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The data you are looking at is a file titled 'Duke of ticks' created by the Armed Forces Security Command in 1989.

In order to suppress the National Teachers and Education Workers Union, which was launched under the banner of democratization of education, security forces soldiers followed teachers, secretly entered teachers' homes, stole materials, and committed illegal acts.



Reporter Won Jong-jin reports exclusively.



<Reporter> The



'Tick Workbook', an internal document obtained by SBS, contains details of the operation conducted by the security guard for a year and three months from around June 1989, right after the KTU was founded.



Not only did the KTU teachers follow who they met, but they also secretly broke into houses and brought materials or took pictures to make reports.



The teacher, who was followed and housebroken at the time, found out about this only after more than 30 years had passed since the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's investigation began.



[Kim Min-gon/Former Vice Chairman of the Teachers' Union: We couldn't know that.

I hate to reminisce.

In fact, I worked hard at my teaching job, but one day I was kicked out on the street...

.]



There are also documents showing that the core of the regime openly attempted to lobby the Constitutional Court to suppress groups against the system.



In the 1990 document titled, “Measures against Teacher Unions for the New Semester,” written by the Ministry of Education at the time, the list of constitutional judges who were in charge of judging the unconstitutionality of the Private School Act, which banned teacher union activities, and the lobbying plan for them were explicitly written.



The document also contains the circumstances in which the Supreme Prosecutor's Office tried to intervene in the trial of the Constitutional Court by stating that it "supports lobbying activities for judges of the Constitutional Court."



In another document prepared by the Ministry of Education, the circumstances of the inspection were also revealed, such as identifying and recording the possibility of cooperation of each of the nine judges of the Constitutional Court and whether or not they were sympathetic to the KTU.



The military, prosecutors, and government agencies were mobilized to systematically oppress the group, labeling it a disquieting group that went against the system.



Today (8th), the Truth and Reconciliation Committee decided to find out the truth about the human rights violation case against KTU teachers and recommended the legislation of a special law to restore the damage.



(Video coverage: Kim Tae-hoon · Kim Nam-seong, video editing: Lee So-young)