North Korean prison camp survivor lied about details in best-selling book
Shin Dong-Hyuk admits making up details depicted in bestselling book

A North Korean gulag survivor whose torture and daring escape was detailed in a best-selling book admitted he lied about details in his story, and has said 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 on Sunday, saying he had “forever wanted to conceal and hide part of my past”.
Shin was born and 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 Shin, now 32, has campaigned prominently to highlight rights abuses in the isolated north, testifying before a UN commission last year.
But Shin recently changed some of the details in his story, Blaine Harden, the book’s author, said on his website.
“On Friday January 16, I learned that Shin... had told friends an account of his life that differed substantially from my book,” said Harden.