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For Immediate Release
Washington D C - June 4th 2013
Contact: (202) 547-3686
FAPA: former President Chen’s suicide
bid
due to inadequate medical treatment
(Washington, D.C. – June 4th 2013) -- In the evening of Sunday June 2nd,
former President Chen Shui-bian reportedly tried to hang himself in Pei-teh
Prison in Taichung. This is apparently the third or fourth time that the former
President has attempted to take his own life.
The Formosan Association for Public
Affairs – a Washington DC-based Taiwanese-American grassroots organization
– expresses its deep concern about this further downturn in the former
President’s health. According to FAPA, this serious deterioration is primarily due
to the fact that the former President has received inadequate medical care
since he was moved to Pei-teh Prison in Taichung on April 19th.
Until April 19th the
former President was held at the Taipei Veterans General Hospital where he
received treatment for his medical and psychiatric ailments from an expert
team at TVGH, headed by a top psychiatrist, Dr. Chou Yuan-hwa.
However, at Pei-teh Prison, there is no
medical team. Medical staff from surrounding hospitals are called in on a
case-by-case basis. In fact, his medical records were not even transferred
from TVGH to Pei-teh Prison. Reportedly, since April 19th,
there have not been any treatment sessions to deal with his mental
depression, just one weekly brief visit from a doctor at the Taichung
Veterans General Hospital.
In addition, at TVGH, members of his
volunteer medical team could visit him whenever needed. However, at Pei-teh
Prison in Taichung they need to apply for permission to visit Chen through
a legislator, and the legislator needs to accompany them on the visit. The
volunteer medical team is also not allowed to write anything down during
their visit, making it difficult for them to keep a record.
A number of key members of the US
Congress, including Congressmen Steve Chabot (who traveled to Taiwan to
visit Chen last month) and Robert Andrews, and Senators Sherrod Brown and
Lisa Murkowski have urged the government of President Ma Ying-jeou to grant
a medical parole that allows former President Chen to either go home and
receive treatment there, or be transferred to a real hospital where
specialized medical and psychiatric care is available. This was also the
recommendation from the top psychiatric specialist at TVGH.
FAPA will continue to work with the US
Congress and the Obama Administration to make it clear to the Taiwan
authorities that continued imprisonment of former President Chen is
severely damaging the international image of Taiwan as a free and
democratic nation, and that release on medical parole is the only
humanitarian and responsible solution.
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