<Anchor>

Victims of national violence found the National Assembly today (29th). I have been asked to pass the bill, saying that there are many past issues that have not received people's attention or that have been stopped because the truth has been revealed.

What was the answer of the National Assembly to this?

<Reporter>

The 79-year-old Kwak Jung-ryeol, the so-called Parliamentary Security and Welfare Act, has taken a difficult step to examine the bill to revive the committee for the past history commissioned for reconciliation in 2010.

[Kwon Je-ryeol / Korean war civilian massacre victim survivor: I saw who my father saw in front of the shot ... Let's ask what my father died for ... ]

It is a scream to ask the father of the victim who was driven to the left during the Korean War to reveal his unfair death.

[Kwon Je-ryeol / Korean war civilian massacre victim survivor: (my father) kills without law ... I am a person who has a neurosis in this law. I want to ask if we know how we lived.

The Truth and Reconciliation Council, which was launched by the Participatory Government, was ineffective due to a short period of time, but several prolonged legislative measures have been proposed, but it has been abolished.

[Kim Ha Jong / Korean War Civilian Genocide Victims: Our bereaved families are old. Because I am 87 years old ... I would like to ask the senator to solve the problem of parents. If you would like to extend the period of ... ]

The results of the bereaved families were also terrible.

Korean lawmakers refused to examine the bill, saying the normalization of the National Assembly was the first.

In the end, it was true that the extension bill could not pass the so-called bill, and the ruling party decided to deal with it after the reopening of the National Assembly, but the results can not be guaranteed.

(Image coverage: Lee Seung Hwan, image editing: Kim Junhee)