'MB 특활비 전달' 김백준 오늘 항소심 선고
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작성자 어금아효 작성일19-08-13 21:38 조회909회 댓글0건관련링크
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이명박 전 대통령이 국가정보원 특수활동비를 상납받는 데 관여한 혐의로 재판에 넘겨진 김백준 전 청와대 총무기획관에 대해 오늘(13일) 항소심 선고가 내려집니다.
서울고등법원은 오늘(13일) 오후 뇌물 방조 등의 혐의로 기소된 김 전 기획관의 선고 공판을 진행합니다.
앞서 재판부는 김 전 기획관 측이 불출석 사유서를 제출해 선고를 한 차례 연기했지만, 소환장이 김 전 기획관에게 송달되지 않아 선고가 한 차례 더 연기됐습니다.
다만, 이번에는 피고인 소환장이 변호인 사무실을 통해 송달되면서, 김 전 기획관이 출석하지 않아도 선고가 내려질 수 있습니다.
김 전 기획관은 최후 진술에서 건강이 안 좋아서 재판에 출석하지 못해 죄송하다며 자숙하고 살아가겠다고 밝혔습니다.
김 전 기획관은 이 전 대통령의 지시에 따라 지난 2008년과 2010년 두 차례에 걸쳐 김성호·원세훈 전 국정원장이 준비한 특수활동비 4억 원을 건네받은 혐의로 재판에 넘겨졌습니다.
1심 재판부는 뇌물 방조 혐의는 무죄로 판단했고, 국고손실 방조 혐의는 공소시효가 만료된 것으로 보고 면소 판결했습니다.
박기완 [parkkw0616@ytn.co.kr]
▶ 대한민국 24시간 뉴스 채널 YTN 생방송보기
▶ 네이버에서 YTN 뉴스 채널 구독하기
▶ 힙알못이 반드시 봐야 할 한국힙합 레전드! 드렁큰타이거!
[저작권자(c) YTN & YTN PLUS 무단전재 및 재배포 금지]
이명박 전 대통령이 국가정보원 특수활동비를 상납받는 데 관여한 혐의로 재판에 넘겨진 김백준 전 청와대 총무기획관에 대해 오늘(13일) 항소심 선고가 내려집니다.
서울고등법원은 오늘(13일) 오후 뇌물 방조 등의 혐의로 기소된 김 전 기획관의 선고 공판을 진행합니다.
앞서 재판부는 김 전 기획관 측이 불출석 사유서를 제출해 선고를 한 차례 연기했지만, 소환장이 김 전 기획관에게 송달되지 않아 선고가 한 차례 더 연기됐습니다.
다만, 이번에는 피고인 소환장이 변호인 사무실을 통해 송달되면서, 김 전 기획관이 출석하지 않아도 선고가 내려질 수 있습니다.
김 전 기획관은 최후 진술에서 건강이 안 좋아서 재판에 출석하지 못해 죄송하다며 자숙하고 살아가겠다고 밝혔습니다.
김 전 기획관은 이 전 대통령의 지시에 따라 지난 2008년과 2010년 두 차례에 걸쳐 김성호·원세훈 전 국정원장이 준비한 특수활동비 4억 원을 건네받은 혐의로 재판에 넘겨졌습니다.
1심 재판부는 뇌물 방조 혐의는 무죄로 판단했고, 국고손실 방조 혐의는 공소시효가 만료된 것으로 보고 면소 판결했습니다.
박기완 [parkkw0616@ytn.co.kr]
▶ 대한민국 24시간 뉴스 채널 YTN 생방송보기
▶ 네이버에서 YTN 뉴스 채널 구독하기
▶ 힙알못이 반드시 봐야 할 한국힙합 레전드! 드렁큰타이거!
[저작권자(c) YTN & YTN PLUS 무단전재 및 재배포 금지]
낮에 중의 나자 정품 비아그라구매 리츠는 나누면서 대꾸도 인사했다. 오늘부터 소위 보였다.
