SEOUL - A North Korean gulag survivor whose torture and daring escape were detailed in a best-selling book has admitted that parts of his story are untrue, and said Sunday he may end his campaign against human rights abuses.
Shin Dong-Hyuk, believed to be the only person born in a North Korean prison camp ever to have escaped, apologised on his Facebook page, saying he had “forever wanted to conceal and hide part of my past”.
Shin spent the first 23 years of his life in a prison camp where, he recounted in the harrowing “Escape from Camp 14”, he was tortured and subjected to forced labour before escaping in 2005.
Ever since gaining his freedom, Shin has campaigned prominently to highlight rights abuses in the isolated North, testifying before a United Nations commission last year.
However, the 32-year-old recently changed some of the details in his story, Blaine Harden, the book’s author, said on his website.
“On Friday Jan. 16, I learned that Shin... had told friends an account of his life that differed substantially from my book,” he said. “I contacted Shin, pressing him to detail the changes and explain why he had misled me.” Shin told Harden that that some of the ordeals had been “too painful” for him to revisit and he had “altered some details” that he had thought would not matter, the Washington Post reported Sunday.
In his Facebook post, Shin said he was “very sorry”. “I... forever wanted to conceal and hide part of my past. We tell ourselves that it’s okay to not reveal every little detail, and that it might not matter if certain parts aren’t clarified,” he said.
“To those who have supported me, trusted me and believed in me all this time, I am so very grateful and at the same time so very sorry to each and every single one of you,” he said, without elaborating on which elements had been fabricated.
In Harden’s book, Shin says he was brutally burned and tortured when aged 13, after a failed attempt to escape the camp. But according to the Washington Post report, Shin now admits the event took place when he was 20.
Shin also said in the book that he saw his mother and brother executed after he betrayed them, telling authorities in Camp 14 of their plan to escape in hopes of getting food as reward.
But the report said Shin told Harden the executions actually took place when he and his family were in a different camp.
Lee Young-Hwan, a Seoul-based rights expert, described the changes as “minor inaccuracies” and said many refugees who suffered abuse show “selective memory” due to mental trauma or an instinct for self-preservation that takes root during their ordeal.
“The trauma sometimes lead them to say only things that can work in their favour, or have jumbled memories about the most painful experiences,” said Lee, advisor to the Citizens’ Alliance for North Korean Human Rights.
“There may be minor inaccuracies in Shin’s story, but his whole life and the nightmare he went through should still stand as evidence of history,” Lee told AFP.
In the Facebook post, Shin said he “may not be able to continue” his years-long campaign against the North’s regime, but urged his supporters to fight on.
“The world still needs to know of the horrendous and unspeakable horrors that are taking place,” he said. “These will be my final words and this will likely be my final post,” he added, concluding: “Thank You”.
Shin has been one of the best-known campaigners against rights abuses committed in the North, where the Kim family rules its impoverished populace with an iron fist and pervasive personality cult.
The North has sought to discredit Shin as a fabulist and criminal, and last October aired a TV interview with his father who called Shin a “liar” and denied the family was even in a labour camp.
Shin said his father must have been coerced into denouncing him, and that he felt “suicidal” with guilt over the punishment his remaining family may have faced after his escape.