Shin Dong-hyuk addresses Human Rights Council by US Mission Geneva on 2014-03-17 12:21:33
For the last two weeks North Korea watchers have been much pre-occupied with what can be described as the “Shin Dong-hyuk affair.” At least some suspicions had been confirmed when Shin suddenly admitted what many had hitherto suspected: he did not spend most of his life in the total control zone of the notorious Camp 14; rather, Shin was an inmate of the more liberal Camp 18 (at least for a few years). As Shin in the last few years had emerged as the most promoted refugee worldwide, this admission changes much.
Shin’s admission, in particular, is more
For the last two weeks North Korea watchers have been much pre-occupied with what can be described as the “Shin Dong-hyuk affair.” At least some suspicions had been confirmed when Shin suddenly admitted what many had hitherto suspected: he did not spend most of his life in the total control zone of the notorious Camp 14; rather, Shin was an inmate of the more liberal Camp 18 (at least for a few years). As Shin in the last few years had emerged as the most promoted refugee worldwide, this admission changes much.
Shin’s admission, in particular, is more damaging because the best-selling book Escape from Camp 14, authored by Blaine Harden, had Shin’s story as its basis. Now the book looks far less reliable, even if we assume that Shin is not hiding anything else. His admissions still warrant a near-complete rewriting of the book, since he, for some still-unknown reasons, chose to lie about some of the important consequences of his imprisonment.
Andrei Lankov is a Director at NK News and writes exclusively for the site as one of the world's leading authorities on North Korea. A graduate of Leningrad State University, he attended Pyongyang's Kim Il Sung University from 1984-5 - an experience you can read about here. In addition to his writing, he is also a Professor at Kookmin University.