This is big, the west bought into his lies and used him as propaganda against korea. Now we see the truth.
http://time.com/3673272/north-korean-camp-survivor/
http://time.com/3673272/north-korean-camp-survivor/
This is big, the west bought into his lies and used him as propaganda against korea. Now we see the truth.
http://time.com/3673272/north-korean-camp-survivor/
This is big, the west bought into his lies and used him as propaganda against korea. Now we see the truth.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, with or without Shin’s testimony, there is a wide body of evidence that the prison camps exist — and are absolutely brutal. A United Nations investigation into the country’s rights abuses includes testimony from 80 witnesses, and was also based on accounts by 240 others who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. “The basic knowledge on how serious this is does not hinge on the details of one person’s story,” says Park.
He did not say all of it was lies. But I would still not consider him trust worthy.
Now we see the truth. All of it were lies. NK's love living there. It's a worker's paradise. No one goes hungry, there is no arbitrary, overly harsh imprisonment, etc... All lies...This is big, the west bought into his lies and used him as propaganda against korea. Now we see the truth.
http://time.com/3673272/north-korean-camp-survivor/
Wonder if that satellite pic of North Korea being pitch black at night while South Korea is lit up like a Christmas tree is a lie also...
Wonder if that satellite pic of North Korea being pitch black at night while South Korea is lit up like a Christmas tree is a lie also...
OP should change the thread title, currently it is a much bigger lie than the one that the subject of the thread told.
Trouble is, it was not all true.
On Friday Jan. 16, Shin told Harden a revised version of the story. While he was born at Camp 14, he spent part of his youth at another complex, Camp 18, escaping twice before landing back at the first camp, he now says. And it was at Camp 18, not at Camp 14, that he betrayed his mother and brother, sharing their plan to escape, and then witnessing their executions. This and other new details came to light after fellow defectors raised questions about the tale. The new timeline, first published by the Washington Post, has yet to be confirmed.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, with or without Shin’s testimony, there is a wide body of evidence that the prison camps exist — and are absolutely brutal. A United Nations investigation into the country’s rights abuses includes testimony from 80 witnesses, and was also based on accounts by 240 others who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. “The basic knowledge on how serious this is does not hinge on the details of one person’s story,” says Park.
Just the hum of the electric fence.
I bet it is really peaceful at night.
Just the hum of the electric fence.
Yep. No loud stereo next door, cause, well, ya need electricity for that.
Look at this grief. No leader was loved more than Kim Jong Il. No evil dictator would command such love.
I'm calling Poe's Law on this.Look at this grief. No leader was loved more than Kim Jong Il. No evil dictator would command such love.
Look at this grief. No leader was loved more than Kim Jong Il. No evil dictator would command such love.