<Anchor> The

death toll from the massive explosion in Lebanon has increased to 157. Hundreds of missing people have yet to be found, but citizens have been outraged by authorities for neglecting dangerous explosives for six years and have called for the government to retreat.

Reporter Kim Young-ah.

<Reporter>

Three children and a nanny are gathered by the window.

The child, who was overwhelmed by the strong wind, didn't know what to do, so he woke up and cried.

Ammonium nitrate, the cause of the catastrophe, was found to have been originally shipped to Africa, not Lebanon, in 2013.

When a cost problem occurred while trying to load more equipment from Beirut port, the owner abandoned the ship and the ammonium nitrate in the ship was seized and stored in a warehouse.

The Lebanese government has arrested 16 port officers for mismanagement.

However, an angry public sentiment to the government that left the high-risk explosives without measures is spreading to the government's resignation protests.

[Beirut Citizen: Help Lebanon, not the government. The government is not working for the people. This is obvious.] The

international community, along with humanitarian aid, has also called for a transparent investigation into the cause of the accident.

French President Maclon, who formerly ruled Lebanon, also visited the scene and said he needed reform in Lebanon.

[Macron/French President: Aid to Lebanon will not be passed on to the hands of corrupt people, but will be delivered transparently to the necessary sites.] The Korean

government will provide emergency aid such as medicines and daily necessities through the same name troops stationed in Lebanon. And delivered $1 million in humanitarian aid.

(Video Editing: Yonghwa Jung)