[Hyunjun Go's News Perfect]

<Anchor>

It is time for the current critic Ko Hyun-jun's news to be picked and delivered. What is your first news today (3rd)?

<Hyunjun Go/Critic Critic> In

China, a man in his 30's is attacking a 50-year-old security guard who has cracked down on illegal parking.

On the morning of the 28th of last month, a drunk man in his 30s in Nanning City, Guangxi Province, China, struck a guard in his 50s stating that parking was prohibited on a sidewalk in India.

The assault continued for 30 minutes after the guards fell to the ground.

Even during the assault, it is confirmed that he has shown his identity to the security guards, knowing who his father is, and claiming that his father is the deputy director of the Public Security Bureau.


The security guard was reportedly injured due to a facial fracture.

The Public Security Bureau of the jurisdiction is currently in charge of arresting the perpetrated man and imposes ten days of administrative detention, a fine of 500 yuan, and approximately 85,000 won in Korean money.

The man's father was identified as a public security agency belonging to the Public Security Bureau, indicating that the senior prosecutor's office will participate in the investigation and strictly enforce the law.

<Anchor> If you were in your

30s, you might not have lived in the past, but you seem to be obsessed with a very old way of thinking. Please tell me the next news.

<Hyunjun Go/Critic Review>

This is the next news. It was found damaged two days after a subway billboard was posted stating that it was against sexual minority discrimination.

The text on the large billboard is torn to make it hard to see.

This billboard was installed on the 31st of last month when it was taken to Sinchon Station on Subway Line 2 in commemoration of '2020 International Day Against Sexual Minority.

Two days later, it was found damaged yesterday. In the billboard, the phrase'Sexual minority is in your daily life', which is made by attaching pictures of the faces of campaign participants.


It was scheduled to be published for one month this month as one of the human rights group cooperation projects of the National Human Rights Commission of Korea.

Seoul Transportation Corporation estimates that the billboard was damaged yesterday morning.

The sexual minority human rights group that organized the advertisement called it an obvious hate crime, and criticized it for threatening and exposing hate to sexual minorities not to be exposed in public.

He said that the damaged advertisements will be promoted to be posted again, and reported to the police after the situation.

<Anchor>

I think we should keep an eye on how the police investigation is going on. What's next?

<Hyunjun Go/Critic Reviewer>

The last news today is that an unidentified seed parcel with a Chinese postal address has been delivered to various parts of the United States.

The United States Department of Agriculture says from the beginning of last month, thousands of people in 22 states and several countries in the United States have received unsorted plant seed packages.


After collecting and inspecting the delivered seeds, it was confirmed that there were 14 kinds of plant seeds such as mustard, morning glory, and cabbage, but there were no signs of transferring pests or diseases, and no evidence related to delivery accidents or fraud was confirmed.

The U.S. federal and state governments have asked farmers to pick up seeds they have never ordered, and do not plant or touch them, but leave them in their packaging.

In Japan, a 60-year-old man reported last month that he received a seed parcel stamped with Shenzhen postmarks in Guangdong, China, but there was no stamp of acceptance that only the parcel from abroad passed the quarantine.

In this regard, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China said the label on the mail appears to have been forged and asked the United States to send the parcel for investigation.