‘Breaking a military marriage’: 10 months jail for man in China who had affair with wife of PLA soldier on active duty

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‘Breaking a military marriage’: 10 months jail for man in China who had affair with wife of PLA soldier on active duty

Published: 9:00am, 14 Feb, 2024

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A court in China has jailed a man for 10 months after he admitted to having slept and cohabited with the wife of a soldier currently serving in the People’s Liberation Army. Photo: SCMP composite/Sohu

A man in China has been sentenced to 10 months in prison for destroying a “military marriage” by dating and cohabiting with the wife of a serving People’s Liberation Army (PLA) soldier.

China’s Criminal Law stipulates that anyone cohabiting or marrying another person in knowledge that he or she is the spouse of a PLA soldier will face imprisonment of up to three years.

The punishment is so harsh because the state is obliged not only to give special protection to the marriage of a soldier, but also to respect and protect the honour of serving members of the military, according to China’s National Defence Law.

The People’s Court Daily reported that a man surnamed Ma was handed the 10-month jail term by a court in Dunhua, in the northeastern province of Jilin, for the crime of destroying a military marriage.

China’s National Defence law serves to respect and protect the honour of serving members of the military.

Ma met a woman surnamed Yuan, who was his former colleague, in 2022, and the pair had sex the same day.

When Yuan told Ma she was married and that her husband was a PLA soldier, Ma did not take it seriously at first and told others that Ma was his girlfriend.

Some time later, when Yuan told Ma it is a crime to fornicate with her, Ma decided to end the romantic relationship immediately.

However, they dated again a month later because Ma said he could not help missing the woman. They then lived together at Ma’s home.

Yuan then asked her husband, who was living in another city while serving in the PLA, for a divorce, which raised his suspicion that she was having an affair.

Li then checked surveillance cameras in their residential community when he returned home for a holiday, witnessed her infidelity and called in the police.

Ma’s admission of the crime in court meant he was given a more lenient sentence, the report said.

An editorial in the People’s Court Daily said soldiers generally live far away from home and can not take care of their families. Therefore, it is “immoral and criminal” to take advantage of their absence to destroy their marriage.

“With their marriage jeopardized, soldiers’ mindset will be affected and the army’s fighting capacity will be weakened,” the editorial said.

“As a result, it is vital to protect the stability of a military marriage. Any activity which leads to breaking a military marriage should be punished seriously.”

The country’s protection for military marriages ends when their service finishes.

In 2018, mainland actress Zhang Xinyu married a PLA officer and received praise from China Discipline Inspection Newspaper which is administered by the Communist Party’s Central Commission for Discipline Committee.

Besides soldiers’ marriages, China’s laws also grant children of PLA members soldiers some additional scores in important tests, such as the high school and university entrance examinations.
 

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that is why china has momentum and will remain in it, having principles and acting in accordance give stability of society and guarantees to the citizens that they will protected from affairs like this without overlapping endless drama.
 
Too much State regulation in the private affairs of individuals. If a person breaks up a marriage, the offended spouse can pursue a damages claim. Perhaps these laws are due to China requiring to recruit soldiers. In a non militaristic State, these laws would be regarded as too much limitation of the right to freely associate
 
calm down guys, china never claimed that they are liberal democracy and you can not observe their society trough those lenses in order to draw out correct conclusion.
 
Too much State regulation in the private affairs of individuals. If a person breaks up a marriage, the offended spouse can pursue a damages claim. Perhaps these laws are due to China requiring to recruit soldiers. In a non militaristic State, these laws would be regarded as too much limitation of the right to freely associate
This is a rare case and that's why it made an international news, in most cases soliders just let them go and won't take them to the court.
 
calm down guys, china never claimed that they are liberal democracy and you can not observe their society trough those lenses in order to draw out correct conclusion.

It's not a matter of liberalism or democracy. Many democratic States have too much theological influence, mostly certain European and Muslim nation and of relatively recent India. I've never been to China but I am told that they have some pretty impressive laws regarding the rights of individuals.
 
It's not a matter of liberalism or democracy. Many democratic States have too much theological influence, mostly certain European and Muslim nation and of relatively recent India. I've never been to China but I am told that they have some pretty impressive laws regarding the rights of individuals.
actually it is, liberal democracy in west is often conflated as synonym for democracy itself.
china claim that they are democracy too under their own communist ideological pretext.
 

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