International Conscientious Objector Day South Korea’s Alternative Civilian Service Violates International Standards

SYRACUSE – As the world prepares for International Conscientious Objector Day on May 15, over 800 Jehovah’s Witnesses in South Korea have chosen to perform alternative civilian service (ACS) instead of compulsory military duties.

Jang Kyung-jin, a father of three children, ages four, eight and 11, spent more than five years facing uncertainties and court trials before his conscientious objection was recognized. He is now in the ACS programme and faces the additional three-year challenge of raising his children as an absentee father. Mr. Jang states: “Although I wish to serve my community to the best of my ability, I also realize that my children need me in their early stages of development. The restrictions of life in the prison grounds make that impossible.”

Under the current ACS format, these young men are prisoners by definition, because they are forced to live and work in prison facilities. The republic’s 36-month ACS is the longest in the world, twice the length of active military service, and thus considered punitive. Experts inside and outside of South Korea recognize the program violates an international covenant the republic is party to and have been calling on the government for reform.

For example, the commissioner of South Korea’s National Human Rights Commission, Mr. Doo-hwan Song, has stated publicly: “I deeply agree on the need to improve the [ACS] system to meet international human rights standards.”

South Korea’s ACS first made international headlines when it was introduced in 2019. Prior to that, for some 65 years, South Korean courts criminally convicted and imprisoned more than 19,000 conscientious objectors, mostly Jehovah’s Witnesses. As a result, for decades, South Korea was often internationally censured. However, the criticism has since shifted to the punitive nature of the ACS program, which is twice the length of prison time imposed by the republic prior to the 2019 provision.

This issue is close to home for JungMin Lee, of Flushing, Queens. Lee, who was born in South Korea, was 21 years old when he was sentenced to over two years in prison as a conscientious objector. “It was unjust,” he said. “I was locked up, not because of wrongdoing, but because I believed in God and was trying to do everything he asked me to do.”

According to Amnesty International: “South Korean conscientious objectors were promised a genuine alternative service. Instead, they are confronted with little more than an alternative punishment.”

The program is not congruent with the republic’s constitution, encroaching on a citizen’s freedom of thought, conscience, and religion as guaranteed in Article 19. Experts eagerly anticipate how the newly elected president and his administration will address the issue.

For more information about Jehovah’s Witnesses or conscientious objection in general, as well as the punitive nature of ACS in South Korea, email the Asia-Pacific Association of Jehovah’s Witnesses (APAJW): apajw.jp@jw.org.

Related Posts