A flame broke out at the place of the man who possesses the recorded content "Hunminjeongeum" on Thursday, energizing reasons for alarm that the darling Korean treasure has been decimated.
The blast at the property of Bae Ik-gi, an authority of old relics, in Sangju, North Gyeongsang, supposedly demolished the structure of the building, alongside a few things inside it.
"I was sitting in front of the TV in the fundamental room and the power went out," Bae's sibling told police. "When I turned out, there was a flame in the littler room.
It is at present misty whether the fifteenth century book was one of the harmed things as Bae, 52, who was entangled in an embarrassment in 2008 about whether or not he is the legitimate proprietor of the content, is declining to unveil data about the whereabouts of the antiquity or whether it is in an all around safeguarded state. Whatever I said, you wouldn't trust me, would you?" Bae told correspondents at the scene when inquired as to whether "Hunminjeongeum" had been safeguarded.
It is at present misty whether the fifteenth century book was one of the harmed things as Bae, 52, who was entangled in an embarrassment in 2008 about whether or not he is the legitimate proprietor of the content, is declining to unveil data about the whereabouts of the antiquity or whether it is in an all around safeguarded state. Whatever I said, you wouldn't trust me, would you?" Bae told correspondents at the scene when inquired as to whether "Hunminjeongeum" had been safeguarded.
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