CUBA'S
ABUSES OF PSYCHIATRY
Taken in part from:
MIAMI
HERALD by
JUAN O. TAMAYO
At the heart of the
issue is Cuba's steadfast portrayal of itself as a society in
which ''normality" for its 11 million people, especially
children, means total support for Castro's ruling Communist Party.
The Cuban
totalitarian
government has long been accused of abusing psychiatry, like its
former Soviet allies, to detain dissidents an others under diagnosis such as
''apathy toward socialism" and ''delusions of defending human
rights."
CHILDREN'S CODE
Article 3 of the
legal Children's Code, calls on ''society and the state [to] work
for the efficient protection of youth against all influences
contrary to their communist formation." That means,
according to Marta Molina, a Cuban psychiatrist who went into
exile last year, that children who don't follow the party line not
only run into trouble with authorities but also with psychiatrists.
Cuban
psychiatrists are under stringent government orders to defend communism in
such cases, Molina said, and ''because of the lack of adequate
independent counseling, the children frequently became very
depressed." She treated more
than 500 children in Cuba who had ''serious psychological problems
as a result of their own disagreement with the communist ideology
or their
parents' refusal to indoctrinate
them," Molina said
in a sworn affidavit.
Based on the
government's view of normality, Cuban officials have impugned the
sanity of all persistent Castro critics, arguing in effect that
opposition to the regime is so abnormal that dissidents must be
mentally ill. ''Such a
conceptualization has enabled the Cuban government to redefine
some ecidivist' political activity as a form of mental
illness," wrote two veteran Cuba analysts, Charles J. Brown
and Armando Lago, in the 1991 book The Politics of Psychiatry in
Revolutionary Cuba, published by Freedom House.
The book details the cases of 27 dissidents diagnosed as suffering from mental
ailments, mostly depression. Many received electroshocks, more as
torture than treatment, the authors stated.
SOVIET
PARALLELS
Rigoberto Rodriguez, a Cuban-American who heads the South Florida
Psychiatric Society, said Cuba's abuses are similar to those of
the former Soviet Union, which diagnosed many dissidents in the
1970s as suffering from ''sluggish schizophrenia".
But in Cuba they are even
more prevalent, said Rodriguez, who sits on the American
Psychiatric Association panel that investigates abuses of the
profession around the world.
''We have reports
of a several hundred cases of abuses in Cuba, the same as the
couple of hundred cases in the Soviet Union but within a much
smaller population," he said.
The Soviet Union
abandoned the World Psychiatric Association in 1983 to avoid its
censure. Cuba walked out at the same time in support of its ally,
but reports of new abuses continue to be widely received.
Dr. Ramona Paneque,
a Cuban-American psychiatrist in Miami who recently attended a
professional conference in Havana, spoke on Elian
Gonzalez: 'Elian needs treatment for
the tragedy he suffered." U.S. experts agree
that Elian would need counseling in Cuba to help him over his
mother's drowning in November, his removal from the home of Miami
relatives and his return to a home so utterly different from South
Florida. That is acceptable
as far as it goes, said Paneque and three other experts. But
they fear that the ''reinsertion" planed will go beyond
legitimate counseling and into efforts to mold the boy into a
loyal Castro supporter. ''They may try to
make Elian renounce the memory of his mother, his rescuers, and the family that
helped him in Miami . . . and turn that child into an
example of a good . . . revolutionary," said Dr.
Fernando Milanes, retired vice-chairman of the University of
Miami's psychiatry department.
Published Sunday,
May 7, 2000.
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