human dignity and right to pursue happiness is for each individual to have their rights to choose their fate," the court ruled, saying that one's sex life is private. "And the rights to choose their fate includes rights to be engaged in sex and choosing the partner."

Up until then, anyone who cheated on their spouse could be charged and, if convicted, spent up to two years in prison.

The same penalty also applied to "the one who fornicated with the" cheating spouse, according to the Constitutional Court's website.

Any current charges against those people could be thrown out and those who have received guilty verdicts will be eligible for retrials, according to a court official who declined to be named, citing office rules.

CHANGING SOCIAL TRENDS

Under the law, having sex with a married person who is not your spouse was punishable 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 Corp. shot up after the court ruling, surging by the daily limit of 15 percent on South Korea's Kosdaq market.

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 traditional values.

Supporters of the law said it promoted monogamy and kept families intact, while opponents argued that the government had no right to interfere in people's private lives and sexual affairs.

The court was acting on 17 complaints submitted from 2009 to 2014 by people who had been charged under the law.

"Seven judges in the court, which rules on the constitutionality of laws, supported the ruling, while two dissented," the court said.

The dissenting view said that legalizing adultery hurts efforts to promote family in South Korea. It points to statistics showing 40% of South Korean marriages since 2000 end in divorce. And between 2000 and 2006, at least 47.1% of those divorces came about after one or more spouses cheated.

"Adultery and fornication go beyond a person's rights (and) intrude on other people and the community," the Justices wrote. "Considering that the relationship between husband and wife is the fundamental element of a family, the country and the society should legally protect and maintain (this) relationship."

MARRIAGE DISPUTES

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, explaining that the legislation no longer contributed to overall public interest.

It was the fifth time the court had reviewed the adultery ban since 1990.

In October 2008, five of the judges said the law was unconstitutional.

Legal experts say the adultery ban had lost much of its effect because people increasingly settled marriage disputes in civil courts.

Adultery could be prosecuted only on a complaint made by a spouse who had filed for divorce.

The case immediately ended if the plaintiff dropped the charge, which was common when financial settlements were 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."

South Korea, along with Taiwan, had been a rare non-Muslim nation to criminalize adultery, according to Park So-hyun, an official at the Korea Legal Aid Center for Family Relations, a government-funded counseling office.

CONFUCIAN HERITAGE

Many legal experts had predicted that the court would abolish the adultery ban, but the decision was still controversial in a country that remains greatly influenced by a conservative Confucian heritage, despite decades of Western influence.

Park Dae Chul, a lawmaker for the conservative ruling party, Saenuri, said it respects the court's decision but that the country needs to strengthen its efforts to protect marriage and the family system.

Lawmaker Yoo Eun Hye of the liberal opposition New Politics Alliance for Democracy said the decision reflected social changes.

Last year the government banned access to Ashley Madison, a dating website for people who want to cheat on their partners, over concerns that the service could encourage adultery.

The Korea Communications Standards Commission, the country's Internet censorship body, said it has not decided whether to lift the ban on the website.

By Maureen Murimi

Source: CNN News, Yahoo News

Tags:

Maureen Murimi South Korea adultery

Want to send us a story? Submit on Wananchi Reporting on the Citizen Digital App or Send an email to wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke or Send an SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp on 0743570000

Leave a Comment

Comments

No comments yet.

latest stories