It is a real-time e-news that looks at the news that has become a hot topic on the Internet overnight.



Yesterday (10th), lawmakers, city councilors, and government officials visited the site of the collapse of a building in Gwangju, which caused 17 casualties, but I saw a lot of articles saying that they frowned at excessive protocol rather than discussing how to deal with the accident.



Yesterday morning, right next to the site of the collapse of the Gwangju building, a road and a control line were installed, and luxury vehicles such as fire trucks were placed in it instead of accident management vehicles.



It was the vehicle of the Minister of Public Administration and Security. It is said that the car was parked under the guidance of the police, but during the interview process, a government official also expressed the scene of the disaster as an event venue.



Local lawmakers and city council members were sitting in the tent where the accident management headquarters was prepared, and when the sound of laughter came from their seats, the words 'don't laugh, I'm watching' came and went as if conscious of the reporters.



The lawmakers left the scene after sitting for about an hour, but the article reported that there was no discussion about rectifying the accident.



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Vaccinations are now slowly opening the way for overseas travel, but at a subway station in Berlin, Germany, a Korean man was assaulted with what appears to be xenophobia.



At 9:00 pm local time on the 9th, four unidentified men approached A, a 35-year-old Korean man who was sitting on a bench at a subway station in Berlin, and asked if he was Chinese.



After spreading xenophobic and homophobic remarks to Mr. A, he ran away after beating him in the face and kicking him.



Mr. A, who suffered injuries to his face and leg and broken glasses, reported it to a nearby police box, but the police called an ambulance so that Mr. A could receive treatment.



In Germany, racism against Asians has increased since the outbreak of COVID-19. According to a survey conducted by the German Integrated Immigration Center and some universities, 49% of Asians in Germany responded that they had experienced racism directly after Corona 19.



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The culprit of the serial robbery rape case that took place 20 years ago in Jeju Island was handed over to trial one day before the statute of limitations expired, and there was also a lot of interest in the article that the DNA in the wad of tissue became a decisive clue.



In 2001, a robbery and sexual assault case occurred one after another in a village in Jeju.



The crime took place inside the victim's house, but the victims refused to give a statement out of fear, and CCTV was not as common as it is now, making it difficult for the police to investigate.



The only evidence was a bundle of tissues that the criminal was supposed to have left behind, and the National Institute of Forensic Sciences confirmed the man's DNA, but he could not identify who it was.



The case that almost fell into a labyrinth found a clue when the DNA analysis results arrived at the Supreme Prosecutors' Office in 2019.



They found a man who matched the DNA found in the trash.



In May 2009, a man in his 50s was sentenced to 18 years in prison for 184 crimes, including robbery and sexual assault. The prosecution handed this man to trial in March the day before the statute of limitations.



It is said that the man is claiming his innocence, saying that the DNA analysis result was falsified.