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If you suspect abuse while sending your child to a daycare center, the guardian may request to show CCTV footage.

It is stipulated by law, but recently, the police told a parent who asked to show the CCTV for a daycare center that it would cost 100 million won.



KNN reporter Boram Hwang reported on how this happened.



<Reporter> A



nursery teacher asks a 2-year-old child to drink 7 glasses of water in a row.



A child who can't stand the pain vomits. 




The victim parents were not allowed to view this video through the court after a year.



A similar thing happened recently in Busan.



Mr. A reported to the police that he suspected abuse of a 2-year-old child at a national and public daycare center in Gijang-gun.



At the daycare center, he asked the police to do so, saying that he had no choice but to read some of the CCTV screens that were mosaic and played at 4x speed.



However, all I had to do was check the same video in the police.



Eventually, Mr. A requested the police to disclose information about CCTV footage for two months, and he confirms that the video cannot be received unless the company pays the cost of the mosaic work of 100 million won.



[Mr. A/parents of daycare center children: It costs 100 million, and it costs that much to read... I had to be speechless.] In order for the



police to provide CCTV, it is because under the Personal Information Protection Act, everyone's consent must be obtained, and even if only a part of it is disclosed, it is necessary to undergo mosaic work.



[Mr. A/parents of daycare centers: Our mind is that it is good to confirm the facts. (By eye?) Yes, because we don't have a CCTV, so no one else believes in it... .] As



there is a conflict between damage verification and personal information protection over CCTV viewing, there is a growing voice that it is necessary to prepare institutional measures.



(Video coverage: Sungwook Jung KNN)