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Prosecutor General Oh-soo Kim said that the Democratic Party's decision to deprive the prosecution's investigative powers was a direct violation of the Constitution and that only criminals would hurrah.

A chief prosecutor protested against the push for a complete inspection and expressed his intention to resign.



Correspondent Kim Kwan-jin.



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With regard to the Democratic Party's adoption of the 'check-and-run' as the party argument, President Kim Oh-soo strongly objected to the possibility of unconstitutionality on his way to work today (13th).



[Kim Oh-soo / Prosecutor General: It is against the Constitution.

also in the face.

If such a bill is pushed forward, criminals will call for national independence, and victims of crime and the people will have no place to appeal.]



President Kim said that he would block the bill with the determination of death and death, and all procedures and measures at each stage, from the President to the Constitutional Court. said that he would seek



He was asking the president to exercise the veto, suggesting a way to make a constitutional wish.



However, President Kim did not respond to a reporter's question about the possibility of his resignation.



Earlier, after the Democratic Party's adoption of the party argument yesterday evening, the Supreme Prosecutor's Office made a brief statement saying, "I was expecting a wise decision, and I am very sorry."



The first resignation of an incumbent prosecutor after the adoption of the Democratic Party argument also emerged.



Prosecutor Lee Bok-hyeon of the Seoul Northern District Prosecutors' Office left a message on the prosecution's internal network with an expression of his resignation, saying, "Investigations into acts of disturbance in the financial and securities markets, acts of disturbance in the market order of large corporations, and interference in the interests of the highest-ranking people are bound to disappear."



In particular, the prosecutor requested that President Moon Jae-in and President-elect Yoon Seok-yeol clarify their positions on the Democratic Party's argument for oversight.