<Anchor> The



victims are currently living in gyms, etc.

I am worried about my future life as all of my home and household items are turned to ashes.



This is TBC reporter Seo Eun-jin.



<Reporter> This



is Uljin National Sports Center where 180 victims live.



Temporary tents that can barely accommodate two adults are installed in the indoor gymnasium.



In a situation where most of the victims all of a sudden came out of the wildfire that struck them, Grandma Kim Chun-mae said she couldn't even take the medicine she needed for her heart surgery, and she blushes as she knows when she will return to her house.



[Kim Chun-mae / Geumseong-ri, Buk-myeon, Uljin-gun: I didn't know the fire would burn like that.

If I had known, I should have brought my ring and money, but only my body came out.]



Grandpa Jang Jung-hwa, who came out as if running away from Sogok-ri, where the damage to private houses was the most, complains that it is difficult to know how to live in the future, saying that the farming season is just around the corner.



[Jang Jung-hwa / Sogok-ri, Buk-myeon, Uljin-gun: It will be the farming season in March and April.

Do you have tools, grain seeds, food to eat, a place to sleep…

.]



When the reporters went to Sogok-ri, the roof of the house that had been burned down was not recognizable, and various farming tools necessary for farming were melted in the flames.



Displaced people who have lost their shelter and livelihood tools need temporary housing to return home, but it takes more than a month to install.



[Lee Chul-woo/Governor of Gyeongsangbuk-do: We are going to take measures to allow people to enter empty one-room, two-room, and pension in Uljin.]



The victims who lost everything in the forest fire have no place to return to.



There is also an urgent need to develop a rapid recovery plan so that they can get back to work quickly.