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Health

South Korea Is Lifting Its 66-Year-Old Ban on Abortions

In a landmark ruling, a South Korean court has ordered lawmakers to revise the ban by the end of 2020.
anti-abortion law protesters in Seoul
Anti-abortion law protesters in front of the constitutional court in Seoul on April 11, 2019. The banner reads "We are not a tool for giving birth."  Photo by Kim Hong-Ji/REUTERS

Yesterday, hundreds of protesters from both pro-life and pro-choice groups gathered outside the Constitutional Court in Seoul as they waited for a decision that will change the lives of women in South Korea.

At 2 PM, the South Korean court ruled that the country’s abortion ban is unconstitutional and has ordered for the law to be revised by the end of 2020. The ban was introduced in 1953.

“The abortion ban limits women’s rights to pursue their own destinies and violates their rights to health by limiting their access to safe and timely procedures," the court said in a statement as quoted by The Guardian. "Embryos completely depend on the mother’s body for their survival and development, so it cannot be concluded that they are separate, independent living beings entitled to the right to life."

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While the decision is a victory for pro-choice campaigners, who fought for nearly seven decades to have the ban lifted, the fight is far from over.


While you're here, watch our 2016 documentary on backstreet abortions in the Philippines:


The current law criminalizing abortion will remain effective until it is

revised in 2020.

If lawmakers fail to introduce new legislation by the deadline, the ban would be repealed.

Since 1953, abortion is an illegal practice in the predominantly Christian country. It's only allowed when the pregnancy puts the woman’s life at risk or is a result of rape and incest. Even then, a woman is required to obtain permission from her spouse to undergo the abortion procedure.

Under the current law, women who undergo illegal abortion face a maximum one-year sentence or a fine of up to two million won ($1,700 USD). Meanwhile, doctors who perform illegal abortions can face a prison sentence of up to two years. The enforcement of the law, however, is rare. Though there were as many as 50,000 estimated illegal abortions in 2017 alone, according to a report by the New York Times, only around 80 women and doctors went to trial for their involvement in abortions between 2012 and 2017. Only one of them ended up serving time in prison, while the rest received fines or suspended jail terms.

The law has been brought to court multiple times. The latest ruling was made in 2012 when the court ruled in favour of the current law. The latest push to make amendments to the law came after a doctor—who was prosecuted in 2017 for performing almost 70 abortions—challenged the issue to court.

Although a survey has shown that the public’s attitude towards abortion seems to have shifted over the years, there’s still a lot of resistance from Christian activists groups that also consist of anti-abortion doctors. The groups even run a hotline for people to report clinics and doctors that perform illegal abortions.

South Korea’s president, Moon Jae-in, who is a liberal and a Christian, has not stated clearly if he supports the law. However, in response to the country’s embrace of the #MeToo movement, he has vowed to lead South Korea toward a society where "sexual equality and women's rights are realized, and the dignity of all people is respected."