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INTERNATIONAL
Thursday, July 27, 2006
PSYCHOLOGISTS' GROUP UNDER FIRE FOR
INTERROGATION POLICY
Aiding
military called 'incongruous' with human rights concerns
CHICAGO,
Illinois (AP) -- The American Psychological Association is under
fire from some of its members and other professionals for declaring
that it is permissible for psychologists to assist in military
interrogations.
An online petition against the group's policy has garnered more
than 1,300 signatures from members and other psychologists. Protest
forums are being planned for the APA's convention next month in
New Orleans, Louisiana. And some members have threatened to withhold
dues or quit.
The unrest stems from an APA policy, issued last year, that says
that while psychologists should not get involved in torture or
other degrading treatment, it is ethical for them to act as consultants
to interrogation and information-gathering for national security
purposes.
That stand troubles some members of the organization in light
of the reported abuses at Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib and elsewhere.
"The issue is being couched as psychologists helping out
with national security at the same time that psychologists are
opposed to the issue of torture," said Chicago psychologist
William Gorman, an APA member who signed the petition and works
with refugee survivors of torture. "That stance in the present
context appears to me incongruous."
News reports have said that mental health specialists who are
helping U.S. military interrogators have helped create coercive
techniques, including sleep deprivation and playing on detainees'
phobias, to extract information.
The American Medical Association last month adopted what many
view as a stronger stand against physician involvement in prisoner
interrogation, echoing a position held by the American Psychiatric
Association, whose members are medical doctors. The U.S. military
has indicated it will therefore favor using psychologists, who
are not medical doctors and are not bound by the other groups'
policies.
The Physicians for Human Rights, a Cambridge, Massachusetts.-based
advocacy group, issued a statement Wednesday urging APA leaders
to "explicitly prohibit psychologists from participating
in interrogations."
Salon.com reported Wednesday that six of the 10 people on the
APA task force that drafted the psychologists' policy have close
military ties, including four who have worked at Guantanamo, Abu
Ghraib or Afghanistan.
New York psychologist Steven Reisner, an APA member and vocal
opponent of the policy, said those ties make the group's stance
even more troubling.
Gerald Koocher, APA's president, said that none of the task force
members were involved in torture and that their military ties
were not a conflict of interest.
Some professionals, including Reisner, a faculty member at Columbia
University's International Trauma Studies program and at New York
University's medical school, want the 150,000-member organization
to rewrite the group's ethics code to bar psychologists from any
involvement in detainee interrogation.
Reisner said fliers and forums are being prepared for the group's
Aug. 10-13 convention "to generate a momentum of embarrassment
and outrage that the APA has thus far been facilitating these
interrogations rather than stopping the violations of human rights."
Responding to member concerns, the APA's ethics committee is drawing
up guidance on what constitutes appropriate and inappropriate
behavior by psychologists involved in interrogations, Koocher
said.
The APA also said that its governing council is expected to vote
on a resolution on Aug. 9, a day before the convention, reaffirming
the group's opposition to torture and other inhumane treatment.
The group also has invited Lt. Gen. Kevin C. Kiley, the Army's
surgeon general, to attend the convention and answer questions
about military use of psychologists.