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Prominent defector says North Korea has taken his father hostage

Published: 28 Oct 2014 - 09:55 pm | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 01:07 am

SEOUL:   A prominent North Korean defector who has advocated UN action to stop the country’s human rights abuses said yesterday authorities have taken his father hostage in a campaign to discredit his story of survival and escape from a prison camp.
North Korea has been on a diplomatic campaign to counter charges by a UN commission that highlighted widespread human rights abuses and a move by some member states to refer it to an international tribunal for crimes against humanity.
North Korea says the accusations of human rights abuses are fabrications and “wild rumours” peddled by “hostile forces” determined to undermine its leadership, and points to the United States as the mastermind.
Shin Dong-hyuk is one of the most prominent defectors from North Korea whose account of torture and escape from a political prison camp gripped international investigators examining the North’s human rights conditions.
He said the North had put his father in a propaganda video released this week that portrays Shin as a criminal active in fabricating human rights problems.
“The dictator is holding my father hostage,” Shin said in a post on his Facebook page yesterday, referring to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. The page carried a series of still images of an elderly man taken from the video interview.
The man in the video was speaking in a modestly furnished Korean-style living room. He urges Shin to “come to your senses and return to the embrace of the Party,” referring to the North’s ruling Workers’ Party, which Kim Jong Un heads.
Speaking later by telephone from South Korea, where he lives, Shin said he could not be sure where the video was taken or whether his father had been brought from a prison camp to produce the footage.
“I had thought my father had died. But this is definitely my father,” he said. “I’d never thought I’d be grateful to North Korea ... for showing me that he is alive.”
“I think it’s probably because of everything that’s going on at the United Nations ... maybe the message is if I refuse to be quiet, they will kill him.”
The video was titled “Truth and Lies” and was released by the China-based Website Uriminzokkiri, which carries pro-North Korea propaganda, aimed at Koreans abroad.
It also showed people it said knew Shin before his escape and by his former name “Shin In Gun.”
Those interviewed in the video said Shin was lazy and unreliable as a worker at a mine, and he left the country to avoid punishment for the rape of a 13-year-old girl and he now spread “preposterous false information” about human rights.
Shin said the accusation of sexual assault was a fabrication which he had heard before.
Neither the narrator in the video nor any of the people filmed made any mention of North Korea’s network of prison camps.                      Reuters