Paul Goble
Staunton,
July 9 – The World Cup circus may not have distracted Russians from the
Kremlin’s plans to force them to work longer before receiving a pension – indeed,
the transparency of what Moscow was doing may have had the opposite effect –
but it has distracted the attention of many in the West to new repressive
measures the Putin regime is taking.
Among
the worst is a new law, approved by the Duma on third reading last week, that
allows prosecutors to commit to psychiatric hospitals on an involuntarily and
forced basis those who are found guilty not just of criminal laws but of
administrative rules, significantly expanding the number of Russians at risk of
such treatment (theins.ru/opinions/108997).
Psychiatrist Andrey Bilzho says the
new law is extremely dangerous and opens the way to the restoration of the Soviet
practice of using forced psychiatric hospitalization against dissidents who
were completely healthy in psychological terms but had offended the powers that
be by their opposition to the Kremlin.
The political abuse of psychiatry in
this way, he says, is relatively well known. What is not is an equally horrific
spread of its use for still other purposes much in the same way that denunciations
were used in Stalin’s time: to get someone out of an apartment one wanted to
occupy and so on. Such things were common outside of Moscow, Bilzho says.
Now, they could easily return,
although with the political abuses.
The new law does differ from its
Soviet predecessor in one detail, the psychiatrist says. In Soviet times, the
procuracy wasn’t involved. Officials simply called emergency services and asked
that so and so be taken to a psychiatric hospital for treatment, a place where
they ensured in advance that he or she would be “treated” appropriately – that is,
inappropriately.
In the new law, everything appears “normal,”
except for “one ‘small’ condition.” The procurator involved must be free,
independent and honest, and the psychiatrists must have a similar freedom to
find that someone doesn’t need treatment.
In a “normal” country, that would be the way it would work.
But as Bilzho points out, Russia isn’t
a normal country; and that isn’t how things will work out. Consequently, there is every reason to fear
that this new law will be abused. Russians and others must denounce it and be
on alert for new attacks by the regime against the rights of the population.
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