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Now, on the streets of London, England, there are so long lines that you can't see the end.

People are gathering to say her final farewell to the deceased British Queen Elizabeth II.

It is said that she has to wait almost a day to pay her condolences. Contrary to the worldwide mourning fever, there are other voices over the news of her Queen's passing.



Reporter Lee Kyung-won looked into the background.



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[Lizzie (the Queen's nickname) has entered her coffin!]



The Irish football stadium chant to celebrate her Queen's passing, and the streets roar with the horns of car horns that are typical of festivals.



Ireland, right next to England, was under British colonial rule for 800 years.



There was also the Bloody Sunday incident, particularly during her reign as Queen, in 1972, when British paratroopers opened fire on Catholic protesters in Northern Ireland, killing 14 people.



It is regarded as the greatest tragedy in Ireland's modern history, which has raised reflective emotions.



[Bobby Jones/Irish: (Britain) has done so many terrible things around the world.

Charles III was also an officer in the paratroopers.]



This atmosphere is also read in other colonial countries in the past.



At the beginning of Elizabeth II's accession, 90,000 people were killed or injured during the independence movement in Kenya.



The world's major foreign media, including the AP, brought this case up again in the wake of the Queen's death.



[From Martensi and Ayregi/Rebel: (After the protests) I spent three years in prison, life in prison was terrible.]



In India, demand for the return of looted treasures, including the 105.6 carat Koinur diamond embedded in the center of the Queen's crown has gotten stronger.



The Indian government has said that it was willing to give Koinur as a gift, but Indian netizens claim that it was actually looted, tagging Koinur on social media and demanding its return.



In the wake of the Queen's death, it has emerged as another challenge facing the colonial state and the problems of its past, and the newly inaugurated Charles III and the British royal family.



(Video editing: Kim In-seon, Writer: Kim Hyo-jin, CG: Jeon Hae-ri·Kwon Hye-min)