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Picture of the South Korean Constitutional Court in central Seoul, Thursday 21 October 2004.
The law was revoked on Thursday, February 26, and the activity adequately authorizes infidelity in the nation.

South Korea's Constitutional Court has struck down a 60-year-old law which criminalized additional conjugal sex.

The law was revoked on Thursday, February 26, and the activity adequately authorizes infidelity in the nation.

The choice was taken by nine-part seat which administered, by seven to two, that the 1953 statute went for ensuring customary family values was unlawful.

"Regardless of the possibility that infidelity ought to be censured as shameless, state force ought not mediate in people's private lives," directing Justice Park Han-Chul said.

"Open originations of people's rights in their sexual lives have experienced changes," Park said, as he conveyed the court's choice.

Under the 1953 law, infidelity could just be indicted on dissention from a harmed gathering, and a case could be shut instantly if the offended party dropped the charge.

Wrongdoers confronted a prison term of up to two years and in the previous six years, around 5,500 individuals have been accused of infidelity.

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