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Putin brings back mental ward torment
London Times ^ | 8/26/07 | Mark Franchetti

Posted on 08/26/2007 1:03:36 PM PDT by wagglebee

THE elderly couple did not hesitate to open the door when they saw Dimitry Mukhin through their spy-hole. Mukhin, a psychiatrist who lived in the neighbouring building, had recently paid a friendly visit to ask if they needed anything. But this was no courtesy call.

As Emilia Tomareva and Albert Uzikov let him into the Moscow flat where they had lived for decades, Mukhin rushed in with two men in white coats and a policeman.

The shocked couple were bundled into an ambulance with their hands tied behind their backs and locked up in separate psychiatric hospital wards, even though neither was mentally ill.

Both were injected with drugs against their will and without a court order that is normally required under Russian law. By the time they were released 10 days later after a judge ruled that they should never have been incarcerated in the first place, both were ill and terrified.

Uzikov, a leukaemia sufferer, was so weakened by the drugs that he had to be carried home. A few months later he died.

“I don’t know what they did to my husband but he could barely stand when he was released,” Tomareva said. “We found out that while he was being held he had several minor heart attacks but was not given any medical attention. That, coupled with the drugs they gave him, killed him.

“We lived peacefully and never bothered anyone. What they did to us was criminal. I live in fear now.”

Tomareva and Uzikov were victims of what human rights activists are warning is a return to the Soviet-era abuse of psychiatry as a tool of repression.

The Soviet Union routinely silenced dissidents by putting them in asylums. The practice attracted worldwide condemnation, in part because of the protests of Andrei Sakharov, the nuclear physicist confined to the city of Gorky for years.

Among the most notorious cases was that of Alexander Yes-enin-Volpin, a mathematician who became one of the Soviet Union’s first dissidents. He was interned in mental hospitals eight times and was once held for two years before he left in 1972 for the United States.

But whereas under communism people were subjected to debilitating drugs because of their opposition to the state, a bribe often suffices now to have a rational person with no interest in politics condemned to the nightmarish world of Russian mental hospitals.

The activists say that rampant corruption, coupled with a lack of controls on Russian psychiatry, have resulted in people being locked up illegally, sometimes simply because someone wants to take over their flat.

Tomareva suspects that some neighbours were behind her detention. She told investigators they wanted to buy the flat in which she and her husband lived but the couple had refused to part with it.

She suspects the neighbours paid a bribe to have them detained with the intention of arranging for their flat to be put up for sale, under Russian law, a person found to be mentally ill loses most of their rights.

In the end a court found Mukhin guilty of having sent the couple to a psychiatric ward illegally and gave him a four-year suspended sentence. He denied any wrongdoing.

“Having a perfectly sane person locked up in a psychiatric institution has become shockingly easy,” said Tatyana Mal-chikova of the Citizens’ Commission for Human Rights, which believes there are hundreds of cases like that of Tomareva.

“All it takes is a bribe. The system is being abused all the time. But whereas in Soviet times the victims were mainly dissidents, now it could happen to anyone over a simple dispute. Once someone sane is locked up and being injected daily with powerful drugs, it doesn’t take long to turn them into vegetables.”

Last week authorities in the Arctic city of Murmansk released Larissa Arap, an opposition journalist whose five-week detention in two psychiatric hospitals caused a storm of protest.

Arap, who is a supporter of Garry Kasparov, the former chess champion turned fierce Kremlin critic, was confined after publishing an exposé in which she described how staff at a mental hospital were abusing young patients, often with electric shocks. During a routine medical test to renew her driving licence, she was asked by a doctor if she had written the article. Arap defended her story. The doctor called the police and had her forcibly detained. In hospital she was regularly given drugs and last week she was so feeble that she could barely speak.

“I feel very sick,” said Arap, who has never suffered from anything more than mild depression. “I have no idea what they gave me but I have memory loss. I lost all sense of time and can’t remember much of what they did to me. They tied and beat me. It was torture. I saw other perfectly sane people inside.”

Similar treatment was used against Sergei Ablamsky, a lawyer in Bryansk, 250 miles southwest of Moscow, when he came into conflict with a prosecutor he accused of corruption. Ablamsky was taken in handcuffs to a psychiatric institute where he was held for four weeks.

“It was a terrifying experience,” he said. “Once you’re inside you are no one. You have no rights and are treated worse than an animal. I saw people being beaten up all the time. I was kept drugged and had little understanding of who I was and where I was being held. I could barely move. Once you are trapped inside that world, they will do everything to break you and make you insane.” “The Soviet practice of doing away with people by declaring them mentally ill is making a comeback in today’s Russia,” said Vladimir Bukovsky, a Soviet-era dissident now living in London who was twice locked up in mental institutions.

