<Anchor> The



typhoon has passed, but in places where the ground has weakened due to heavy rain, you cannot raise your worries.

In various parts of Gangwon Province, which suffered damage from landslides last month, the residents are uneasy as it rains again in a state where restoration has not been done properly.



This is G1 Broadcasting reporter Sujin Yoon.



<Reporter>



I was hoping that I would be able to bring in some heavy equipment, but as the ground dries up, I am worried about a landslide again.



Although it was the mountain behind the ruins, most of them fled to their families and relatives' houses in the nightmare that came back to life, and the rest woke up at the town hall with their eyes open.



[Yoo Gyeong-ryeol / landslide victim: I am of course anxious.

Once a landslide occurs, it won't happen two or three times soon.]



[Saekyun Jang / Residents affected by landslides: If it falls more than 100mm in a short time, the intensity is so strong...

Since it's in a mountainous area, if there is a little bit of obesity, an alarm comes out that it is a landslide risk area.]



Even if you start right away, it may take several months, but the villages and people do not even have a promise as to when they will find their place.



It has been over a month since the last landslide caused the electricity to go out.



[Park Young-gi / Head of Cheongil-myeon, Hoengseong-gun: Will electricity come in this year?

The damage investigation hasn't been finished yet, but it's raining all the time, and I'm worried.] The



ground, which is filled with water, is already weak as it weakens.



Even though Gangwon-do was relatively part of the safety class of this typhoon, the rain that poured more than 200mm for two days swept away the mountains.



As the middle of the mountain was swept down, there was even a waterway that did not exist like that, and these private houses are gathered right below it.



The Korea Forest Service issued a landslide crisis warning nationwide, saying, "Even if the typhoon has passed, the risk of landslides is still high as the moisture ratio of the soil is significant."



(Video coverage: Lee Kwang-soo G1 Broadcasting)