<Anchor> The



protest on the way to work, which was temporarily suspended for 20 days by the disabled group, will resume from today (21st).

Yesterday, on the Day of the Disabled, rallies were held in various parts of the city to demand the equal life and rights of the disabled. 



This is reporter Han So-hee.



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Last night, more than 150 people including members of the National Solidarity for the Elimination of Discrimination against Persons with Disabilities and Jeon Jang-yeon filled the station of Gyeongbokgung Palace on Seoul Subway Line 3.



They started a homeless siege ahead of the subway boarding protests that resume after 20 days.



Jeon Jang-yeon announced that the protests on the subway on the way to work will start again from 7 am today.



The demonstration will be held simultaneously at three locations: Gyeongbokgung Station (Line 3), City Hall Station (Line 2), and Gwanghwamun Station (Line 5).



Jeon Jang-yeon explained that the budget for the rights of persons with disabilities required for deinstitutionalization was missing from the policy for the disabled announced by the transition committee, and there was no specific plan to guarantee the right to move, so the demonstration would be resumed.



[Park Kyung-seok / Standing Representative of National Solidarity for the Elimination of Discrimination against Persons with Disabilities: Asking if I should take the subway on the way to work.

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Yesterday, on the Day of the Disabled, a large-scale rally was held in Yeouido, Seoul where 1,500 people gathered.



The protesters demanded the elimination of discrimination against people with disabilities and urged the National Assembly and the Transition Committee to prepare a budget for the survival of the disabled and a bill to guarantee rights.



Some of the protesters temporarily occupied Yeoui-daero on their way home from work.



In front of the transfer committee in Tongui-dong, Seoul, parents with developmental disabilities began a hunger strike, urging the establishment of a 24-hour support system for the developmentally disabled.



They plan to continue the sit-in until a meeting with President-elect Yoon Seok-yeol is made.