#20 - JRL 2007-179 - JRL Home
Russia: Is Coercive Psychology Staging A Comeback?
Copyright (c) 2007. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC
20036. www.rferl.org
August 22, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Journalist and activist Larisa Arap spent 46 days
confined against her will in a psychiatric hospital ward in Russia's northern
Murmansk Oblast.
After she was released on August 20, Arap claimed that she was beaten,
drugged, and humiliated during her internment.
Arap had sought mental health treatment in the past. This time, however, she
says the treatment had nothing to do with her condition -- and everything to do
with her reports on child abuse in local psychiatric wards.
Arap alleged that children and adolescents held in the Murmansk regional
psychiatric hospital in the remote city of Apatity were regularly subjected to
electroshock treatment and sexual abuse.
Her article, entitled "Madhouse," was published June 8 in the Murmansk
edition of "March of Dissent," the newspaper tied to the United Civic Front (OGF)
opposition coalition led by Garry Kasparov. Arap is an OGF member and close to
the time of her article's publication attended a Murmansk rally protesting the
policies of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Detained, Then Drugged
On July 5, during a routine medical examination, Arap's doctor asked if she
had authored the piece on the psychiatric wards. Within hours, the 49-year-old
Arap was detained by police and then taken by ambulance to a Murmansk hospital
where she was injected with drugs that blurred her vision and left her weak and
unable to maintain her balance.
On July 26, she was relocated to the Apatity facility she described in her
article. Her case has drawn heated criticism from people who see the spectre of
the Soviet-era "psikhushka" -- psychiatric wards used for the involuntary
detention of political opponents of the state -- resuming its role as a tool of
repression.
Upon her release, Arap said that the clinic staff had tried to force her to
sign a declaration stating that she was being treated voluntarily. "I refused,
after which I was asked to sign another declaration requesting to be released
but pledge to get outpatient psychiatric treatment. There was no other solution
than to write this declaration. They wouldn't have let me go otherwise," Arap
said.
Arap was freed from the institution less than a week after Russian
human-rights ombudsman Vladimir Lukin called for her release. Lukin called for
an independent assessment of Arap after human-rights groups, the OGF, and
members of her family claimed she had been forcibly detained in retaliation for
her article.
Yury Savenko, president of Russia's Independent Psychiatric Association, led
the expert commission chosen by Lukin to examine Arap. He said that although
Arap showed signs of mental instability -- she admits to being briefly
hospitalized at Apatity in 2004 for stress and insomnia -- the forced
hospitalization was in no way necessary.
"Our group managed to meet with her, despite every possible obstacle being
put before us," Savenko said. " We studied medical documents and materials
related to the case, and spent an hour and a half with her. The result was that
we came to the conclusion that we're dealing with a person who is in fact ill.
There are no 'politics' behind this. However, the politicization of our entire
life is such that these patients become the first victims of the situation. And
it's been revealed with unusual clarity that punitive psychiatry, so-called
'police' psychiatry, is alive and well. Because Larisa Arap, from the very
beginning, presented no immediate danger to herself or others."
He added that under the circumstances, the forced treatment was likely to
worsen, rather than alleviate, Arap's condition.
Involuntary Treatment
According to data from the Independent Psychiatric Association, as many as
5-7 percent of the patients hospitalized in medical facilities like the Murmansk
hospital are undergoing involuntary treatment.
"Psychiatry in Russia today is broadening its repressive functions and the
use of involuntary measures in relation to citizens," says Lyubov Vinogradova,
executive director of the Independent Psychiatric Association, who joined
Savenko on the expert commission that met with Arap.
Vinogradova calls Arap's hospitalization "involuntary and a violation of
human rights."
The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) published an open
letter calling on President Putin to honor the findings of Lukin's expert
commission, ensure Arap's release, and see that a criminal investigation is
opened against those responsible for her detention and treatment.
"The horrifying method of forcible psychiatric detention as punishment for
dissent was a trademark of the Soviet past and has no place in a new, democratic
Russia," the CPJ statement said.
(RFE/RL correspondents Svetlana Volskaya and Olga Vakhonicheva contributed to
this report.)
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