<Anchor>



In the past, there are facilities where people were forcibly dragged and imprisoned and labored under the military regime.

A representative example is the Busan Brothers Welfare Center, and our 'Panda to the End' team exclusively obtained the results of a government service study that found similar incidents had occurred in other accommodation facilities across the country at the time.



First, reporter Won Jong-jin will summarize the contents.



<Reporter>



[Hwang Song-hwan / Prison Facility Victim: This one, this one is also right and has no teeth.]



[Kim Se-geun/Concentration Facility Victim: Well

, 'ferry boat'

and

'Hiroshima'

such spirits are unspeakable.

can't forget

I still have that

nightmare

while sleeping .]



[Hwang Song-hwan / Concentration Facility Victim: Those people, not people.

devil or devil.

]



[Kim Se-geun/Victim of Concentration Facility: There is a body warehouse with a blue gate.

Then, when you die, roll up two military blankets and take them there...

Five or six corpses go out a week.

I saw it firsthand.]



Two people talking about similar experiences when they were living at the Seoul Children's Shelter 50 years ago.



The scars from that time are still clear on the head, and even now, it is difficult to sustain life without taking medications for panic disorder and claustrophobia.



The more you hate to recall, the more vivid your memories.



[Kim Se-geun / Prison Facility Victim: Even if I dragged him to the mountain during the day (rape me).

A person called 'The Bucket Straw'

.

That person was really bad.

]



For the first time, the results of a government service study on the conditions of collective accommodation facilities across the country have been published.



The primary study subjects were 11 accommodation facilities in Seoul, Gyeonggi, Incheon, and Gangwon.



Through internal records of various facilities and interviews with prisoners and workers, the research team concluded that human rights violations existed in all detention facilities, both public and private, throughout the entire stages of admission and detention.



In some facilities, more than 80-90% of people who came in through police crackdowns had people related to them, such as family members.



This means that they were not accommodated to protect the homeless orphans or the disabled, but at stations, bus stops, and plazas, the lower classes of the city were defined as so-called 'vagrants' and cracked down at random.

[Kim Jae-hyung/Professor, Department of Culture and Liberal Arts, Korea Broadcasting and Communication University: People who deserve moral punishment were also caught indiscriminately



and put in a facility.]



.



For example, in 1983 and 1984, 91 men with an average age of 38 from the Busan Brothers Welfare Center moved to the Incheon Samyeongwon, and returned to the Brothers Welfare Center 90 to 200 days later.



It was mobilized for the construction of the Samyoungwon building, which was just before receiving the facility permit.



In the background, it was confirmed that there was a government guideline to reduce construction costs by using resident labor to expand accommodation facilities nationwide.



The research team concludes that because the state used the collective detention facilities as a monitoring and control network for the urban lower class and minorities, it was a structure that inevitably caused human rights violations in all detention facilities.

[ Kim Jae-hyung/Professor, Department of Culture and Liberal Arts, Korea National Open University:

I think it can be said that the state and facilities

did not



have any will or program to restore them to society .]

As such, ex officio investigations by government agencies and discussions on compensation and compensation have emerged as tasks.

(Video coverage: Kim Tae-hoon, Video editing: Kim Jun-hee, VJ: Kim Jun-ho, Design: Shim Soo-hyun·Kim Hong-sik)