Sao Vanna, who suffers from a mental disability, sits chained in a hut on Tuesday in Kandal’s Tuol Pich commune. Many others in rural Cambodia face a similar fate, due to stigma, lack of services and poverty. The practice persists in a legal vacuum. Erin Handley
Chained up, out of sight: Desperate families often keep mentally ill relatives in squalid conditions
Phnom Penh Post | 10 March 2017
Sao Vanna sits huddled on a bamboo bench, knees pressed against
her chest, as small chickens dart around her in her family home. She
gathers up the black cloth of her pant leg to reveal a thick rusty chain
fastened to her ankle.
Vanna has been chained up for years, and rarely leaves the room where
she is confined. When she needs to relieve herself, her sister brings a
basket and places it beneath her in this one-room thatch house, in
rural Tuol Pich commune, Ang Snuol district.
Vanna is one of an unknown number of people with a mental disability
across Cambodia who are chained, tied or caged by their desperate
relatives. Despite the practice clearly violating the rights of people
with disabilities, experts say it exists in a legal grey area.
Enduring stigma and a severe lack of services, awareness and money
leaves rural families resorting to restraint as their only way to cope.
* * *
For Vanna’s sister, Sin Ry, 59, the care – and the risk – had become
too much. “If I release her, she is difficult to control,” Ry says.
“Sometimes she hits me,” she adds, tracing a scar hidden by her hair.
She needed stitches after the impact from a bamboo stick that Vanna had
grabbed.
Vanna first eyes outsiders with suspicion, but her face breaks into a smile when she speaks.
“I am 30 years old. I feel comfortable because of the handcuff,” she
says. “I quit school because I was sick. I had something wrong with my
head.”
Vanna’s sister Ry struggles to explain precisely what psychological
condition Vanna has. Ry says she was healthy until around the age of 17,
but then she started behaving strangely and her eyes began darting
around erratically in her head.
She was told her little sister has “broken blood cells”, but can’t name the diagnosis beyond that.
What she does know is the cost of Vanna’s medicine from the
Khmer-Soviet Friendship Hospital in Phnom Penh 36,000 riel ($9), every
two months. It calms her down.
“I sell my chickens and rice to get the medicine,” Ry says. Sometimes
she makes 3,000 riel (about $0.75) a day, sometimes not. Their brother
works in construction, and, on occasion, he gives his sisters 100,000
riel ($25).
Vanna has been chained for more than a decade. For half those years,
Ry sought out traditional healers before switching to doctors with
modern medicine. “We kept believing in healers, another, after another,
after another,” Ry says. They would prepare herbal concoctions and
splash water, but Vanna remained troubled.
Vanna has certainly made her mark on the thatch palm leaf wall within
reach of where she’s chained. Faces have been rendered in black marker
they’re actors, she says, that she saw on TV a long time ago.
There are also child-like sketches of flowers: long stalks and big
round petals. “The flowers represent a new year,” Vanna says. Shafts of
light, meanwhile, stream in though holes she has punched through the
thatch.
“I punched it when I got angry with my sister. Then blood came from
my knuckles,” she says, adding Ry had taken her hand and treated the
cuts with ointment.
Ry says the chain is not just to protect others from Vanna’s anger,
but for Vanna’s safety too, a point that was tragically driven home when
their sister was raped and murdered three years ago as she went to take
a shower near their house.
“We need to care for her, do everything for her. We have to get to
hospital to get medicine for her, and I also have to look for work,” Ry
says. “We are poor and we have no money to pay, and they have no
organisation to help us. Where is the organisation?”
* * *
The mental health system in Cambodia is under strain. Dr Chak Thida from
the Khmer-Soviet Friendship Hospital’s psychiatric department, where Ry
collects her sister’s medication, says they see up to 400 follow-up
patients a day, with up to 30 new patients daily.
Dr Chhim Sotheara, executive director at the Transcultural
Pyschosocial Organisation (TPO), said those who are chained up usually
have some kind of psychosis, like schizophrenia, or have behavioural
problems stemming from chronic substance abuse.
Mostly, he says, the chains are to prevent them from harming others, or from being attacked by villagers.
“We can understand that the family decided to chain patients because
they are not able to control their behaviour, the treatment was
unsuccessful, they are too poor or the mental health services are too
far from their home,” Sotheara said in an email.
“Since Cambodia has no Mental Health Act, it is not right to say that it is illegal to chain patients.”
TPO’s “Operation Unchain” project began in 2015 with a $5,000
donation from King Norodom Sihamoni and an additional $18,000 raised by
the public.
The project currently treats 56 patients in nine provinces, including
Kandal. Of those 56, 40 are now unshackled. “The more support from the
family, the quicker the patients can be unchained,” Sotheara says.
But Operation Unchain’s funds are dwindling fast, he says, and TPO is
focused on treating current patients, rather than recruiting new ones.
“There are more patients who request treatment from us, but we cannot
offer it yet due to financial difficulty,” he says. “No one is
interested in funding this.” He has approached Cambodian tycoons to no
avail, but is hopeful friends in Australia may help.
Ung Sambath, deputy director at the Disability Action Council, says
poverty fuels the practice. “If your family is very, very poor, and you
have a person with a disability in the family, what do you choose? The
food to eat, or the health care for the person? This is the real
situation,” Sambath says.
Ngin Saorath, executive director of the Cambodian Disabled People’s
Organization, says shackling people violates their freedom and
independence – and it affects both the body and mind.
“If society does not value them, they will become worse and worse,
they cannot enjoy their rights or participate in society,” he says.
Dr Chhit Sophal, director of the Ministry of Health’s department of
mental health and substance abuse, did not respond to multiple requests
for comment, but has previously said the government is developing a
Strategic Plan for Mental Health and Substance Abuse 2017-2020 despite
“limited resources”.
After collecting green pea-sized eggplants in a basket for their lunch, Ry says she wants to be able to unshackle her sister, but feels she cannot.
Vanna, excitably, tells Ry she wants to help cook, she wants to wash clothes but Ry shakes her head. “She only says this, but she does not know,” Ry says. “It is it difficult, very, very difficult.”
What a sad country!
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