Cheating on your spouse can land you in jail in South Korea
South Korean actress Ok So-ri cheated on her husband with a singer has called on the country’s Constitutional Court to overturn the statute that can send a person to jail for up to two years for adultery. South Korean prosecutors on Wednesday demanded that the actress to be thrown in jail for a year and a half for having an affair.
South Korean enacted its adultery law more than 50 years ago to protect women who had few rights in the male-dominated society but critics say now it is a draconian measure no longer fit for a country with an advanced civil and family court system.
“The accuser (her husband) wanted a severe sentence,” prosecutors said in court as to why they are seeking 18 months in jail for Ok, Yonhap news agency reported. Prosecutors were not available for comment.
Ok’s lawyers were also not immediately available for comment but they have said in a petition to Constitutional Court: “The adultery law … has degenerated into a means of revenge by the spouse, rather than a means of saving a marriage.”
Last month, the Constitutional Court said adultery damaged the social order and therefore was a criminal offence.
It is rare for courts to jail adulterers but that has not stopped several thousand angry spouses from filing criminal complaints each year.





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