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Angry Chinese Blogger (Mirror)
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2008: A Mandate for Madness
In China, maintaining the right image is often everything, and nowhere is this more true, at this time, than in Beijing.
As the host city of the 2008 Olympic Games, Chinese authorities are going to great lengths to ensure that the city presents the the right image for the millions of foreign and domestic tourists who are expected to arrive. As such, authorities have embarked on a pronounced scheme of city beautification; planting trees, renovating buildings, and even signing far reaching ordinances banning multistory cranes from the cities skylines months prior to the opening of the Games.
Of course, these efforts have not been without controversy. There have been complaints over compulsory land requisitions and demolitions, the displacement of citizens to make way for public amenities, and the upgrading of facilities to such an extent that some have now left the price range of the average man on the street. There have even been accusations that city authorities might be on the verge of expelling hundreds of thousands of migrant workers for the duration of the games in case 'they make Beijing look untidy'. However, amidst all of this, a new controversy has now emerged.
According to reports, Beijing city authorities are planning to launch a crackdown on those suffering from mental illnesses and psychological conditions, in order to prevent them from causing 'harm to society' during the 2008. A euphemisms taken to mean 'portraying a side of Beijing that authorities would rather keep from tourists'.
It is currently unclear what kind of form such a crackdown would take, although the Chinese media has suggested that it may take the form of enforced institutionalization for the duration of the Games for people with a wide variety of disorders. It may also take the form of official orders forcing relatives of the mentally ill to confine them during certain hours, or forbidding them from entering certain regions of the city.
According to city officials, individual municipal authorities will be in charge of the crackdown. | | “The city government plans to ask the municipal (council) to make a law about psychiatric health regulations aimed at providing mental health treatment and preventing mentally ill people from damaging the public interest.”
Zhou Jidong, Head of legal Affairs, Beijing City Government | | Understandably, the prospect of a street sweeping exercise to remove the mentally ill from public view during the games, has has not been well received by mental health charities and human rights interests.
Based on past initiatives, it is unlikely that any crackdown will include a sustained treatment or rehabilitation program to care for the mentally ill once the games are over.
Secondary Agenda?
While Beijing has concerns over the effect that 'wondering mentally ill' may have on the image of the 2008 games, and mental health groups have concerns over the effect that a street sweeping exercise might have on the human rights of some of China's most vulnerable people, some China watchers have questioned whether Beijing might have more in mind that detaining.
In addition to detaining old people with dementia and young people with emotional difficulties, China watchers have questioned whether Beijing might be planning to use mental health laws as a means of detaining dissidents in order to prevent them from mounting public protests during the 2008 games, or from using the Games as a opportunity to meet with foreign journalists.
Extra Judicial Detention
Beijing has a known history of using 'mental illness' as a political tool to silence protesters, and has frequently acted to imprison persistent demonstrators using open ended mental health legislation, and of using the label of mental illness as a weapon to discredit its critics.
In one past case, human rights activist Wang Wanxing was detained on the June 3 1992, after he attempted to meet foreign journalist at Tiananmen Square, in order to discuss the massacre that took place there three years earlier.
Wang was committed to a mental institution run by the Chinese security forces in Beijing's Fangshan District, where he was detained until August 1999, when he was released on a trial basis. However, in December Wang requested permission to discuss his confinement with the media, at which point he was re-detained, finally being released in 2005. As a mental health prisoner, Wang was outside of the legal system, had no access to a lawyer, and his detention was not subject to judicial review. He was also detained on an open sentence, meaning that his incarceration had no upper time limit.
Officially, Wang was recorded as suffering from a condition known as "political monomania"; a mental illness under which sufferers experience dangerously obsessive paranoid delusions relating to political issues. This condition is not recognized as a mental disorder by the WHO.
According to an assessment made by Chinese psychologists, shortly before his release, Wang remained dangerously mentally ill, and required both detention and medication. | | "[Wang] displays impairments of thought association and of mental logic. His systematic delusions have shown no conspicuous improvement since he was first admitted to the hospital, and his [mental] activities are still characterized by delusions of grandeur, litigation mania, and a conspicuously enhanced pathological will.
Psychological report, Fall 2005 | | However, after his release in 2005, an independent team of experts, including European experts on mental illness and psychosis concluded that Wang was suffering from no detectable form of mental or physical illness other than those naturally associated with the stress of such an extended detention. | | "There was no reason that Mr. Wang had to be locked up in a special forensic psychiatric hospital or to be admitted to any psychiatric facility.... We were not able to reveal any form of mental disorder: no signs of depression, psychosis or organic disorder."
Independent psychiatric report | | Other cases include those of Liu Xinjuan and Hu Jia, both high profile activists.
In January 2006, Chinese security forces seized land rights activist Liu Xinjuan from Jing’an park, Shanghai, as she prepared to take a petition to the People’s Congress. After being interrogated at a Minhang District police station, she was transfered to the Beiqiao Psychiatric Hospital after authorities ruled that her protest were a sign that she was 'mentally unsound'. It was the fifth time in three years that authorities had detained Liu in a mental institution because eof her protests against forced evictions and abuse of land rights.
In mid 2004, Chinese security forces demanded that the family of AIDS activist Hu Jia commit him to a mental institution 'for evaluation', on the grounds that his health and human rights campaigning was a sign of mental illness. When Hu's family declined, he was involuntarily committed.
An unknown number, rumored to be several thousand, followers of the FLG spiritual movement, have also been forcefully institutionalized.
According to Human Rights Watch, as much as 15 percent of institutionalized Chinese have been detained for political reasons, rather than genuine mental health reasons. It is not clear if this figure includes FLG members, who are commonly detained under separate laws permitting them to be detained for up to two years 'reeducation' without trial or charge.
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To date 3 Comment(s)
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ShaMao'er
/ Website
(14.2.08 23:25)
The Chinese are not exactly noted for sympathy for those with mental illness. About 2 years ago, a relative of mine's great uncle had a major stroke in a small village near the North Korean border. He lost is ability to walk and talk and generally looked pretty bad. The villagers, (his neighbors for 50+ years), said he was possessed and through him out of his home. If we hadn't intervened he would have starved to death outside the home of a local witch.
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ACB
(16.2.08 07:50)
People in the US believe in possession, too. It's a base superstition and as nothing to do with mental illness.
Check out the beliefs held by followers of things like La Regla de Lukumi (Santeria) in the US.
It's not nice and its not right but it happens in superstition and poverty ridden communities the world over.
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Madam Miaow
/ Website
(28.4.08 22:13)
A "crackdown" on those with "mental illnesses and psychological conditions"? How mad is that?
It is so sad to learn how backward the Chinese authorities can be. Just when you hope progress and some sort of enlightenment is round the corner you run into situations like this.
As the new superpower with 6 billion people to feed, China had better start making some big strides in improving the lot of its citizens.
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