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International Association Against Psychiatric Assault

c/o Lawyer/Rechtsanwalt André Raeber, Hinterbergstrasse 24, 6312 Steinhausen, Schweiz/Switzerland

The association is a Human Rights organization that opposes psychiatric coercion and aims to abolish psychiatric coercive measures altogether, promoting the fundamental rights of self-determination, liberty, and human dignity.



IAAPA

International Association Against Psychiatric
Assault

Spechtweg
1, 4125 Riehen, Switzerland

 

The
association is a Human Rights organization that opposes psychiatric
coercion and aims to abolish psychiatric coercive measures
altogether and to promote the fundamental rights of self-determination,
liberty, and human dignity.

IAAPA
is not only “radical” in its aims, it also has a true democratic
“revolutionary” form: the General Assemblies take place legally
via the internet and thereby completely save travel expenses
for our members.
In this way members from poor countries and poor members from
rich ones can participate in the decision making process without
the need to depend on doctors’ associations, pharmaceutical
sponsors or the state for reimbursing their travel costs.

 

Our
letter to the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Mrs. Navanethem
Pillay:

International
Association Against Psychiatric Assault

because
Human Rights are indivisible

IAAPA
– 79/2 Ibn Gvirol – 64046 Tel Aviv – Israel


High
Commissioner for Human Rights
Mrs. Navanethem Pillay
Palais des Nations
CH-1211 Geneva 10
Switzerland

November
2, 2008

Implementing the CRPD in Germany

International
Association

Against
Psychiatric
Assault
IAAPA

Spechtweg
1

4125 Riehen
Switzerland

www.iaapa.ch

Speaker
of the Executive Committee:
Hagai Aviel
79/2 Ibn Gvirol
64046 Tel Aviv
Israel
iaapa@hotmail.com

Dear
Mrs. Pillay,

 

May I briefly introduce to you our organization:     
We are a Human Rights organization in the field of psychiatric
coercion whose aims are to abolish psychiatric coercive
measures altogether and to promote the fundamental rights
of self-determination, liberty, and human dignity. We
have members in 15 countries world-wide (see also: www.iaapa.ch).
3 of them have ratified the CRPD but without any effect
on the practice and the law in their respective countries.
From other countries who have ratified the CRPD, from
none of them have we received a positive response with
regard to psychiatric violence and coercion as contradicted
by the CRPD. The German organization Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft
Psychiatrie-Erfahrene e.V
.
(BPE) has now informed
us in a press
release
on the planned fraud with the CRPD by their
government and parliament.

 

We were therefore delighted that in your
Information Note No. 4 for the Dignity and Justice
for Detainees Week
, you took such a clear stance
against this planned fraud. We understand that for implementing
the CRPD, one has to focus on political steps. Therefore
the path the German organization BPE chose to
confront the law-making bodies with the consequences
of the CRPD before the ratification and demand the necessary
changing of the law for the date of the ratification
in
Germany
seems to us the only promising one. Such a strong power
as a law-making body of a sovereign country can never
be tricked with a contract which has unwanted consequences
which they hadn’t intended. Only if they know what they
sign/ratify, can you ever expect them to fulfil their
promises.

 

That’s why, in our view, it is so important that the request for supporting
a change of the German government’s proceedings is heard
and we want to encourage the High Commissioner for Human
Rights to defend the CRPD in this crucial situation.
Should the Germans get away with such a blatant fraud
with the CRPD, who else in the world will then implement
the CRPD in the field of psychiatric detainees? The
CRPD is in real danger of becoming a symbolic policy
of the governing forces without any substantial meaning,
especially in such an important area of deprivation
of liberty and bodily harm, the core values for human
dignity.

