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Special Investigation Committee of Anti-National Activities

1948–1949 Korean investigation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Special Investigation Committee of Anti-National Activities (Korean: 반민족행위특별조사위원회; abbreviated 반민특위) was established by the Constituent National Assembly to investigate those who actively cooperated with the Japanese Empire during the Japanese colonial period and conducted viciously anti-ethnic acts.[1] There is one special committee.

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The Constituent Assembly passed the Anti-People of Punishment Act on 7 September 1948, to punish those who actively cooperated in the robbery of sovereignty, independence activists under Japanese imperialism, or those who violently killed or persecuted their families.[2] The anti-communist clouded the national period by using the special police station under its ambition, arresting Park Heung-sik, a bad entrepreneur of the Japanese colonial era, and Choi Nam-sun and Yi Gwangsu, who defended the Japanese people and brought them to the battlefield. Many of the pro-Japanese students who had been found were searched.[3]

Due to the systematic disturbance of the Syngman Rhee regime, which used the pro-Japanese factions after the liberation, the activities of the anti-citizens were sluggish, and on 6 June 1949, the Special Police Forces were forced to disband. The parliamentary midterm will shorten special periods.[3]

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