New Era

Virus puts Indonesia’s mentally ill back in shackles

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POLEWALI - Locked up all day in a tiny, squalid hut with barely enough space to lie down, Rauf is a prisoner to his mental health issues and carers whose only way of coping is to shut him away.

While not unique to Indonesia, padlocks, shackles and chains are frequently used to cover for a lack of proper mental health provision in the world’s fourth

most-populous nation.

But the coronaviru­s epidemic has exacerbate­d the problem, forcing many people back into chains after they had been freed following a change in attitudes, and access to medication and better care.

Rauf, 40, spent decades in shackles until a few years ago, when he was finally allowed to wander on his own - usually to

his favourite place, a crowded market.

The virus has forced the return of old methods, however, and he is once again shackled and locked in a cramped backyard hut where he eats, sleeps and defecates.

“We don’t want him to be infected by the virus as we learned that things are now getting worse,” said Hasni, Rauf ’s aunt who looks after him in Polewali in West

Sulawesi.

She also worries that virus lockdowns could restrict Rauf ’s access to medication, and fears he could harm himself or others.

Locking up people with mental health conditions used to be common in Indonesia - particular­ly among families who could not cope or afford appropriat­e care.

Foreign tourists in Bali would often be shocked to discover someone chained to a tree in an otherwise picture-perfect village.

A national campaign helped thousands to gain better access to mental health treatment and medication, and experts believed they had turned the corner - until the virus struck.

“This is the tragedy with the pandemic that it is happening in so many countries including across Indonesia,” said Kriti Sharma, a senior disability rights researcher for Human Rights Watch (HRW).

In a report released Tuesday entitled “Living in Chains: Shackling of People with Psychosoci­al Disabiliti­es Worldwide”, HRW documented hundreds of thousands of people with mental health issues - some as young as 10 - being confined for years.

Psychosoci­al disability - when a mental illness interferes with a person’s ability to function - can arise from any mental health issue if the impact on their life is severe enough. The report was released ahead of World Mental Health day on Saturday.

Cases of shackling were either gathered by field workers, reported by locals, or shared by relatives unable to cope.

“It is a practice that is widespread, brutal and an open secret in many communitie­s,” Sharma said.

Indonesia’s health ministry - which has registered nearly 300 000 people as experienci­ng mental health conditions - said it had recorded more than 6 000 “shackling” cases in the first half of the year, a rise of more than 1 000 on the whole of 2019.

“The number could double if the pandemic continues,” said Siti Khalimah, the director for mental health affairs at the ministry.

Describing the latest figures as the “tip of the iceberg”, she said many more cases were likely to go undiscover­ed because of shame or social stigma.

Mental health services had been severely hampered by coronaviru­s lockdowns, she added, with patients unable to visit clinics, or medical workers travel to communitie­s.

Sodikin, 34, was released in 2016 after spending more than eight years in chains in Cianjur, West Java.

A combinatio­n of medication and proper advice meant his progress was astounding, and in 2018 he started work at a clothing factory - becoming a breadwinne­r for the family.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Chained… A man with a mental health condition with his hands shackled in a locked room at his home in Labuhan Haji in Southern Aceh province.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Chained… A man with a mental health condition with his hands shackled in a locked room at his home in Labuhan Haji in Southern Aceh province.

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