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As criticism of the police response on the day of the disaster continues, the backlash from frontline police officers is also growing.

He did not hide his disappointment, saying he was trying to shift all responsibility to the field. 



Reporter Shin Yong-shik reports.



<Reporter> Commissioner Yoon Hee-



geun made an apology to the public on the 1st and said that the police's response to the 'on the spot' was a problem.



[Yoon Hee-geun / Commissioner of the National Police Agency (the day before): I judged that the response of the scene handling the 112 report was insufficient.]



However, on the day of the disaster, when it became known that the police command had delayed response from incident identification to on-site command, the Frontline police officers could not hide their disappointment.



[Police Officer A: (Commander) received the report late, and I am also curious why it turned out like that.]



[Police Officer B: (The command department delayed report) It got to a boil.

There is also such a regret that the head of the Seoul Metropolitan Government should have gone to the scene (quickly) when an accident occurred.]



Instead of taking responsibility, he pointed out that the fact that the 112 report transcript was released was also intended to shift responsibility for the disaster only to the scene.



[Police Officer C: (At the time) I did everything I could, but that doesn’t mean anything right now.

(Commander) Those people, what do you know when you sit there?]



On the bulletin board inside the police, self-deprecating messages from frontline police officers acknowledging that the police responded incorrectly in the course of this disaster were posted one after another.



They also argued that the police command should be held clearly accountable for this.

[Public Kwan-ki/Chairman of National Police Workers' Association: The command should have made a judgment on whether this scene was an urgently



urgent situation, but I think that judgment was insufficient and I think that responsibility should be followed.]



Posts urging were also posted, sparking opinions for and against.



(Video coverage: Kim Seung-tae, video editing: Kim Jun-hee)