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69 The current legislation is a combination of  two laws, the first from the 1953 Korean  Criminal Code prohibiting abortion entire- ly, and another from the 1973 Maternal and  Child Health Act superimposing the system  of exceptions on top of the ban. Since their  enactment, the laws and their application have  been plagued by incongruencies — the gov- ernment energetically promoted abortion from  the early 1960s through the 1990s to prevent  overpopulation — but there hasn’t been much  movement toward changing the rules. Until  now.   “As of 2010, it can no longer be said that  there is a lack of discussion on abortion. …  It’s raging in newspapers, chat rooms and in  the halls of government,” said Andrew Wol- man, assistant professor of law at Hankuk  University of Foreign Studies and author of  “Abortion in Korea: A Human Rights Perspec- tive on the Current Debate Over Enforcement  of the Laws Prohibiting Abortion.” Korea’s abortion debate differs from the  West in that it doesn’t focus as much on the  morality conversation; questions of religion  and morality are present, but they’re simmer- ing underneath. “The debate centers on whether the govern- ment should enforce the existing law,” Wol- man said. “Those in favor of a crackdown  come from two camps: government officials  and obstetricians.”  Doctors have been vocal opponents since  the beginning, and now they are the loudest  voice against the practice, citing issues of  criminality and making it their business to call  a penalty on what they see as a flawed system.  “The income from performing illegal abortions  has become a fundamental part of our prac- tice. … These days, one cannot run a clinic  without performing them,” said Dr. Anna Choi,  founder of the antiabortion group GYNob. The group boasts a membership of near- ly 700 doctors who all agree with Dr. Choi’s  comments to the National Catholic Register  back in 2010: “This is a tragic situation and  a serious problem for our society. Not seeing  the fetus as a living being promotes a culture  of contempt for life. … We’ve become indif- ferent to these illegal procedures.”  GYNob wishes to abolish abortions in Korea  and has already set up a hotline to report doc- tors who perform them. The Catholic Church  and other pro-life religious groups have rallied  behind GYNob, though the majority of the  group’s members have no religious affiliation.  Politics and the birthrate debate Abortion! It’s never easy. Abortion is illegal in Korea. Those who have either had or performed an abortion  can be punished. It is important to both prevent abortion and have the right  perspective on life. Bye, Mom... Three hundred forty thousand abortions are performed every year, and that many  lives are lost. We have to protect the lives of those trying to make their frst trip  into the world. ‘as of 2010, it can no longer be said that there is a lack of  discussion on abortion. … it’s raging in newspapers, chat  rooms and in the halls of government.’ Andrew Wolman, assistant professor of law, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies