Health & Society
Scientology Empowering Mental Health against Abuses: Advocating for Guidelines to Protect People
BRUSSELS, BELGIUM, October 12 2023. World Mental Health Day on October 10 2023 became a platform for a global community that stands up for raising awareness and instigating change against psychiatric abuses. The Scientology Network joined forces with the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) to organize an event focusing on shedding light on this pressing issue, by dedicating a full day of broadcasting to the issue through Scientology TV. Also, the broader international movement against psychiatric abuses highlighted the importance of the new WHO & OHCHR guidelines that safeguard people from abuses in mental health.
Revealing the Hidden Risks of Psychiatric Medication and its Potential Dangers
Startling statistics reveal that one out of every four Americans is currently dependent on medications. Shockingly even children as young as five years old are involved in over 400,000 cases. Unfortunately, there is awareness regarding the potential risks associated with these medications. Reported side effects include thoughts of violence, anxiety, depression, psychosis, hallucinations and even fatalities. It is deeply concerning to note that individuals using medications face a six times higher likelihood of dying by suicide.
Acknowledging complications such as memory loss, cognitive impairment, brain damage and even fatalities associated with electroshock therapy (ECT) the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has taken a stance. However, despite this acknowledgement 100,000 individuals, in the United States undergo Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) each year, and it is alarming to note that even psychiatrists themselves acknowledge that they do not fully comprehend the mechanisms behind ECT.
Advocating for the Mission of CCHR; Putting an End to Psychiatric Abuse
The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) a profit organization is committed to safeguarding mental health and actively working towards eliminating unethical practices in the global psychiatric industry. CCHR and its partners have played a role in enacting over 320 laws aimed at protecting individuals from such abusive practices.
World Mental Health Day Marathon; Shedding Light on Psychiatric Misconduct
As part of their World Mental Health Day campaign, the Scientology Network organized a marathon event with the objective of educating the public in 17 languages about misconduct and corruption within the mental health field worldwide. This event served as a call to action aiming to eradicate activities associated with psychiatry.
Revealing the Facts: Highlighted Shows During the Marathon
The marathon showcased a series of documentaries produced by CCHR, which aimed to uncover the truth, about the history and practices of the industry.
Here are some titles for your consideration:
- Therapy or Torture: The Truth about Electroshock, an exposé on the brutal psychiatric practice of electroshock
- Psychiatry: An Industry of Death, an investigation of psychiatry’s dark past
- Marketing of Madness: Are We All Insane?—a look at how psychiatry concocts mental diseases for the sake of profit
- The Hidden Enemy: Inside Psychiatry’s Covert Agenda, uncovering how psychiatry infiltrated the US military and its devastating effects
- Voices for Humanity—the only ongoing television series dedicated to those working in the streets, schools and communities to spread the message of human rights, educate communities on the dangers of drugs and combat psychiatric abuse.
Global Initiatives: Collaborative Efforts between WHO and OHCHR
In anticipation of World Mental Health Day the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) published a document called “Promoting Mental Health Protecting Human Rights: Guidance and Practices.” This comprehensive guide aims to assist countries in reforming their legislation to eradicate human rights violations in healthcare while improving access to high-quality medical services and many organizations and individuals, including CCHR, have been acknowledged for their contributions to the guidelines.
Challenges in Safeguarding Human Rights within Psychiatry
Within healthcare there are persisting instances of abuse and coercive practices often supported by existing laws and policies. These abuses encompass mistreatment related to well-being as well, as emotional conditions. While some nations have taken steps to revise their laws and policies the changes implemented so far are limited in their scope.
The recommendations put forward propose measures to prevent coercion in healthcare services. They stress the significance of obtaining consent as a guiding principle in all health interventions and offer suggestions on how to handle cases within legal frameworks and policies without resorting to coercive methods. Additionally, peer-based programs that do not necessarily fall under purview also can and do play an important role with more cost-effective results while also avoiding the abuses that are reported to occur in the bio-medical approach.
A Human Rights Approach to Mental Health: The Role of Guidelines for Protecting Mental Health
These guidelines involving various entities extend beyond the healthcare sector and aim at lawmakers and policymakers involved in shaping, amending and implementing health-related legislation. These guidelines provide a checklist for countries to assess whether their laws align with human rights obligations. The guidance underlines the importance of involving individuals with lived experiences and their representative organizations in this process while emphasizing education and awareness.