“Abuse of psychiatry had ceased after the collapse of communism. But now, under Vladimir Putin, a president who has brought back many Soviet-era practices and has described the collapse of the Soviet Union as a catastrophe, it’s becoming common again.”


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: communist; govwatch; soviet; vladimirputin
Putin is following in the footsteps of Stalin.
1 posted on 08/26/2007 1:03:38 PM PDT by wagglebee
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Ping


2 posted on 08/26/2007 1:03:59 PM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

dejas vu


3 posted on 08/26/2007 1:05:42 PM PDT by nuconvert ("Terrorism is not the enemy. It is a means to the ends of militant Islamism." MZJ)
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To: wagglebee

Why am I not surprised?


4 posted on 08/26/2007 1:06:36 PM PDT by stephenjohnbanker ( Hunter/Thompson/Thompson/Hunter in 08! "Read my lips....No new RINO's" !!)
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To: wagglebee

“Putin is following in the footsteps of Stalin.”

No way. Bush looked into his eyes and saw his soul.


5 posted on 08/26/2007 1:09:51 PM PDT by pieceofthepuzzle
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To: wagglebee

And hitlery will follow putin’s!


6 posted on 08/26/2007 1:10:16 PM PDT by dusttoyou (FredHead from the git go)
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To: wagglebee

Russia is really down to the level of the worst of the 3rd world when it comes to respect for the rights and dignity of the individual. Many Americans have misconceptions about Russia as most Russians look like Westerners. The truth of the matter is that Russia a deeply alien civilization.


7 posted on 08/26/2007 1:11:27 PM PDT by Aikonaa
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To: wagglebee

I wonder if President Bush was able to see this coming when he looked into Putty’s soul? LOL!


8 posted on 08/26/2007 1:13:53 PM PDT by NRA2BFree ("The time is near at hand which must determine whether Americans are to be free men or slaves!")
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To: wagglebee

This is what the leftists in this country would like to do to conservatives.


9 posted on 08/26/2007 1:15:14 PM PDT by B Knotts (Anybody but Giuliani!)
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To: wagglebee
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
10 posted on 08/26/2007 1:18:37 PM PDT by stm (Fred Thompson in 08! Return our country to the era of Reagan Conservatism now.)
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To: All; dusttoyou

.

Ever since the Fall of Saigon in 1975 Communist Vietnam has been imprisioning formerly Free South Vietnamese people into Mental Wards or worse:

Pictures of a vietnamese Re-Education (SLAVE LABOR) Camp

http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1308949/posts

http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1806248/posts

.

A Fall of Saigon engineered by a post-WATERGATE Democrat Congress’ cut off of all our funding for the then Free South Vietnamese to fight for their own Freedom with.

A Fall of Saigon supported by Anti-Freedom / Anti-U.S. Activists:

HILLARY RODHAM
WILLIAM CLINTON
TED KENNEDY
JOHN KERRY
BARBARA BOXER
JANE FONDA
TOM HAYDEN
JESSE JACKSON
RAMSEY CLARK (21st Century’s SADDAM Defense Attorney)
...etc.

.


11 posted on 08/26/2007 1:32:08 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: wagglebee

Devils. Evil devils. (Ras)putin included.


12 posted on 08/26/2007 3:03:34 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heros have always been cowboys--Reagan and Bush)
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To: wagglebee

You were expecting something different from a former full Colonel of the KGB whose duty station was in East Germany.

When he wasn’t running charming characters like the Baader-Meinhoff gang & the Red Army Faction into West Germany then he was spying on his “allies” the East Germans.


13 posted on 08/26/2007 7:29:20 PM PDT by Nebr FAL owner (.308 reach out & thump someone .50 cal.Browning Machine gun reach out & crush someone)
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To: wagglebee

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1574836/posts
The UN Plan for Your Mental Health (UNESCO)


14 posted on 08/26/2007 7:32:52 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Aikonaa
The Man Who Was
15 posted on 08/26/2007 7:35:22 PM PDT by dighton
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To: DAVEY CROCKETT; FARS; struwwelpeter; M. Espinola

“I feel very sick,” said Arap, who has never suffered from anything more than mild depression. “I have no idea what they gave me but I have memory loss. I lost all sense of time and can’t remember much of what they did to me. They tied and beat me. It was torture. I saw other perfectly sane people inside.”<<<

Ping.


16 posted on 08/27/2007 2:43:25 AM PDT by nw_arizona_granny (This is "Be an Angel Day", do something nice for someone today.)
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To: wagglebee

So it seems. Cut of personality and everything. And our leaders are treating him like another “Uncle Joe”. Sickening.


17 posted on 08/31/2007 3:24:16 PM PDT by dr_who_2
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