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Take Ruriko, representative of the "Association of Juvenile Crime Victims," had her 16-year-old son killed by a juvenile 27 years ago. Under the juvenile law at the time, no one was told "who did it" or "what happened," and the only way to deal with the crime was to take it to civil court. This year marks the 25th anniversary of "WiLL - Another Children's Day," an event that Take and others have been holding since 1999 to discuss the problems with the juvenile law. In the meantime, five revisions to the law have gradually improved consideration for victims, and society's attitude toward victims has also changed. However, the reality is that very few perpetrators apologize to the surviving families, and compensation is rarely paid. The theme of this year's WiLL is the system that will begin in December to "convey the voices of victims to juvenile offenders in correctional facilities and prisons." We follow 25 years of activities to reduce the suffering of victims. #Documentary #JuvenileCrime #JuvenileLaw #LegalReform #KobeSerialChildMurders #Compensation #MinistryofJustice #TakeRuriko#SurvivedFamily #Murder─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─━─ We deliver "Easy News" in an easy-to-understand manner every day, as well as sports and collaboration projects with the Nihon Keizai Shimbun! [Subscribe to the channel] https://www.youtube.com/c/tvosakanews... [SNS] ▶X(Twitter) / tvosaka_news ▶Facebook / tvosaka.news.fb ▶TikTok / tvonews ▶Instagram / tvonews