[Hyunjun Go's News]



<Anchor>



It is time for current affairs critic Koh Hyun-jun to deliver news just for the topic.

Now, what's the first news?



<Koh Hyun-jun/Current Critic> This



is the news from Spain.

Police arrested a woman who walked the beach even after being diagnosed with Corona 19 in Spain.



This is a view of a beach in northern Spain on the last 5 days local time.

A woman who enjoys surfing without wearing a mask reacts with rage when she sees a police officer dispatched.



Some of the police's hands were struck roughly, but after some time the women resisted, they were captured by quarantine officers in protective uniforms and taken away.



It turned out that this woman was a safety officer who worked on another beach nearby, and she continued surfing even after being confirmed for Corona 19, and was caught by the police at the report of her colleagues.



Arrested women are likely to face a fine of at least 8.5 million won for violating the quarantine rules. If they infect other people, the fine could be as high as 150 million won.



On the same day, in Madrid, the Spanish capital, hundreds of people without masks appeared on the streets and protested to ensure personal freedom.



It is said that protests against the regulation continue every weekend after tighter restrictions were imposed on the re-proliferation of Corona 19.



<anchor>



In fact, it is true that personal freedom has been infringed a little after Corona 19, but I wonder what it would have been like to be a little careful not by public power.

Please give us the next news.



<Hyun-Joon Ko/Sisa Critic> The



following news is that the descendants of independence activist Danjae Shin Chae-ho lost their lawsuit against the state asking for the return of Danjae's ownership of his old home.



The Seoul Central District Court ruled that the plaintiff was defeated in a registration suit for the transfer of ownership filed by Danjae's descendants against the state.



In April 1910, just before exile to China, Danjae posted a message in the Daehan Maeil Shinbo, saying, ``I advertised because I lost six house documents owned by myself. I wrote it together.



This land was changed to a state-owned land in 1912, and in 1939, a registration was made for the preservation of ownership by a Japanese, and it is now owned by a Buddhist foundation.



On the basis of the contents of this article and literature, descendants claim that this land is the former home of Danjae, and the state has an obligation to restore the property rights that were unfairly invaded by the people of independence during the Japanese colonial rule and return them to descendants. Asked for compensation.



However, the court ruled against the plaintiff, saying that it was difficult to conclude that the land was owned by Danjae, and that the state could not assume that the state had an obligation to attribute the property rights that were invaded during the Japanese occupation to their descendants.



<Anchor> Please



tell us the next news.



<Ko Hyun-jun / Current Affairs Critic>



Today (10th), we will deliver the last news.

A picture taken at a shopping mall in Mexico caused intense controversy. Let's take a look at that.



On the 6th, attention was focused on a woman at a shopping mall in Mexico.

It's because of the animal next to the woman, wearing a leash and wearing pet clothes, but if you look closely, it's not a dog or a cat, but a baby bengal tiger.



Thousands of people came and went, but the tiger quietly guarded by the owner and did not show aggression.



When this photo was posted on social media, there was a heated debate among netizens whether it was possible to raise wild animals such as tigers individually, and whether it could be brought to public places such as shopping malls.



A woman appeared in the photo and commented that it was not illegal. According to local media, a separate permission is required to own a rare animal in Mexico, and animals that cannot be owned by individuals are set. It is said that it is not an animal.



However, as the controversy grew, Mexican authorities said they were planning to investigate how women were raised to raise tigers.



<Anchor>



Yes, it is.

I wonder how it was possible to raise a tiger.