South Korea’s government is making it easier to get an abortion

Feminists do not think its proposal goes far enough. Opponents of abortion are also up in arms

Nov 21st 2020
SEOUL

The worst thing about it was the shame. “I worried about how other people would judge me for doing something illegal, what my parents and my friends would say if they found out,” says Kim Min-kyoung, a 24-year-old student from Seoul who decided to terminate a pregnancy last year. The second-worst thing was paying: how to find $1,000 without prompting awkward questions.

Both these problems should soon be slightly less severe for women in South Korea. If a bill under consideration by the National Assembly becomes law, a woman will be able to obtain an abortion up to 14 weeks into a pregnancy with ease. From 15 to 24 weeks in, she will still be able to do so provided she attends a counselling session and waits 24 hours before making a final decision. Her reason for ending the pregnancy must also fall into one of a series of approved categories. This regime would greatly expand access to abortion and thus put an end to expensive illicit procedures. It has prompted an unsurprising backlash from anti-abortion activists, but feminists are not entirely happy either.

Continued, behind paywall: https://www.economist.com/asia/2020/11/21/south-koreas-government-is-making-it-easier-to-get-an-abortion


S. Korea’s revised abortion rules anger all sides

Updated: 2020-10-15

The clash between the right to choose and right to life continues here in South Korea. The constitutional court's historic ruling last year that abortions should not be criminalized didn't end the contentious debate.

Under the ruling, the country has until the end of 2020 to revise its 1953 law on terminating pregnancies. The government has introduced an amendment that doesn't repeal the ban on abortion completely, but revises parts of the Criminal Act and the Mother and Child Health Act to allow terminations up to 14 weeks, and up to 24 weeks provided that there are medical or socio-economic reasons approved by the doctor.

Continued: http://www.arirang.co.kr/News/News_View.asp?nseq=266309


South Korea’s abortion law revision plan sparks controversy

Conservatives and religious groups are facing off with women's rights organizations in a fierce debate over changes to a 1953 law that makes abortion illegal.

13.10.2020
Julian Ryall

The South Korean government has announced plans to reverse the blanket ban on abortions that was imposed in 1953 and revise the law to permit a termination before the 14th week of a pregnancy. The proposed changes have been strongly criticized by both sides of the argument.

Last week, the government announced that it will alter sections of both the Criminal Act and the Mother and Child Health Act that refer to abortion. The changes will also allow abortions up to a maximum of 24 weeks for women with extenuating medical or economic circumstances, if a genetic disorder is identified in the baby or if they have been the victim of a rape.

Continued: https://www.dw.com/en/south-korea-abortion-controversy/a-55253968


South Korea – Progressive groups, women oppose ‘regressive’ abortion bill

By Park Han-na
Published : Oct 11, 2020

Controversy has intensified over the government’s bill to allow abortion until the 14th week of pregnancy, as progressive groups say the new law would remain in violation of women’s rights and the Constitution.

As a follow-up to the Constitutional Court‘s landmark ruling last year to revise the ban on abortion, the government unveiled its plan on Oct. 7 to press no criminal charges against those who have an abortion until the 14th week of pregnancy.

Continued: http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20201011000182


South Korea – Gov’t push with anti-abortion laws triggers opposition movement online

Posted : 2020-10-09
By Kim Se-jeong

The Korean government's current focus on abortion laws has triggered women here to launch an online movement under the hashtag #IHadAnAbortion.

"I had an abortion. Because it is a
crime in Korea, I never talked in public about how I dealt with my unwanted
pregnancy and what I had to endure after having the abortion. Now I will do so
without hesitation! #IHadAnAbortion" Lee Lang, an independent music singer-songwriter,
wrote on Twitter recently in Korean.

Continued: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2020/10/113_297330.html


South Korea proposes compromise abortion law after landmark court ruling

Oct 7, 2020
By Sangmi Cha

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea on Wednesday proposed allowing abortion up until the fourteenth week of pregnancy as part of a new law designed to comply with a landmark ruling by the constitutional court that struck down a decades-long ban.

South Korea criminalised abortion in 1953 when its leaders wanted to boost the population, but exceptions to the law were introduced in 1973, including when the pregnancy was caused by a sexual crime.

Continued: https://www.thechronicleherald.ca/news/world/south-korea-proposes-compromise-abortion-law-after-landmark-court-ruling-506627/


South Korea – Gov’t seeks to allow abortion until 14th week of pregnancy

2020-10-06

The government will propose revisions to the existing laws to allow abortion until the 14th week of pregnancy, judicial sources said Tuesday.

They said the justice ministry will announce its plan to revise the Criminal Act and the Mother and Child Health Act on Wednesday as a follow-up to a Constitutional Court ruling in April last year.

Continued: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2020/10/113_297111.html


S. Korea – Women’s rights groups call for complete abolishment of anti-abortion law

Posted : 2020-10-01
By Lee Hyo-jin

Women's rights activists are urging the government to take swift action to revise current laws to ensure the complete decriminalization of abortion, regardless of the length of pregnancy.

The country's 67-year-old Anti-abortion Law was declared unconstitutional by a landmark ruling of the Constitutional Court in April last year, which stated that banning abortion in the early stages of pregnancy was a violation of the right to self-determination.

Continued: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/nation/2020/10/251_296847.html


South Korea – Justice ministry committee recommends repealing anti-abortion law

August 21, 2020
By Woo Jae-yeon

SEOUL, Aug. 21 (Yonhap) -- South Korea's justice ministry said Friday it is working on revising a 67-year-old criminal law that made abortion a crime punishable by up to three years in prison.

The Committee of Gender Equality under the ministry made its first policy recommendation that the ministry should recognize women's right to choose as a basic human right and move closer to repealing the decades-old law.

Continued: https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20200821008600315


South Korean Clinic Performed Abortion on Wrong Woman, Police Say

South Korean Clinic Performed Abortion on Wrong Woman, Police Say

By Choe Sang-Hun
Published Sept. 24, 2019

SEOUL, South Korea — An expectant mother who visited a medical clinic in Seoul, South Korea, last month to receive a nutritional shot woke up hours later to learn she had mistakenly been given an abortion, the police said on Wednesday.

The police said they planned to ask prosecutors to indict the clinic’s doctor and a nurse on charges of inflicting accidental injury. The staff, the police said, administered anesthesia and performed an abortion on the woman, a Vietnamese citizen, who was six weeks pregnant.

Continued: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/24/world/asia/south-korea-abortion-mistake.html