Summary: A South Korean court has convicted a woman and two doctors of murder for killing a newborn delivered via Caesarean section at 36 weeks. The baby was born alive and placed in a freezer, with medical records later falsified to show a stillbirth. The case highlights the legal vacuum surrounding abortion in South Korea, where the procedure was decriminalized in 2019 but specific regulations were never enacted.
Main Topics Covered: 1. The murder conviction of a woman and two doctors for killing a live-born infant during a late-term termination. 2. The details of the crime, including the live birth and the falsification of medical records. 3. The context of South Korea's unclear abortion laws following decriminalization and the lack of enacted regulations. 4. The judicial reasoning, which considered both the severity of the crime and the lack of societal support for the woman.