South Korea and Sri Lanka could cooperate in punishing Sri Lankan perpetrators.

On SBS 's' I want to know' broadcast on the 3rd night, I went to Sri Lanka to re - examine the rape case in Daegu 20 years ago and to grasp the case properly.

In 1996, Chung Eun-hee (a pseudonym), a college freshman from Daegu, was drunk with college buddies at dawn and was found dead on the highway at 5 am after he missed his whereabouts.

At the time, there was no question in the bag, and there was no underwear in the jeans that Mr. Since the accident of Mr. Eun-hee, my friends and my sisters have picked up the remains of Mr. Eun-Hee by the Kuma Expressway.

They asked for re-enactment, saying that they were raped before a traffic accident. However, he did not accept the possibility of sexual assault as a result of the autopsy that he had not detected semen in his body.

When I asked the undergarment, which was supposed to be underwear of Eun-Hee, in the noodles, it was detected semen. However, the underwear was not of Mr. Eunhee 's father claimed her constitutional wish and was accepted as the underwear of Mr. Eun - hee, where she collected the DNA of the assailant again.

So in 2013, the Sri Lankan K was sued as a defendant. But the perpetrators were three. Among foreign workers working in the industrial complex near Daegu, there were rumors that three Sri Lankans raped drunk women late at night.

Two other Sri Lankans, other than Mr K, had been deported because of illegal stay. K has been sued for the Tuk - tuk - do - special rape charges because of the expiration of the allegation of rape. However, due to lack of evidence of burglary, the prosecution was acquitted in three trials.

"I want to know" team went to Sri Lanka to meet those who returned home. K was leaving with only information that he currently operates a supermarket in the city of Sri Lanka Candy. The residents who met there asked about Mr. K, and reluctantly commented on him.

Police in the Daegu area also recognized K as a dangerous person and explained that he was associated with the violence organization in Sri Lanka. Another accomplice, Sri Lankan Hassan (pseudonym), said of the day, "I do not remember well."

However, Sri Lanka's Justice Department announced that it would prosecute K and other accomplices with sexual assault and showed its intention to punish it by its own laws. It was the result of the Sri Lanka CID cooperating with South Korean prosecutors asking the Sri Lankan Justice Department to cooperate with the prosecutors and forensic scientists after forming a team.

Sri Lanka's Justice Ministry said there is a possibility of indictment against two other people identified as accomplices. In Korea, the statute of limitations has expired and the evidence has been insufficient to be released for innocence, but Sri Lanka law allows them to be punished. The bereaved families heard this news and said that they are now ready to leave.

(SBS funE Cho Yeon Hee editor)