South Korea drops proposed orientation discrimination

Illustrated rainbow pride flag on a white background.

When South Korea’s Ministry of Justice proposed in early October a federal law that would prohibit certain forms of discrimination, sexual orientation and a wide range of other categories were included.

According to Democratic Labour Party officials and news reports, however, the current version of the law has been changed to exclude protection from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, military status, nationality, language, appearance, family type, ideology, criminal or detention record and educational status.

New York City-based Human Rights Watch recently pressed the South Korean cabinet to re-introduce those protections.

“The current version of the bill is a disappointment,” Jessica Stern, researcher in the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender programme at HRW, said in a release.

“A supposed landmark non-discrimination law has been hollowed out to exclude Koreans, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, who are in need of protection.”

The proposed new law was intended to strengthen the existing National Human Rights Commission Act, which already bars discrimination on the basis of most categories, including sexual orientation, by requiring the President and other levels of government to develop plans to eliminate discrimination.

But as revised by the justice ministry, the new law would actually remove protections for many groups.

The inclusion of sexual orientation in particular had come under attack in South Korea.

The Congressional Missionary Coalition, a group of Christian right members of the National Assembly, plans to hold forums in November to oppose the law.

A petition, spearheaded by an organisation called the Assembly of Scientists Against Embryonic Cloning, was sent to all branches of government claiming that if the bill becomes law, “homosexuals will try to seduce everyone, including adolescents; victims will be forced to become homosexuals; and sexual harassment by homosexuals will increase.”

Such untrue and prejudicial allegations are not only insulting and degrading to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Koreans, but they create a climate of hostility and hatred that can endanger their well-being.

International human rights law is clear that discrimination based on sexual orientation is prohibited, and South Korea’s treaty obligations require it to enforce that prohibition.

South Korea has previously demonstrated international leadership on this issue.

At the third session of the United Nations Human Rights Council, South Korea, along with 53 other nations, delivered a statement recognising the abundance of evidence of human rights violations on the basis of sexual orientation and calling on the UN to give these issues attention.

With respect to transgendered people, while the South Korean Supreme Court ruled last year that individuals who have undergone sex reassignment surgery are entitled to change their legal identity, it seems unlikely that the proposed new law would cover discrimination against them.

Human Rights Watch called on South Korea to ensure that the law would extend to discrimination based on gender identity.

“South Korea has previously shown leadership by condemning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, but this commitment must be consistent,” said Stern.

“The government should maintain its track record and reintroduce comprehensive categories for protection.”

Chrys Hudson © 2007 GayWired.com; All Rights Reserved.