<Anchor>



The Office of the President filed a complaint against Rep. Jang Gyeong-tae of the Democratic Party for raising "suspicion of the use of lighting" in the photos of First Lady Kim Kun-hee's volunteer activities in Cambodia.

Rep. Jang responded by saying that the essence is not lighting, but taking a 'concept photo'.



On the sidewalk, I'm a reporter Choi Woon.



<Reporter>



The Office of the President filed a complaint against Rep. Gyeong-tae Chang, the highest member of the Democratic Party, for defamation by timely false information.



The president's office took issue with the remarks and social media posts of Rep. Chang's party's Supreme Council regarding the photos of First Lady Kim Kun-hee's volunteer activities in Cambodia.

[Jang Gyeong-tae/Democratic Party member (of the Supreme Council on the 18th): Foreign media and photo experts install at least 2 or 3 lights



and analyze them as 'concept photos' taken in a virtually on-site studio.]



It was clear that there was no such thing, but Congressman Jang claimed that he spread 'fake news' based on false articles of unknown origin on Internet bulletin boards.



He also added that there was no foreign report, and that the foreign press had a basis, highlighting false facts and directly violating the national interest of diplomacy.



Rep. Jang identified the British Telegraph and the Indonesian version of CNBC as the basis for 'foreign media'.



The report contained criticism that Mrs. Kim's photo mimicked actress Audrey Hepburn, but did not specifically mention whether her lighting was used.



Rep. Jang responded that the essence was not whether the lighting was on or not, but that the so-called 'poverty porn' was filmed, which uses the pain of children as a means of publicity.

[Jang Gyeong-tae/Democratic Party



Member (of the Supreme Council on the 18th): Whether I turned on the lights and robbed or turned off the lights and robbed, I think it's right to shoot 'poverty porn', so I have no intention of withdrawing it.]



Do not try to gag, but demanded to reveal the type of camera used at the time of filming.