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Jiang Regime's Use of Psychiatric Hospitals to Persecute Falun Gong Practitioners Draws Attention at International Meeting of Psychiatrists (Photo) On May 19, 2003, Mr. Robin J. Munro won the Patient Advocacy Award at the
2003 APA annual meeting for his research on China's abuses of psychiatry to
carry out political persecution of dissidents. Currently, Robin J. Munro is doing research at the University of London in
England on the legal problems associated with psychiatric treatments. He has
spent several years investigating China's persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners and dissidents through the abuse of psychiatry. He authored
several books on this special topic, including one entitled, "Dangerous
Minds: Political Psychiatry in China Today and Its Origins in the Mao Era". Mr. Munro came to San Francisco to attend the 2003 APA Annual Meeting (the
156th annual meeting) and spoke on China's abusive policy to
psychiatrists from all over the world, who attached great importance to the
content of his speech. Afterwards, attendees enthusiastically discussed the
issue and brought forward many suggestions about how to stop China from using
psychiatry as a means of political persecution. During an interview, Mr. Munro said, "The political use of psychiatry in
China to persecute dissidents was prevalent during the Cultural Revolution. The
abuses evidently subsided from the 1980s to 1990s. At the end of 1990s, however,
just when I was about to close my research, the suppression of Falun Gong
suddenly began in 1999. Many reports provide evidence that detained Falun Gong
practitioners are forcibly locked in mental hospitals. They are obviously
mentally healthy but are forced to receive psychiatric treatments and are
mistreated or beaten. None of this is treatment; it is persecution. It is very
clear that over the past nearly three years, there have been a few hundred of
these kinds of cases, each of which has reliable evidence. This so-called
'treatment' actually tends to imperil, threaten and force Falun Gong
practitioners to write 'guarantee' letters to give up their practice. Once they
write this kind of statement under threats and pressure, they will be
immediately released. From the medical science point of view, this has no
standing at all, for if they indeed suffered from psychosis, how would it be
possible for them to be cured simply by signing a piece of paper? This, on the
other hand, allows us to clearly see through the nature of what actually has
happened. Today, in China's psychiatric hospitals, most of these kinds of cases
involve Falun Gong practitioners." Posting date: 5/25/2003 |