NGO
Comments on the draft text
Draft article 11 - FREEDOM FROM TORTURE OR CRUEL, INHUMAN OR DEGRADING
TREATMENT OR PUNISHMENT
World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry
May 26, 2004
Article 11 obligates states to prevent torture and other ill treatment
of people with disabilities, in particular, medical or scientific experimentation
without the free and informed consent of the person concerned, and forced
interventions or institutionalization to correct, improve or alleviate
any actual or perceived impairment.
This is crucial for people with psychosocial disabilities. World Network
of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry is familiar with situations all
over the world where people are subjected to invasive and harmful psychiatric
procedures as well as experimentation, without their consent. These
procedures range from psychosurgery and electroshock without anesthesia,
to forced and coerced administration of drugs that interfere with our
mental functioning and distort our personalities.
Such interventions violate the international human rights norm prohibiting
torture, under certain conditions. The definition of torture in the
Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish torture includes:
the use of methods upon a person intended to obliterate the personality
of the victim or to diminish his physical or mental capacities.
Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture, Article 2
When psychiatric interventions are used against the will of any person
to interfere with the person’s capacity to produce certain kinds of
thoughts, destroy the person’s existing psychological makeup, or prevent
the person from carrying out actions, this fits within the definition
of torture in the Inter-American Convention. This concept is closely
related to the freedom of thought enshrined in ICCPR article 18, which
is not subject to any limitations or derogations.
ICCPR article 18, paragraph 2 reads:
No one shall be subject to coercion which would impair his freedom
to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice.
Psychiatric interventions that invade the brain and interfere with
its capacity to produce thoughts violate article 18. No procedures or
legal standards are contemplated by the ICCPR to allow limitation of
this freedom or the corresponding state obligation to refrain from any
coercive interventions.
The definition of torture in the UN Convention Against Torture reads,
For the purposes of this Convention, the term "torture"
means any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or
mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as
obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing
him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of
having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person,
or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain
or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent
or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official
capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent
in or incidental to lawful sanctions.
Convention Against Torture, Article 1(1)
Psychiatric interventions such as psychosurgery, electroshock and drugging
with neuroleptics (often considered a “chemical straitjacket”) are often
done for coercive purposes to induce the individual to change his or
her behavior. Under such circumstances, it is appropriate to speak of
the intentional infliction of severe mental and physical pain and suffering
for a coercive purpose. This happens, for example, when a psychiatrist
orders the forcible administration of one neuroleptic drug which makes
a person vomit and feel extremely unwell mentally and physically, for
the purpose of inducing her to accept another neuroleptic drug that
she has refused. Another example of medical technology being used as
torture is the use of implants under the skin to deliver psychiatric
drugs against the person’s will, and beyond the person’s capacity to
resist. Such technology is currently under development in research trials.
Another factor to be noted in the definition of torture is the element
of discrimination. All forced psychiatric interventions are based on
the notion that people with psychosocial disabilities should be extremely
distressed to be who they are, and that failure to accept disabling
interventions shows poor judgment. This violates the principle of respect
for human diversity and for impairment as an ordinary part of the human
condition, as well as the principles of autonomy and equality.
Forced psychiatric interventions, even of the most ordinary kind, cause
severe mental and physical pain and suffering. A quick survey in the
United States drew several personal stories of the devastating short-
and long-term effects of such interventions. We should not be in the
business of creating additional or secondary disability such as post
traumatic stress, tardive dyskinesia (a brain disorder causing painful
movements that can also be life-threatening, which is caused by neuroleptic
drugs), or obliteration of memory, learned skills and creativity (which
can be caused by electroshock). Medical interventions must follow the
principles outlined in the supported decision-making model discussed
under article 9. No human being is without the inherent human capacity
to make choices and any interventions to support or assist the person
must approach the person with solidarity, as a human being whose choices
must be respected, and not as an object to be made over to the specifications
of medically-prescribed normality.
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