 

Yours sincerely,

 

 

Hagai Aviel

(Speaker of the executive committee)

On
13-Dec-2006 the “Convention on the Protection and Promotion
of the Rights and Dignity of Persons with Disabilities”
1
passed the UN General Assembly. On 30-March-2007 governments
signed the Convention in New York. This signature marks the
beginning of a political debate about this convention and
its political implications for those countries who signed
the convention, namely: Algeria, Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda,
Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Bahrain, Bangladesh,
Barbados, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso,
Burundi, Cambodia, Canada, Cape Verde, Central African Republic,
Chile, China, Colombia, Comoros, Congo, Costa Rica, Cote d’Ivoire,
Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominica,
Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Estonia,
Ethiopia, European Community, Finland, France, Gabon, Germany,
Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, Guinea, Guyana, Honduras, Hungary,
Iceland, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica,
Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Liberia, Lithuania, Luxembourg,
Macedonia , Madagascar, Malawi, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Mauritius,
Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Namibia,
Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Norway,
Panama, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland,
Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Romania, San Marino, Senegal,
Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa,
Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Swaziland, Sweden, Syrian
Arab Republic, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey,
Uganda, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland,
United Republic of Tanzania, Uruguay, Vanuatu, Viet Nam, Yemen.
(see
here
)

The result of this political process will be that in each
of these countries either the convention will be ratified
by its legislating bodies (in democratic countries: the parliaments)
or not be ratified, which would contradict the prior support
of its creation by its government.

Because this convention concerns the human rights of the disabled,
it is crucial to terminate the systematic and wide-spread
violation of human rights sanctioned by law legalizing psychiatric
coercive measures, compulsory hospitalization and forced treatment
as well as the arbitrary prolongation of imprisonment in the
forensic unit as punishment. If the convention is to be ratified
and thus become law in these countries without the psychiatric
special laws being invalidated, it would become the opposite
of what it intended: it would become another instrument against
the civil and human rights of all individuals who were psychiatrically/medically
slandered as allegedly being “mentally ill”. These “diagnoses”
are defined in the convention with the term “disabled” (Article
1, par. 2): “Persons with disabilities include those who
have long-term physical, mental, intellectual
or sensory impairments … ”
[Bold
and underlining added by us]

The convention explicitly bears down on the legal discrimination
of persons with disabilities (Article 2, par. 3):
“… Discrimination on the basis of disability” means
any distinction, exclusion or restriction on the basis of
disability which has the purpose or effect of impairing or
nullifying the recognition, enjoyment or exercise, on an equal
basis with others, of all human rights and fundamental freedoms
in the political, economic, social, cultural, civil or any
other field. …”

The convention thereby explicitly forbids the possibilities
which the national constitutions leave open by annulling constitutional
rights with special laws if they have a “disability” as criterion.
However that is precisely the case with the Mental Health
Laws: the laws legalizing psychiatric confinement of non-criminals
as well as the special forensic laws of the Penal Code have
as an essential requirement a psychiatric assessment and/or
a compulsory examination for this. They must therefore be
abolished because they contradict the convention.

Moreover, in Article 12 the convention obligates a ratifying
state as follows:
Equal recognition before the law
1. States Parties reaffirm that persons with disabilities
have the right to recognition everywhere as persons before
the law.
2. States Parties shall recognize that persons with disabilities
enjoy legal capacity on an equal basis with others in all
aspects of life.

Thus any forced guardianship and the compulsory hospitalization,
including coercive treatment which is thereby made possible,
must be terminated. No longer can the words “protection” and
the alleged “well-being” of the persons concerned serve as
a cynical pretext for such measures.

To support this legal interpretation of the convention we
recommend commissioning an expertise by lawyers specialized
in international Human Rights, taking into account the specific
national laws.
We call on organizations for persons with disabilities to
urgently take a stance against a ratification of the convention
by the national legislators if it does not fulfill that which
it pledges: legally binding freedom from discrimination. Legal
discrimination is exercised in its most radical, brutal and
abhorrent form by the laws legalizing coercive psychiatry.
Should organizations for persons with disabilities nevertheless
press for a rapid ratification because they anticipate the
effects of positive discrimination from the convention, a
ratification without the abolishment of coercive psychiatry
would come at an intolerable price: the continuation of the
barbarity of coercive psychiatry with its torture-like practices
and the denial of self-determination by individuals who were
slandered in the psychiatric-medical jargon as alleged “mentally
ill”.

A ratification which maintains the Mental Health Laws would
make the convention a cynical caricature: The convention would
become an additional instrument of camouflage and cover-up
for psychiatric violence. It would become a part of the problem
instead of its solution.
—-
1. Original text of the convention:
http://www.un.org/disabilities/default.asp?id=199

 

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