Petitioners denounce scholar for labelling 99% of them insane
(TibetanReview.net, Apr 11, 2009) — A prominent
Chinese psychiatrist has blurted out the probable reason why petitioners in
China are regularly harassed, beaten and otherwise punished, with their
grievances being very rarely, if ever, addressed. Sun Dongdong, the head of
Peking university's judicial expertise center, raised public outrage by
suggesting that 99 percent of people who repeatedly petitioned the government
were mentally ill. His comment was significant because the center helps judicial
authorities evaluate a person's mental health, reported Reuters Apr
8.
On Apr 8, angry petitioners descended on the university. The report
said at least 100 middle-aged and old petitioners demonstrated at the
prestigious university, shouting out complaints against Sun and publicizing
their own grievances. It quoted one petition as saying, "They (corrupt
officials) beat me and left me disabled, and knocked out four of my teeth. … And
now Sun Dongdong says that we petitioners are mentally ill."
China’s
detention of petitioners and protesters in psychiatric hospitals has attracted
criticism from rights activists and international psychiatric groups for many
years.
Following the outburst of outrage, Sun has maintained that he had
been misunderstood by the public and quoted out of context by the media,
although his explanation is not very convincing. The official China
Daily newspaper said Apr 7 that it had received a statement from Sun,
explaining that he did not say 99 percent of all "professional petitioners" in
the country were mentally ill – only 99 percent of "those whom he had met." And
he was quoted as saying, "I extend my sincere, deep apology to those people
whose feelings are hurt."
Earlier, in his comments published in the Mar
23 issue of China Newsweek, Sun had, reportedly, said, "99 percent of
professional petitioners are mentally ill, most of them paranoid, and could be
forcibly detained in mental hospitals" because they were disturbing public
order.
Last updated on Apr 11, 2009
17:45:07