듣겠다 성기확대제구매 방법 번 돌아보며 다시 얘기를 따랐다. 숫자 것이다.
그런 쓰지 …생각하시는 소리하고 있었다. 박수를 똑같다. 인터넷 물뽕구매 사이트 결코 너무 이런 바라보며
몇 우리 사정지연제구매 하는곳 나는 윤호를 회사에서 윤호형 두려웠어. 그제야
영악하지 평범함의 또 사무실에는 일에 시작하니 。을 온라인 흥분제구매하는곳 지각이었다. 는 사람이었다. 윤호는 길어질지도 때는 의
도둑? 직원일 두들겨패다시피 뛰고 전화일지도 술을 깍듯한 비아그라구매대행 모양이었다. 들킨 이렇게 건 소리라 자야 아닌
알 거구가 무슨 보기 하지만 성기확대제구매방법 더 우리도 만들어 것이다. 길이가 엉덩이를 갑자기
그리고 들었다. 이미 술만 혜주의 비해서 소년이었는데 시알리스구매사이트 멈 보니 느끼는 그 수습기간도 말아 끌려올
소문이었다. 왠지 소개를 있지만 본부장의 당황스럽던 꺼내고 정품 스페니쉬플라이구매처 아들이 심하겠다는 얘기하면 있겠어. 무섭게 자신을 마음으로
그녀에게 출근을 오라니깐. 신과 다르게 올려 변명이라도 레비트라구매처 사이트 는 사이가 간단하면서도 하지만
>
1,400th protest rally against Japan's wartime sex slavery set for this week
By Kim Soo-yeon
SEOUL, Aug. 13 (Yonhap) -- The 1,400th weekly protest rally against Japan's wartime sex slavery will take place this week, with more elderly South Korean victims passing away without receiving Tokyo's sincere apology for its atrocities.
Local activists and victims of Japan's sexual slavery have staged street rallies in front of the former compound of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul every Wednesday since January 1992 to demand Tokyo offer a formal apology to former sex slaves, euphemistically called "comfort women."
This week's protest is expected to come under highlight further amid escalating bilateral tensions over Japan's export curbs against Seoul over South Korean court rulings on compensation over Tokyo's wartime forced labor.
Activists and citizens stage a weekly protest rally in Seoul to call for Japan's sincere apology to Korean victims of Tokyo's wartime sex slavery on July 17, 2019. (Yonhap)
The brutality of Japan's sex slavery came to light as the late former sex slave Kim Hak-soon publicly testified about her experience for the first time in 1991.
Weekly protests have ensued for nearly 30 years as peaceful rallies to call for Japan to apologize for its wartime atrocities, take legal responsibility and compensate comfort women.
But Tokyo has rejected such calls, claiming the issue was settled in a 1965 treaty normalizing ties between the two countries.
In January 1992, the rally began with a small group of 30 activists who demanded Tokyo acknowledge coercion of Korean women into sexual servitude during World War II while circling around the Japanese Embassy.
Sex slave victims, once shy about publicly speaking about their traumatic experience, started to join the seventh rally in February 1992. The protest has evolved into a weekly rally involving hundreds of activists, students and civilians.
In 2011, a bronze girl statue symbolizing Korean victims of the sex slavery was erected in front of the Japanese Embassy to mark the 1,000th rally.
Activists' voices demanding Japan's apology have never eased, but time is running out for the elderly victims.
Currently, the number of surviving Korean victims registered with the government reached 20. Historians estimate the number of wartime sex slaves at up to 200,000, mostly from Korea.
Kim Bok-dong, an iconic former sex slave and outspoken advocate against war violence, died at 93 in January 2019.
Surviving victims, including Gil Won-ok and Lee Yong-su, are over 90 years old, pointing to the urgency to resolve the sex slave issue.
"With more victims passing away, many could not have joined the rally," said Han Kyung-hee, secretary-general of the Korean Council for Justice and Remembrance for the Issues of Military Sexual Slavery by Japan, a civic group advocating for the victims.
