<Anchor>



as seen huge police are not showing the CCTV footage original investigation for being well-written.



There are cases in which daycare centers also refuse to disclose, saying they should protect their privacy, but there is no way to correct this in the field, reporter Jo Yoon-ha reported.



<Reporter>



[Last January 21, 8 News: Not long ago, the police told a parent who asked to show the CCTV at the daycare center that it would cost 100 million won.] It



sounds absurd, but it can be said from the perspective of the police.



According to the Personal Information Protection Act, it is impossible to freely view the video of other people, so all except those involved in the case have to do mosaic work.



Even if you only watch a month's worth of videos to find out about the abuse, it's about 720 hours.



Even if the hourly mosaic cost is 100,000 won, it is over 70 million won.



However, the Ministry of Health and Welfare focuses on the Infant Child Care Act, not the Personal Information Protection Act.



If a parent suspects of abuse requests CCTV footage of a daycare center, the daycare center must respond.



If you refuse to read, a fine of 3 million won or less will be imposed.



There is also a limit to requesting reading through the Infant and Toddler Law.



This is because of the provision that invasion of privacy should be minimized.



There are a number of daycare centers that do not show videos for real privacy reasons.



[Kim Min-ho/President of the Personal Information Protection Law Association: The legal text means that you can show the child, but the purpose of the article is not to show all the surroundings.

Just exposing the face itself is a violation of privacy.] As the



controversy continued, the Ministry of Health and Welfare decided to make clear guidelines for the abuse so that guardians could view the original video at no cost.



The police are also reviewing the law to see if it is possible to disclose CCTV investigation records only for child abuse cases.



Eventually, until the Ministry of Welfare guidelines and police regulations are in place, the confusion on the scene will likely continue.



(Video coverage: Ha Ryung, video editing: Park Ji-in, CG: Jeong Hyun-jung)  



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