INFORMATION SERVICE OF THE DIOCESE OF RASKA-PRIZREN
KOSOVO AND METOHIJA

For immediate release

TRUTH ABOUT KOSOVO HORROR HOSPITALS

CHURCH REQUESTS EVACUATION OF BADLY TREATED SERB PATIENTS FROM KOSOVO TO
CENTRAL SERBIA Mostly Serb patients in Kosovo Mental and Elderly
Institutions exposed to inhuman conditions and humiliations by the
ethnic Albanian medical personnel

We are enclosing a text by the Guardian (Aug 8th) which describes
inhuman and deplorable conditions in which patients in Stimlje/Shtime
Mental Institution and Pristina Elderly Home live today in Kosovo.
According to the information released by the UNMIK spokesperson Susan
Manuel "the patients in these institutions are mostly ethnic Serbs".
Both institutions are situated in Albanian inhabited areas and there is
a direct danger for the patients who can be abused or killed if they are
released and left unattended. On the other hand regular care by the
Serbian medical institutions and relatives is virtually impossible due
to absence of freedom of movement for the Serbs in Kosovan cities. That
is the reason why these patients depend solely on ethnic Albanian
personnel in which is mostly hostile towards the Serb patients.

For the same reason there are no Serb patients in all other Kosovan
hospitals (except the Serb run hospital in North Mitrovica) because the
Serb medical personnel have been expelled from job and any ethnic Serb
patient in a hostile Albanian surrounding would directly risk his/her
life. Three years after the war in the UN adminisred Kosovo Province
medical protection in Kosovan cities is given only to priviledged ethnic
groups Albanians, Turks and partly Bosniaks while Serbs can only use
their poorely equiped village clinics or go hospitals in Central Serbia.

Representatives of the Serbian Orthodox Church have so far visited the
Elderly Home in Pristina several times and brought supplies and money
for the patients. About the Mental Institution in Stimlje the Church has
very few information due to restricted access to the area. So far no
international humanitarian organization has shown any interest to help
these poor people and relieve their desperate conditions of life.

Serbian Orthodox Church strongly condemns inhuman behavior of the ethnic
Albanian medical personnel in the aforementioned Institutions. The
Church is hereby making appeal on UNMIK to urgently establish contacts
with institutions for mental health and elderly care in Central Serbia
through the Coordination Center and Dr. Covic and give its assistance in
transfer of these unadequately attended patients to Serbian Medical
Institutions as soon as possible.

Disregarding helpless mental and elderly patients only because of their
ethnic origin is one example more of an overwhelming discrimination
which non-Albanian communities, especially Serbs, are facing in Kosovo
today.

Information Service of the Raska and Prizren Diocese [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.decani.yunet.com

===============================================================

THE GUARDIAN

UN 'ignored' abuse at Kosovo mental homes
http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,770856,00.html

Oliver Burkeman in New York
Thursday August 8, 2002
The Guardian

Patients at United Nations mental institutions in Kosovo have been raped
and physically attacked under the eyes of UN staff, held in "filthy and
degrading" conditions, and threatened with punishment if they report the
abuses, according to a damning investigation published in New York
yesterday.

In one case, a woman patient was raped after UN employees locked her in
a room with a male patient because they wanted to "calm her down", while
employees who observed another rape in a hallway said they did not
intervene because the victim "must have asked for it", according to the
independent campaigning group Mental Disability Rights International
(MDRI), which produced the report.

"This is a pervasive pattern of serious abuses. The rule of law simply
does not apply within these psychiatric facilities," Dr Eric Rosenthal,
MDRI's founder, said yesterday. "We found extreme, inhuman and degrading
treatment, arbitrary detention and the physical and sexual assault of
women, and we received a blanket denial from the authorities."

Dr Robert Okin, chief psychiatrist at San Francisco's biggest hospital
and one of the report's authors, said the UN had "disregarded its own
standards for the protection and treatment of the mentally disabled and
turned a blind eye to the evidence" at Kosovo's two mental institutions
- the Shtime home, which houses 285 patients 19 miles south of Pristina,
and the Pristina elderly home - and the Pristina University hospital.

In the course of the two-year study, investigators at Shtime reported
finding patients sleeping on concrete floors amid piles of human
excrement, or in soiled sheets, and spending their days in apathy,
sometimes without clothing, and often with nothing to do. They were
given out-of-date psychotropic drugs with no monitoring by experts,
because there is no psychiatrist on staff.

In further reports of sexual assault, male patients were allowed to roam
the women's wards at night making what one Red Cross worker called
"voluntary or involuntary girlfriends".

Kosovo's director of psychiatric institutions told MDRI he did not have
the money available to fit a secure door to protect the women's wards,
even though funds were available for refurbishment elsewhere in the
facility, the group said.

An official at the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (Unmik), which holds
overarching responsibility for the government of the former Yugoslav
province, admitted the report was "not generally inaccurate".

The campaigners condemned the UN for continuing to fund refurbishment of
the institutions instead of integrating the patients into community care
programmes, but the official said money was not available for such
initiatives. In addition, the patients were mostly ethnic Serbs, while
the surrounding community was mostly ethnic Albanian, and the patients
might be "abused or killed" if released.

"This is not in any way to excuse the bad circumstances in the
institutions, but it's not like New York or California." But the
official agreed that many ethnic Albanian staff had "not been trained
and probably [were] not very sympathetic" to the patients.

Another UN official said the organisation intended to "explore and
examine" individual allegations, but money might prevent it. "The
question is, do we have the resources that are sufficient to follow the
recommendations in the report?" the official said.

Later, in a statement, Unmik said: "We are in the process of developing
special programmes to alert nurses and staff to the issue," adding that
"children have been removed from the institution at Shtime and are no
longer vulnerable". But "to build up a structure and mechanisms to deal
with this phenomenon at the local level... takes time".

Dr Rosenthal said that patients had been warned by staff to keep quiet.
"If you say anything bad about the staff, God will kill you," a nurse
was reported as telling a patient in front of an MDRI investigator at
Pristina University hospital.

Two former patients there, along with a physician working for another
organisation, were also threatened by a staff member to prevent them
revealing that the staff member had had sexual relationships with the
two patients, the report said.

Furthermore, "when women have been diagnosed as mentally ill, they are
no longer credible as witnesses to the abuse", said Laura Prescott, one
of the report's authors and president of Sister Witness International, a
US organisation founded by formerly institutionalised women.

Dr Okin said UN bureaucracy prevented the organisation from hiring a
foreign psychiatrist. There were no psychiatrists at Shtime because "the
UN is strangled by its own version of a civil service bureaucracy: its
pay classification system is such that it won't allow itself to pay for
a psychiatrist", he said.

The report, funded by the Open Society Institute with money from
financier George Soros, was endorsed by the most respected human rights
organisation in the US yesterday. Kenneth Roth, executive director of
Human Rights Watch, called it "profoundly important... the horrors it
describes are undeniable".

file://end text.//



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