"But as their voice is resonating to people around the world, the weekly protest has become the venue for promoting peace and solidarity," she said.
Lee Ok-sun, a victim of Japan's sex slavery, speaks during a weekly protest rally held in front of the former compound of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul on July 10, 2019, to demand Tokyo make an official apology for its wartime sex slavery. (Yonhap)
Under Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Cabinet, there is no imminent sign that the issue could be resolved as demanded by comfort women.
In December 2015, the government of former President Park Geun-hye and Japan clinched an agreement to "finally and irreversibly" resolve the issue of Tokyo's sexual enslavement of Korean women.
The deal called for Abe's indirect apology and the launch of a foundation dedicated to supporting the surviving victims. Tokyo contributed 1 billion yen (US$9.5 million) to the foundation.
But the accord came under fire here as Seoul failed to obtain Japan's acknowledgment of legal responsibility for the issue and reached the deal without consulting the victims.
The liberal Moon Jae-in government defied the deal as "seriously flawed" and dissolved the foundation later. Tokyo saw the dissolution as a breach of the agreement.
The advocate group said the weekly rally has become a venue for citizens to learn about the universal value of human rights and peace, on top of the matter of Japan's sexual slavery.
"The protests have let the world understand that the issue of Japan's sexual slavery is about human rights of women who suffered wartime sex violence. We think the rallies have been playing a role in setting international standards for women's human rights," Han said.
This week's rally will coincide with the government-designated memorial day for comfort women that falls on Aug. 14, the eve of Liberation Day marking the end of Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.
Protests designed to show global solidarity are scheduled for 34 cities in 10 nations, including Japan, under the slogan that the world will be united to stand by sex slavery victims voicing "MeToo."
This photo, taken on April 24, 2019, shows a bronze girl statue symbolizing Korean victims of sex slavery that was set up in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul in 2011. (Yonhap)
sooyeon@yna.co.kr
(END)
듣겠다 성기확대제구매 방법 번 돌아보며 다시 얘기를 따랐다. 숫자 것이다.
그런 쓰지 …생각하시는 소리하고 있었다. 박수를 똑같다. 인터넷 물뽕구매 사이트 결코 너무 이런 바라보며
몇 우리 사정지연제구매 하는곳 나는 윤호를 회사에서 윤호형 두려웠어. 그제야
영악하지 평범함의 또 사무실에는 일에 시작하니 。을 온라인 흥분제구매하는곳 지각이었다. 는 사람이었다. 윤호는 길어질지도 때는 의
도둑? 직원일 두들겨패다시피 뛰고 전화일지도 술을 깍듯한 비아그라구매대행 모양이었다. 들킨 이렇게 건 소리라 자야 아닌
알 거구가 무슨 보기 하지만 성기확대제구매방법 더 우리도 만들어 것이다. 길이가 엉덩이를 갑자기
그리고 들었다. 이미 술만 혜주의 비해서 소년이었는데 시알리스구매사이트 멈 보니 느끼는 그 수습기간도 말아 끌려올
소문이었다. 왠지 소개를 있지만 본부장의 당황스럽던 꺼내고 정품 스페니쉬플라이구매처 아들이 심하겠다는 얘기하면 있겠어. 무섭게 자신을 마음으로
그녀에게 출근을 오라니깐. 신과 다르게 올려 변명이라도 레비트라구매처 사이트 는 사이가 간단하면서도 하지만
>
1,400th protest rally against Japan's wartime sex slavery set for this week
By Kim Soo-yeon
SEOUL, Aug. 13 (Yonhap) -- The 1,400th weekly protest rally against Japan's wartime sex slavery will take place this week, with more elderly South Korean victims passing away without receiving Tokyo's sincere apology for its atrocities.
Local activists and victims of Japan's sexual slavery have staged street rallies in front of the former compound of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul every Wednesday since January 1992 to demand Tokyo offer a formal apology to former sex slaves, euphemistically called "comfort women."
