On
June 20th
2013, the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family, along with female
lawmakers from the ruling Saenuri Party, blocked
the Defense Ministry’s latest proposal to give extra credits to
male job seekers who completed their compulsory military service.
The reason given by the Ministry of Gender Equality was that the
incentives that were proposed by the Defense Ministry, if passed,
would have infringed on the rights of women and the disabled.
Article
39, Section 1 of the
Republic of Korea Constitution states: “All citizens have the
duty of national defense under the conditions as prescribed by law.”
In
its current interpretation, “all citizens... prescribed by law”
means that all able-bodied
men between the ages of 18 to 35 must serve in the military.
Although women can certainly choose to enlist, women are not
subjected to the draft. Whereas men who are conscripted (unlike
those who choose to become non-commissioned officers after they
complete their minimum military service or those who go through the
ROTC route or those who graduate from any of the military
academies) start their military careers as privates, women who choose
to enlist start their military careers as either staff sergeants or
second lieutenants.
I
myself was conscripted and served in the Republic of Korea Army from
June 2011 to March 2013. For the sake of clarification, I was proud
to have served in the Army. Although I still feel like a foreigner
in my own country, it doesn’t change the fact that this is, indeed,
my country. And as an ardent anti-communist, I was more than willing
to do my part to defend my country.
That
being said, neither my military service nor the military service that
was carried out by any other conscript was voluntary. For twenty-one
months (longer for those who served in the past), my life was not
mine to live. Regardless of what any conscript may have thought
about the matter, it just didn’t matter. From the moment we take
our oaths to defend our homeland from enemies, both foreign and
domestic, until the day that we are discharged, our lives belong to
the government. No one in the Military Manpower Administration asked
our opinions on the morality of conscription. No one asked us if we
even wanted to be there. We were just there; property of the
Republic of Korea government.
Source: http://www.quickmeme.com/meme/3uxoky/ |
During
those twenty-one months, the government can do with our lives the way
it sees fit. And it does. Although I received differentiated
monthly paychecks after each promotion, on average, I earned about
US$100 per month. For a country whose economy is as developed
as Korea’s, you’d think that the government could afford to pay
its soldiers a livable wage. However, the thing about a forced
conscription is that the government is not compelled to pay very
much. When the choice that Korean men face is between twenty-one
months of military service for lousy pay or anywhere between eighteen
months to three years in prison for refusing to serve as well as
being ineligible for employment almost anywhere for being an ex-con
or for being a draft dodger, the rational choice becomes obvious
quite quickly.
As
such, when I read that the Ministry of Gender Equality blocked the
proposal to give extra credits to male job seekers who completed
their compulsory military service, I became a little irate.
That
being said, I had to recognize that I was thinking emotionally and in
my experience, such kind of thinking seldom leads to objectivity.
The
Ministry of Gender Equality may have been short-sighted in its
rationale that those extra credits would have “infringed on the
rights of women and the disabled.” However, that does not change
the fact that in an economy that is as patriarchal
as Korea’s, women do face far more discrimination based on their
gender than any civilized society ought to permit.
Despite
the fact that President Park Geun-hye is Korea’s first elected
female president, there appears to be little to suggest that women
are about to break the proverbial glass ceiling. In August 2011,
FinanceAsia published a list of the top
twenty women in finance in Asia. There wasn’t a single Korean
woman on that list. According to the
Korea Times, there are only a handful of female chief executive
officers (CEOs) among top Korean companies and half of them are
daughters of the parent groups’ chairmen.
Of
the three hundred seats in the National Assembly, only forty-seven of
those seats are held by women. That is a meager 15.7 percent of the
seats, a figure that puts Korea in 105th
place in a global ranking
of the proportion of women in parliament. This puts Korea with the
ranks of Albania, Burkina Faso, and North Korea. Korea has actually
gotten worse in this ranking because in 2011, Korea was at 80th
place.
Due
to the pressure of long working hours and the lack of maternity
support, women between the ages of 25 and 29 made up about at 69.8
percent of the workforce in 2010 while the figure dropped to 54.6
percent for women between the ages of 30 and 34. Furthermore, it is
estimated that women earn only about 70 percent of what their male
counterparts earn.
Source: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/50242166-ce60-11e2-8313-00144feab7de.html#axzz2WpaLwQHD |
While
it is true that the government has attempted to help women in the
workplace by introducing family-friendly policies such as expanding
tax benefits, providing longer
maternity leave, and establishing more
daycare centers for children of working mothers, it hasn’t
changed the fact that women compose a smaller and economically weaker
portion of the workforce. This is in spite of the fact that Korea is
the fastest aging country in the world combined with the fact that
its working-age population is sharply declining.
The
most likely reasons behind Korean women’s low participation in the
workforce, besides being compelled to stay home to raise children,
are Korea’s male-dominated corporate culture, which is reluctant to
make significant changes to their working environment; and Korea’s
Confucian traditions that have promoted deeply ingrained chauvinism.
When
the Defense Ministry proposed to give extra credits to male job
seekers who completed their compulsory military service, considering
the fact that only men must serve in the military, by definition,
those extra credits come at the expense of women. Furthermore,
considering the unfair social and cultural upper hand that Korean men
already have over women, a barrier which at this time seems almost
impossible to cross, it would appear that those extra credits would
only help to make an unjust social system remain unjust that much
longer.
But
what of the argument that it is unfair to only subject men to
compulsory military service? Considering the fact that countries
like Israel
and Norway
have extended compulsory military service to women, would it not make
sense for Korea to do the same? Would that not make things equal
between men and women?
I
served alongside women while I was in the Republic of Korea Army. I took orders
from female staff sergeants, sergeants first class, second
lieutenants, and first lieutenants. My company commander, a captain,
was a woman. I even had the rare pleasure of meeting a female
lieutenant colonel. As those women chose to enlist, unlike me who
only served for twenty-one months, the shortest time that one of
those women served was a little under three years. The lieutenant
colonel, who is still in the Army, has served for almost thirty
years.
Each
and every one of them commanded my utmost respect and admiration.
That these women exist ought to be a constant source of shame for
draft dodgers.
Source: http://api.ning.com/files/Dz3XGZp1879J8YxPaku8F-aiW5dWLxSBdhRlBmjPkBtlKurG4yt57CLp7UVqqCNfjELMFG-jU1nGfGnwTQddOQV0oNdjOFq0/soldier_on.jpg |
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