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Officials are weighing a reduction in the minimum age of criminal responsibility from 14 to 13 for certain offenses. A final decision will follow further public consultation.
yna.co.krThe government is considering lowering the minimum age of criminal responsibility by one year from the current 14, the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family said Tuesday. A final decision will be made after additional opinion-gathering. Currently, children under the age of 14 cannot be held criminally responsible.
If such children commit offenses, they are referred to community service programs or youth correction institutions.
In a report to the Cabinet, the ministry said it may revise the age range of criminal minority from the current "10 years old or older and under 14 years old" to "10 years old or older and under 13 years old" in cases of violent, serious or repetitive crimes.
The ministry presented the results of various public opinion polls to support proposed changes to the current law. In a poll of 199 adults and 43 youths, support for uniformly lowering the criminal age limit was the most common response, at 78 percent and 67 percent, respectively.
In a separate survey of 212 citizens who participated in the public deliberation process, support for conditionally lowering the age threshold came to 46.7 percent, up 0.9 percentage point from before the deliberations began. Support for uniformly lowering the age limit fell from 37.3 percent to 30.2 percent, while support for maintaining the current age threshold increased from 5.7 percent to 17 percent.
Under the current law, the most severe measure that can be imposed on a juvenile offender under the age of 14 is detention at a youth correction institution for up to two years. By contrast, juveniles aged 14 or older but under 19 who are convicted of a crime face a maximum statutory sentence of 15 years in prison.
The ministry also proposed establishing a new government-wide response system to prevent juvenile delinquency and address juvenile crimes.
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