Psychiatrist's Report Documents the Torture of Zhao Ming in a Chinese Forced Labor Camp
RE: Mr. Zhao Ming Date of Birth: 13/9/71 I interviewed Mr. Zhao Ming in St. Patrick's Hospital taking his personal testimony following his
release from detention earlier this year. I have the full permission of Zhao Ming to write this
report and to highlight his experiences at the hands of the Chinese authorities. His case was
highlighted extensively by the media and appeals were made repeatedly on his behalf by the
Department of Foreign Affairs, by the Minister for Foreign Affairs and by An Taoiseach Bertie Ahern.
Zhao Ming is a single man who is a computer post-graduate computer science student at Trinity
College Dublin. He told me that he first learned Falun Gong for physical health reasons as he
described a number of symptoms including lethargy, debility and frequent flus and colds. He told me
that he had developed a liver problem during his first year at University although the exact nature
of this is unclear and he received various herbal preparations for this. He also had difficulty with
concentration and sleeping during his postgraduate years. However he began practising Falun Gong
regularly in 1995 and he felt immediate physical and mental health benefit from this. He came to
Ireland in March of 1999 to take up a Masters of Science Degree in Computer Science. He returned to
China in December of 1999 during the Christmas break. On the 4th January 2000, having
been perturbed by the official Chinese government crackdown against Falun Gong he went to the state
appeals office to make a personal appeal to the government and to recount the personal benefits that
he had derived from the practice. However he was immediately arrested and was sent back to his
hometown. His passport was confiscated and he was unable to find work at this period. In May of 2000
he returned to Beijing and was immediately arrested in the company or other Falun Gong practitioners
by plain-clothes police. He was initially sent to a detention centre and moved frequently between various detention
facilities and then was finally sent to a labour camp in July of 2000. He described his initial
first week in detention as being in his words "peaceful" but as a result of the fact that
no charges were pressed against him and he was still being detained in spite of this, he went on a
hunger strike for ten days and the prison guards immediately encouraged other inmates to force feed
him. He recalls being forced fed by other inmates in the labour camp who opened his mouth with a
toothbrush and forced him to eat. He told me that he aspirated or inhaled food into his lungs on two
occasions as a result of this causing him extreme physical discomfort. He began a second hunger and
thirst strike which lasted for eighteen days and he tells me that the authorities responded by
restraining him and inserting an intravenous drip into his arm to hydrate him. In terms of the
conditions in the labour camp in which he was held Zhao Ming told me that he felt the worst aspect
of his treatment was what he described as the "mental torture" being meted out to him in
the camp. The other detainees in the camp had been apparently convicted of ordinary crimes and were
generally forced to work mainly wrapping chopsticks. Falun Gong practitioners he told me were
singled out and were not immediately made to undertake this work. Zhao Ming told me that he and
other Falun Gong practitioners were made to watch videos and listen to tapes and supplied with anti
Falun Gong written material all in an effort to make them renounce their beliefs in Falun Gong. They
were repeatedly told that the practice of Falun Gong was [Jiang's regime's slanderous word], however few practitioners renounced
Falun Gong as a result of this forced study. Detainees who refused to renounce Falun Gong were also
subjected to frequent physical and psychological punishment. Sleep deprivation was particularly
common and he recalls being repeatedly woken at 2 to 4 am and sometimes being denied any sleep at
all. He was frequently subjected to physical torture and brutality and described how the prison
authorities would encourage other detainees to physically assault him during the first month of his
detention. He recalls being repeatedly kicked and punched on his thighs and after two weeks of this
'treatment' was unable to walk. He also developed severe constipation and was unable to evacuate
his bowels as a result of this physical brutality. During the second month of his detention he told
me that he was frequently forced to adopt what was termed the 'military squat' and during one two
week period he was forced to spend up to ten hours per day in a squatting position with a result
that his legs became numb and extremely painful. He was also handcuffed to a chair and kept awake at
night by other inmates. He recalls being forced to stand intermittently for up to 20 hours per day
for 2 to 3 days in a row and remembers his feet and hands swelling as a result of this. He tells me
that occasionally but not very frequently electric shocks were administered through cattle batons
and this appeared to have been the worse aspect of the physical torture that was inflicted on him
particularly when up to six batons were applied simultaneously. Thus the physical torture that he
described appears to have been systematic, consisting of primarily sleep deprivation, being forced
to adopt postures and squatting positions in addition to severe psychological pressure to renounce
his peacefully held beliefs in Falun Gong. Zhao Ming felt that the physical punishment was 'tailor
made' to be applied to individuals according to the intensity of their beliefs and dedication to
Falun Gong and would be escalated if overt resistance to the labour camp regime was demonstrated.
Zhao Ming told me that his original sentence was for one year but that this was extended for ten
months as a result of his refusal to renounce Falun Gong and I gather he spent twenty two months in
detention in the labour camp in total. In terms of the effects of this experience on him Zhao Ming tells me that he hasn't lost hope or
hasn't changed his beliefs in Falun Gong in anyway. He tells me that the recall of this memory is
extremely painful and upon his release recently he has had a number of nightmares although his sleep
pattern appears to have settled now to six hours continuous sleep per night. He tells me that he
hasn't any symptoms of depression or of post traumatic stress disorder. He does however subjectively
and objectively I feel, have difficulty recalling all his experiences and finds it extremely painful
to do so. He would admit feeling some numbness and detachment from memories of some of the severe
treatment that was meted out to him. He tells me that he frequently wondered if the food that he was
given was drugged or interfered with in any way. He certainly has no hostility or
mistrust towards people in general or estrangement from his friends or peer group as a result of his
experiences. There is no evidence of alteration in his personal beliefs or adherence to Falun Gong.
He denies any significant alcohol consumption currently. In terms of ongoing physical symptoms he
describes paraesthesia and numbness in both thighs as a result of repeatedly being forced to adopt a
squatting position. He has been referred to a Neurologist Dr. Orna Hardiman in Beaumont Hospital for
a formal consultation regarding these persistent symptoms. Zhao Ming tells me that he intends to
resume studies for his MSc. in Computer Science this year. My overall impression is thus that Zhao Ming is a remarkably strong individual who despite being
a victim of a systematic and organised torture by the state, he has showed evidence of reintegrating
with his peers and his studies. The support that he has received from those who championed his cause
during his detention in my view has been invaluable in helping him to adjust to his adverse
experience. Signed Dr Declan Lyons á
MB MSc MRCP MRCPsych.
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