Mental health human rights protection is a right, for everyone
On World Mental Health Day 2023, people worldwide came together to acknowledge that “Mental health human rights protection is a right, for everyone” safeguarded from any form of abuse or violations of rights. Iván Arjona-Pelado, Scientology representative to the EU institutions, OSCE and UN stated that “Both the marathon hosted by Scientology Network and the guidance introduced by WHO and OHCHR serve as examples of efforts to eradicate abuse and ensure that mental healthcare is rooted in human rights, which is something Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard called for at least as early as 1969”.
By raising awareness promoting the importance of consent and advocating for community-based care the United Nations (UN) and World Health Organization (WHO) are taking steps towards creating a world where everyone’s mental health and well-being are valued and protected.
The ongoing fight against the mistreatment of individuals facing social and mental challenges persists because civil society remains dedicated to upholding human rights and preserving the dignity of every person. Guidelines, for safeguarding mental health offer a roadmap towards a future where mental well-being is prioritized ensuring that individuals receive the care and support they truly deserve.
Health & Society
Female circumcision in Russia – exists and is not punished
Every year, millions of women and girls in the world are subjected to the procedure “female circumcision.” In the process of this dangerous practice, women have part or all of their external genitalia removed. Among the victims are also residents of the North Caucasian republics of Russia, and the Russian authorities do not punish the execution of the violent procedure.
How this violent religious-ritual tradition exists in modern Russia, do the authorities and the clergy try to fight it – reveals the Russian publication of Verstka.
What is “female circumcision”
Female circumcision is a procedure that is accompanied by either trauma or partial or complete amputation of the external genitalia. As a result of the procedure, sensitivity is reduced and the woman may lose the ability to have an orgasm.
Not for medical reasons
The procedure is not performed for medical reasons, but for ritual or religious reasons to suppress female sexuality. That is why in the international medical community this term is not used, but is called “female genital mutilation operations”. International law considers them an attack on the health of women and girls, a form of violence and discrimination.
Victims
Victims of female circumcision are girls up to the age of 15. According to data from the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2024, more than 230 million women in the world suffered from such operations. They are mostly carried out in African, Asian, Latin American and Middle Eastern countries. But there are also victims of female circumcision in Russia among the residents of the North Caucasian republics – Dagestan, Ingushetia and Chechnya.
Injuries
The procedure has serious negative consequences for women’s health – from serious injuries to death due to blood loss. In addition to physical trauma and the shock of pain, female circumcision disrupts the natural functioning of the body. Women and girls may suffer from infections, their genitourinary system may be damaged, they may experience pain during sexual intercourse, menstrual disorders may occur, and the risk of complications during childbirth and death of the mother and the newborn increases by 50%.
Why do they do it?
The “necessity” of such operations is justified by honoring traditions or religious motives. In some cultures, it is part of the rite of female initiation or entry into adult life. Female circumcision is often associated with Islam, including in the Russian Federation.
Prevents lust
In the words of Dagestan journalist Zakir Magomedov, “in the local religious press, which is issued by the official clergy, articles are published in which it is written that female circumcision has a beneficial effect on a woman and protects her from lustful thoughts and desires, and is even beneficial for a woman.”
Female circumcision is performed by people without medical training, and old pocket knives or cattle shears are used as tools.
Control over female sexuality
In almost all cases, the purpose of the procedure is defined as control over female sexuality: “not to be hoika”, “not to freak out”. The official clergy of Dagestan include female circumcision in religious duties, although it is not mentioned in the Koran. Some Muslims, in addition to the Koran, are also guided by the Sunnah – traditions from the life of the Prophet Muhammad and statements of authoritative religious figures. Therefore, in some cases, female circumcision among Muslims can be interpreted as permissible, desirable and even mandatory.
Officially, the Russian authorities are against it
“All women should be circumcised so that there is no debauchery on Earth, to reduce sexuality”, this is how the head of the Coordination Council of Muslims of the North Caucasus, Ismail Berdiev, reacted to the revelations of the “Legal Initiative” organization in 2016, which confirmed the existence of practice. Later, Berdiev clarified that “he did not call for female circumcision”, but only spoke about the “problem of debauchery”, with which “something must be done”.
The Russian Ministry of Health condemns the procedure, and the prosecutor’s office of Dagestan conducts an investigation and finds no confirmation of the facts presented in the report of “Legal Initiative.”
