The Japan Times: Psychiatric Abuse In China
Sept. 5, 2002 The abuse of psychiatry for political purposes has a long and sad history.
Defining dissidents as "mentally ill" allows political authorities to
evade many of the legal protections built into criminal codes, and oppressive
governments have rarely hesitated to use that shortcut when convenient. Such
abuses were commonplace in the Soviet Union; tragically, they appear to be
continuing in China today. There are measures that can be used to block this
behavior, but success depends on vigilance by the rest of the international
community. A test case occurred late last month in Yokohama; thus far, the
response has been lukewarm.
According to a recent report by Human Rights Watch, an international human
rights group, and the Geneva Initiative on Psychiatry, China is using psychiatry
to have political opponents declared insane. The evidence, based on Chinese
psychiatric archives, reveals "a long-standing record of the misuse of
psychiatry for politically repressive purposes, one that resembles in all key
respects that of the former Soviet Union." The authors conclude that as
many as 15 percent of people held in Chinese mental institutions may be
political prisoners, a designation that includes labor activists and other
individuals who complain of political persecution.
The situation has worsened in recent years mainly because of the Chinese
government's response to the Falun Gong spiritual group [...]. The group's
resilience in the face of a harsh crackdown by the Beijing government -- and the
international attention that has focused on the group as a result - has spurred
the Chinese leadership to use more creative methods of suppression. The group
was [...] banned in 1999. Since then, more than 300 detained members of Falun
Gong have reportedly been detained in psychiatric institutions. This surge,
writes the report's authors, is proof of the abuse of psychiatry to suppress
dissent. In addition to detaining individuals, the report alleges that the
Chinese government has forced individuals without mental problems to take
psychiatric drugs and be subjected to electroshock treatment.
Similar charges have been leveled by U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights
Mary Robinson. During her visit to China last month, she pointed to the
detention of Falun Gong [practitioners] in psychiatric wards as a continuing
problem. She also said U.N. officials have had difficulty getting permission to
investigate the alleged abuses.
China denies the accusations. [...] When asked about Falun Gong, the ministry
spokesman said members were committed at their families' request, and only after
a doctor had found signs of mental illness. Of course, the Beijing government's
definition of mental illness in political terms -- "an unhealthy
belief" -- is disingenuous at best.
China has made no secret of its attempt to convince the Chinese people and
the world that Falun Gong is dangerous. Its propaganda campaign uses photographs
and other accounts as "evidence" to [slander Falun Gong]
There is at least one way to confirm the truth of the allegations -- or
China's denials: China could open its mental hospitals to international
inspections. The World Psychiatric Association, which represents professional
groups from over 100 nations, has adopted a motion calling on China to accept an
independent fact-finding mission. Beijing's failure to accept foreign scrutiny
could lead to its expulsion from the group. That last occurred in 1983 when the
Soviet Union withdrew under similar accusations. Reportedly, China has agreed to
an "educational" visit by the WPA, but it has not yet officially
commented on the motion. WPA President Juan J. Lopez-Ibor said he discussed the
possibility of an investigation with Chinese Deputy Minister of Health Ma
Xiaowei earlier this year.
Action by the WPA is not enough; the rest of the world must also raise its
voices to protest Chinese behavior. China's past behavior has shown that Beijing
is acutely sensitive to large-scale protests, and that this sensitivity will
increase with the approach of the 2008 Olympic Games, to be held in Beijing.
This is an opportunity to nudge China into greater compliance with international
norms -- norms that China endorsed when it joined the United Nations. China has
an easy way to silence the brewing storm: It should open the doors of its mental
hospitals and let the world see what is going on inside.
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?ed20020905a1.htm
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