Home > Music

Yoo Seung-jun to talk about controversial exile over military service

  • Published : May 12, 2015 - 14:22
  • Updated : May 12, 2015 - 14:22

Singer Yoo Seung-jun, whose successful career came to a halt 13 years ago over controversies about his military service, will talk in detail for the first time about the circumstances surrounding his decision not to enlist in the Korean army in an online live broadcast next week.

Korean-American Yoo, also known as Steve Yoo, was a K-pop sensation who debuted his musical career in 1997.

His career came to an abrupt end in 2002, when he decided not to enlist in the mandatory military service.

image
Singer Yoo Seung-jun, also known as Steve Yoo. (Yonhap)
He originally announced plans to enlist in 2002, but renounced his Korean citizenship after becoming a naturalized U.S. citizen shortly before his scheduled enlistment.

All able-bodied South Korean men are subject to mandatory military service for about two years in a country that is still technically at war with North Korea.

Yoo was widely criticized for his decision not to enlist, which many Koreans saw as an act of public betrayal after he had achieved fame and success in the country.

He was deported from South Korea for suspected evasion of his military service and banned from reentering the country. He is currently said to reside in Beijing.

Korean film director Shin Hyeon-won announced on Tuesday that Yoo would take part in a Q&A interview, which would be broadcast live online on May 19 from Hong Kong.

image
(Yonhap)
"While there is the issue of Koreans' sentiment (about the matter), there has never been a time that (Korea) has heard the unedited and full account of how and why Yoo Seung-joon made his decision at the time," said director Shin.

Shin, who is the head of eponymous film production company Shin Hyeon-won Productions, will conduct the interview.

Last year, Yoo said through social media that while he has no intention of restarting his musical career in Korea, "it pained (him) how he had not been able to step foot on Korean soil for the past 12 years."

The interview will be broadcast on Afreeca.com/shinpro on May 19 at 10:30 p.m. (local time).

By Yoon Sarah (sarah356@heraldcorp.com)

Most Read Stories : Week