![]() | ||||
|
Taipei Times: China part of psychiatric axis of evil By Christopher Lingle September 18, 2002 Minions of China's communist party are acting as overzealous guardians of order, although
certainly not of the rule of law. At least this is the suggestion in the accusations that China has
been detaining Falun Gong followers and other political dissidents in mental institutions and
forcing them to take psychotropic drugs and undergo electroconvulsive therapy. Evidence of the abuse of psychiatry in China was presented during a congress of the World
Psychiatric Association (WPA). If such activities are confirmed, individual psychiatrists could be
expelled from the association under WPA rules and China could lose its national affiliation. In a recent report, Human Rights Watch offered evidence gleaned from official documents
suggesting that up to 15 percent of inmates in Chinese mental institutions are political prisoners.
This report chronicled China's history of using psychiatry as a means of repressing political
dissidents. One estimate indicates that at least 3,000 people were subjected to psychiatric
detention for political activity over the past two decades. The recent increase in the politicized use and control of psychiatric treatment may be part of
Beijing's concerted effort to stem the rise of Falun Gong, a spiritual [group] that focuses on
meditation. For its part, Chinese clinical psychiatry is said to conform to most internationally acceptable
diagnostic and ethical standards. However, forensic psychiatrists may have been co-opted by the
system by engaging in diagnoses to support acts of political suppression. According to Human Rights
Watch, these decisions have led to political activists outnumbering all those institutionalized for
criminal insanity appraised by China's forensic psychiatry system, including psychotic murderers,
rapists, arsonists and offenders with violent mental illnesses. Psychiatric abuse is nothing new in China. Under Mao Zedong's rule during the 1960s and 1970s,
psychiatric appraisals in almost three-quarters of all criminal cases involved political dissidents. Nor is the practice of utilizing psychiatry to support state repression uncommon in communist
countries. In fact, a psychiatric "axis of evil" can be identified with China joining the
ranks of the now-defunct Soviet Union and its former client Cuba. Similar charges in 1983 forced the
Soviet Union to withdraw from the association to head off moves to have it expelled. In 1996, the
office of research for Radio Marti found 200 documented cases of abuse of psychiatric medicine that
brought the total of known cases of psychiatric abuse in Cuba to 371. But the WPA has neither censured nor expelled China. Instead, the action taken amounted to a slap
on the wrist. A team of experts will be sent to China next year to investigate whether there are
political dissidents being held in mental wards. Since Chinese officials have denied the charges, it
is possible that Beijing might refuse to accept the delegation. As it is, Beijing has refused to
open its asylums to independent investigators so they could observe prisoners and review their
mental state. At present, political deviancy is still considered to be a form of insanity or at minimum it is
taken to represent a serious form of mental illness. As such, "political maniacs" are
housed along with dangerous mentally ill criminals. Chinese citizens have been incarcerated for
shouting slogans or writing banners that are considered to be "reactionary" or for
speaking out in public against government policies. One way to interpret this rise in psychiatric abuse is that the current regime realizes it has
become increasingly weak and is more vulnerable to unrest. Besides direct political dissent, there
is evidence of widespread dissatisfaction with Beijing that includes scattered rioting and even
bombings. The motivations are mixed, and culprits range from disaffected ethnic separatists to
disgruntled workers dispossessed from their jobs by downsizing. But there has also been an increase in dissident activities, including an attempt to form an
opposition political party, the Democratic Party of China. Unfortunately, the authorities choked
this infant movement in its cradle by imprisoning its leaders and raiding their meetings. It would appear from its choice of weak action that the WPA has joined too many other groups or
people who are willing to overlook Beijing's disregard for human and individual rights. It is all
the more disheartening that the WPA is the world's leading psychiatric association and represents
professional groups from more than 100 countries. Christopher Lingle is professor of economics at Universidad Francisco Marroquin in Guatemala and
global strategist for eConoLytics.com. http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/2002/09/18/story/0000168513 Posting date: 9/19/2002
feedback@clearwisdom.net |