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		BTS rekindle debate about military service in South Korea
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		 [July 05, 2022] 
		By Hyonhee Shin and Yeni Seo 
 SEOUL (Reuters) - A surprise decision by 
		South Korean boy band BTS to take a break from live shows has rekindled 
		debate about mandatory military service in a country setting global 
		pop-culture trends while facing a decades old Cold War threat.
 
 Military service is hugely contentious in South Korea where all 
		able-bodied men aged between 18 and 28 are meant to serve for about two 
		years as part of efforts to defend against a hostile North Korea.
 
 Over the years particular categories of men have won exemptions - either 
		allowed to put off service for a certain time or allowed to do shorter 
		service - including men who win a medal at the Olympics or Asian Games 
		and classical musicians and dancers who win a top prize at certain 
		competitions.
 
 Under a 2019 revision of the law, globally recognised K-pop stars were 
		allowed to put off their service until the age of 30.
 
 Parliament is now debating a new amendment that would allow K-pop stars 
		to do just three weeks of military training.
 
		
		 
		For BTS and in particular for the band's oldest member, known to fans as 
		Jin, the outcome of the deliberations in parliament will be momentous.
 While the band's management company has long presented the seven BTS 
		members as keen to do their duty, the reality of two years of full-time 
		military service is coming sharply into focus as time ticks by.
 
 Jin, 29, has put off his service for as long as he can and is facing the 
		imminent prospect of a full stint - meaning two years out of the public 
		eye - when he turns 30.
 
 For Jin and his band mates, waiting for parliament to decide has been 
		hugely stressful and is the main reason they are taking a break from 
		performing, said Yoon Sang-hyun, the lawmaker who proposed the amendment 
		to include three-week training for K-pop stars.
 
 "The members cited exhaustion and the need for rest as the main reason 
		but the real reason was Jin's military service," Yoon told Reuters.
 
 The extent to which BTS had raised South Korea's profile around the 
		world through "soft power" should be taken into account when considering 
		their military service, Yoon said.
 
 "BTS has done a job that would take more than 1,000 diplomats to do," he 
		said.
 
 'HARD TIME'
 
 Since their 2013 debut, BTS have became a worldwide sensation with their 
		upbeat hits and social campaigns aimed at empowering youth.
 
 BTS became the first Asian band to win artist of the year at the 
		American Music Awards last year, and they met U.S. President Joe Biden 
		at the White House in May to discuss hate crimes targeting Asians.
 
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			K-pop boy band BTS member Jin poses for photographs during a photo 
			opportunity promoting their new single 'Butter' in Seoul, South 
			Korea, May 21, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji 
            
			 Choi Kwang-ho, secretary-general of 
			the Korea Music Content Association, a coalition of K-pop agencies 
			including the band's Big Hit management company, said the wait for a 
			decision was excruciating.
 "The young artists have been tortured with hopes that never come 
			true," Choi said.
 
 A Gallup poll in April showed nearly 60% of South Koreans supported 
			the bill exempting globally successful K-pop stars from full 
			military service, with 33% opposed.
 
 The band and their management company have steered 
			clear of the debate but in April Big Hit official Lee Jin-hyung told 
			a news conference in Las Vegas that some band members were having a 
			"hard time" because of "uncertainties" over the parliament debate. 
			He called for a decision.
 Jin, asked hours later about Lee's comments, said he was letting Big 
			Hit handle the issue though adding that what Lee said reflected his 
			view.
 
 K-pop is not the only sector hoping for a change in the rules. The 
			new administration of President Yoon Suk-yeol is considering 
			exemptions for some engineers and researchers in the computer chip 
			and other tech fields.
 
 The Ministry of Defence pointed to a constitutional requirement for 
			all citizens to do their duty to defend the country.
 
 "Adding pop culture artists in the scope of art and sports personnel 
			who are eligible for the exemption requires careful consideration in 
			terms of fairness," a ministry official said.
 
 Some young men also wonder about the case for special treatment for 
			BTS.
 
 Seo Chang-jun, 20, said he understood why Olympic winners got an 
			exemption but wasn't sure about BTS.
 
			
			 "The Olympic Games are national events where all Koreans cheer for 
			the same team but not everyone is a BTS fan. Many people aren't 
			interested in them," he told Reuters. 
 (Reporting by Hyonhee Shin, Yeni Seo and Minwoo Park; Editing by 
			Robert Birsel)
 
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