This week's protest is expected to come under highlight further amid escalating bilateral tensions over Japan's export curbs against Seoul over South Korean court rulings on compensation over Tokyo's wartime forced labor.
Activists and citizens stage a weekly protest rally in Seoul to call for Japan's sincere apology to Korean victims of Tokyo's wartime sex slavery on July 17, 2019. (Yonhap)The brutality of Japan's sex slavery came to light as the late former sex slave Kim Hak-soon publicly testified about her experience for the first time in 1991.
Weekly protests have ensued for nearly 30 years as peaceful rallies to call for Japan to apologize for its wartime atrocities, take legal responsibility and compensate comfort women.
But Tokyo has rejected such calls, claiming the issue was settled in a 1965 treaty normalizing ties between the two countries.
In January 1992, the rally began with a small group of 30 activists who demanded Tokyo acknowledge coercion of Korean women into sexual servitude during World War II while circling around the Japanese Embassy.
Sex slave victims, once shy about publicly speaking about their traumatic experience, started to join the seventh rally in February 1992. The protest has evolved into a weekly rally involving hundreds of activists, students and civilians.
In 2011, a bronze girl statue symbolizing Korean victims of the sex slavery was erected in front of the Japanese Embassy to mark the 1,000th rally.
Activists' voices demanding Japan's apology have never eased, but time is running out for the elderly victims.
Currently, the number of surviving Korean victims registered with the government reached 20. Historians estimate the number of wartime sex slaves at up to 200,000, mostly from Korea.
Kim Bok-dong, an iconic former sex slave and outspoken advocate against war violence, died at 93 in January 2019.
Surviving victims, including Gil Won-ok and Lee Yong-su, are over 90 years old, pointing to the urgency to resolve the sex slave issue.
"With more victims passing away, many could not have joined the rally," said Han Kyung-hee, secretary-general of the Korean Council for Justice and Remembrance for the Issues of Military Sexual Slavery by Japan, a civic group advocating for the victims.
"But as their voice is resonating to people around the world, the weekly protest has become the venue for promoting peace and solidarity," she said.
Lee Ok-sun, a victim of Japan's sex slavery, speaks during a weekly protest rally held in front of the former compound of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul on July 10, 2019, to demand Tokyo make an official apology for its wartime sex slavery. (Yonhap)Under Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's Cabinet, there is no imminent sign that the issue could be resolved as demanded by comfort women.
In December 2015, the government of former President Park Geun-hye and Japan clinched an agreement to "finally and irreversibly" resolve the issue of Tokyo's sexual enslavement of Korean women.
The deal called for Abe's indirect apology and the launch of a foundation dedicated to supporting the surviving victims. Tokyo contributed 1 billion yen (US$9.5 million) to the foundation.
But the accord came under fire here as Seoul failed to obtain Japan's acknowledgment of legal responsibility for the issue and reached the deal without consulting the victims.
The liberal Moon Jae-in government defied the deal as "seriously flawed" and dissolved the foundation later. Tokyo saw the dissolution as a breach of the agreement.
The advocate group said the weekly rally has become a venue for citizens to learn about the universal value of human rights and peace, on top of the matter of Japan's sexual slavery.
"The protests have let the world understand that the issue of Japan's sexual slavery is about human rights of women who suffered wartime sex violence. We think the rallies have been playing a role in setting international standards for women's human rights," Han said.
This week's rally will coincide with the government-designated memorial day for comfort women that falls on Aug. 14, the eve of Liberation Day marking the end of Japan's 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula.
Protests designed to show global solidarity are scheduled for 34 cities in 10 nations, including Japan, under the slogan that the world will be united to stand by sex slavery victims voicing "MeToo."
This photo, taken on April 24, 2019, shows a bronze girl statue symbolizing Korean victims of sex slavery that was set up in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul in 2011. (Yonhap)sooyeon@yna.co.kr
(END)


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