Print

Print


FYI.

 

From: Christine Walton [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2012 10:55 AM
To: Frank Hall-Bentick
Subject: info -Turkish Court Prosecutes Duchess of York for Exposing Child
Abuse in State Institution

 

Turkish Court Prosecutes Duchess of York for Exposing Child Abuse in State
Institution

A Turkish court has charged Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, with acquiring
footage and violating the privacy of children residing in a Turkish
state-run orphanage, after she participated in an undercover documentary
exposing abuse and neglect in the facility, which aired on ITV in 2008. The
trial, which may result in a sentence of up to 22 ½ years in prison, began
in early May 2012 in Ankara without the duchess after Britain refused to
extradite her.

The Turkish government argues that the duchess, through her participation in
the documentary, has violated the privacy of the children, most of whom have
intellectual and physical disabilities. The documentary was created to show
that the basic human rights of the children are being violated in the
orphanages. In 2005, Disability Rights International (DRI), an advocacy
organization, released a report about this issue entitled "Behind Closed
Doors: Human Rights Abuses in Psychiatric Facilities, Orphanages and
Rehabilitation Centers in Turkey." The report documented starving children
who were unable to feed themselves due to their disabilities and were often
unfed. According to the report, when children became ill, staff ceased to
bathe them and provide them with medical treatment, and they were left in
their cribs to die. Children were tied permanently into beds and immobile
children spent their whole lives lying in cribs. Children and teenagers of
all ages and sexes were hosed down in groups. Babies who scratched or hit
had their hands covered by plastic bottles. The children were subjected to
skin sutures, shock treatments, and teeth extractions without the benefit of
anesthesia. One doctor, and other staff members, told DRI official that
children with disabilities "don't feel pain."

Ferguson and ITV documented many of these abuses, and Turkey now seeks to
charge her with a severe penalty. DRI has documented similar human rights
violations of children in institutions in various countries and has found
that governmental authorities who do not allow photography and video
documentation on the grounds of "protecting privacy" are actually seeking to
protect themselves from exposure. They deny the residents of the
institutions fundamental choices about their own lives, and in some cases
rights violations are at issue, as in this instance. International human
rights law guarantees children with disabilities protection from torture and
abuse. Children with disabilities enclosed within the walls of an
institution have no choices, no control over their lives, and no chance of
being heard. The Duchess of York participated in a documentary to make them
visible, and for that the Turkish government seeks to prosecute her.

Full Story: Laurie Ahern, Nations Must Protect Their Children, Not Their
Reputations, The Washington Post, May 20, 2012, available at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/nations-must-protect-their-children-n
ot-their-reputations/2012/05/20/gIQA6S51dU_story.html 

Source: The Disability Law & Policy e-Newsletter, Vol 9, No. 5


________________End of message________________

This Disability-Research Discussion list is managed by the Centre for Disability Studies at the University of Leeds (www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies).

Enquiries about list administration should be sent to [log in to unmask]

Archives and tools are located at: www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/disability-research.html

You can VIEW, POST, JOIN and LEAVE the list by logging in to this web page.