Human Rights Activist Awarded International Association of Scientologists Freedom Medal for Protecting the Rights of Those Abused by Psychiatry
Steve Green of Auckland, New Zealand, November 26, 2015 (Newswire.com) - Steve Green of Auckland, New Zealand,—who uncovered five decades of systemic and criminal psychiatric abuses in his country—has been honored with the International Association of Scientologists Freedom Medal for 2015. By exposing terrible psychiatric crimes and demanding reform, he protected the rights of victims of psychiatry, saw to the closing of notorious psychiatric facilities and insisted that those committing these crimes be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
As the longtime Executive Director of the New Zealand chapter of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights, Mr. Green exposed the practice in New Zealand of Deep Sleep Therapy (in which patients are drugged into a coma and subjected to electroconvulsive shock or ECT).
"It was a constant persistence toward this seemingly insurmountable goal that kept me going against any and all odds, but we did it!"
Steve Green, Executive Director of the New Zealand chapter of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights
Mr. Green catalogued evidence of tortuture, tracked down victims throughout New Zealand and pressed the issue until the Department of Health launched an inquiry that resulted in compensation to victims for mental and physical abuse.
His subsequent pursuit of the criminal psychiatric institutions that perpetrated the abuse created a media sensation, beginning with exposure of the notorious Lake Alice Hospital, a dumping ground for troubled teens in the 1970s. Mr. Green’s discovery of evidence that psychiatrists used ECT to punish children for bad grades or attempting to escape led to the primetime, nationwide airing of a documentary that generated a literal torrent of television coverage and 95 victims coming forward to tell their stories.
CCHR handled the subsequent flood of legal cases, resulting in the victims receiving monetary damages and a formal apology from the New Zealand government. It also resulted in the closing of Lake Alice and other criminally culpable psychiatric institutions.
But the New Zealand government was not holding these psychiatrists accountable under the law, so Mr. Green refused to stop there. CCHR next set its sights on uncovering abuses throughout the New Zealand psychiatric industry, compiling a 200-page dossier detailing five decades of psychiatric crimes and the New Zealand government’s failure to prosecute. His testimony before the United Nations Committee Against Torture in Geneva resulted in their landmark decision stating that forced psychiatric treatment should be classified as torture.
The U.N. Committee also ordered the New Zealand government to enact reforms to end mental health abuse and “prosecute (all psychiatrists who perpetrate these crimes) in accordance with the gravity of their acts”—thus bringing psychiatry under the law.
In accepting his award, Mr. Green said, “It was a constant persistence toward this seemingly insurmountable goal that kept me going against any and all odds, but we did it!”
In all, Mr. Green documented more than 2,000 cases of psychiatric abuse and saw to a payment to the victims of $27 million in restitution.
Mr. David Miscavige, ecclesiastical leader of the Scientology religion, presented the Freedom Medal to Steve Green on behalf of the International Association of Scientologists (IAS) at its 31st anniversary celebration at Saint Hill, England. The IAS Freedom Medal is awarded to Scientologists for stellar accomplishments in forwarding the dignity and freedom of all humankind, thus furthering the Church’s greater humanitarian objectives. Mr. Green was joined this year as an IAS Freedom Medal winner by Mr. Mario Chirinos of Maricaibo, Venezuela, and Mr. Rohit Sharma of New Delhi, India.