The deputy of the State Duma from “United Russia” Maria Maksakova-Igenbergs proposes to introduce the concept of “women’s discrimination on religious grounds” into the Penal Code, and that the punishment for “female circumcision” be 10 years in prison. The Ministry of Justice of Russia does not support Maksakova’s initiative, clarifying that the procedure falls under the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, and more precisely under the paragraphs on “deliberately causing severe, medium and light harm to health, as well as causing harm to carelessness.”
North Caucasus
According to the “Legal Initiative” organization, in the middle of the last decade in Dagestan, at least 1,240 girls were subjected to the procedure annually. The majority of the men surveyed were categorically against the ban on female circumcision, explaining their motive not only with Islam, but also with local traditions and the desire to control the morality of women. Part of the respondents expressed an opinion against the procedure, arguing that the lack of sensitivity in women lowers the quality of sex in men as well.
And in Moscow
In 2018 one of the Moscow medical clinics announces the service of “female circumcision” for ritual and religious reasons for girls from 5 to 12 years old. On the clinic’s website, it was noted that “the operation should be performed not at home, but in a medical clinic.” After a wide public response, the clinic removed the information from its website, but an investigation was carried out, which found the existence of the procedure and other violations. A warning has been issued and the clinic is still open!
First conviction without penalty
Despite the fact that in its second report the organization “Legal Initiative” notes the disappearance of the practice in Chechnya and Ingushetia, the inhabitants of these regions remain in danger. In the spring of 2020, the father of a 9-year-old girl invited him to Magas (the capital of Ingushetia) for a visit and took him to a vaccine clinic. There, female circumcision was forcibly performed on the child. The value of the “service” is 2000 rubles. The little girl, in her bloodstained dress, was then put on a bus back to Chechnya, where she was hospitalized for severe blood loss. The father explains his motive as follows: “So that he doesn’t get excited.”
A criminal case has been opened against the gynecologist who performed the circumcision for intentionally causing minor harm to health. The case has been going on for a year and a half. The judge called on the parties to reconcile, adding that “the girl cannot be helped anyway”. In the end, the doctor was found guilty and fined 30,000 rubles, but was released from serving the sentence due to the statute of limitations. No criminal proceedings have been initiated against the clinic.
In the same year, the mufti of Dagestan issued a fatwa and recognized the removal of the external genitalia as forbidden in Islam, but clarified that “female circumcision” meant only hudectomy — the removal of the foreskin of the clitoris. This is also a crippling procedure, human rights defenders insist.
Health & Society
Four executed for producing illegal alcohol in Iran
Iranian authorities have executed end of October four people convicted of selling illegal alcohol, which poisoned and killed 17 people last year. More than 190 people who consumed the dangerous drink were hospitalized.
The death sentence against the accused in the case was carried out in the Karaj Central Jail.
According to human rights organizations including Amnesty International, Iran carries out the highest number of executions per year after China.
After the Islamic Revolution in 1979, Tehran banned the production and consumption of alcoholic beverages. Since then, the sale of illegal alcohol on the black market has flourished, leading to mass poisonings. The latest case, reported by Iranian media, has killed around 40 people in northern Iran in recent months.
Only Iran’s recognized Christian minorities, such as the country’s Armenian community, are allowed to produce and consume alcohol, but discreetly and only at home.
Illustrative Photo by Amanda Brady: https://www.pexels.com/photo/elegant-champagne-coupes-in-sunlit-setting-29157921/
Health & Society
What is food neophobia – the fear of trying new dishes
Everyone has heard of anorexia and bulimia. But these eating disorders are far from the only ones.
There are people around the world who can only eat certain colored foods. Still others are addicted to water. About 5% of women between the ages of 15 and 35 are affected by some type of eating disorder. Among them are those with neophobia – the inability to try a new type of food. This problem sometimes also affects young children. For them, experts advise parents not to force them, but to explain to them the benefits of a given product. It is also an option to put them on the table in the company of other children who will set a good example.
Neophobia usually disappears around the age of 6. For some people, however, it remains a problem for much longer.
A possible explanation for this condition could be something happening in the person’s life – like choking on food, for example. As a result, a person may begin to avoid a certain type of food and thus give his phobia a “field of expression”.
The reasons for neophobia may lie not only in the psyche, but also in physical features. This disorder is genetically transmitted.
Illustrative Photo by Chan Walrus: https://www.pexels.com/photo/white-and-brown-cooked-dish-on-white-ceramic-bowls-958545/
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