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QINGDAO April 21 (Xinhuanet) - Depressed male inmates
can now use video links to chat with female wardens, who heave been trained to
become the majority of psychotherapists in China's prisons.
According to ministry of justice sources, jails in
more than 10 provinces or municipalities, have female wardens giving
psychotherapy to male inmates, who previously got few chances to meet the
opposite sex or receive professional psychological counseling.
China has approximately 300,000 prison staff for its
1.5 million inmates. Though females make up roughly 20 percent, most of them are
in secretarial positions, banned from taking care of male inmates.
Things began to change when Chinese prisons started
to offer psychological treatment three years ago, said Wang Bao'an with the
provincial prison administration bureau in east China's Shandong Province.
He said 80 percent of the province's 29 prisons now
have femalewardens as psychological counselors able to provide services by
video-link chatting devices when inmates in other provinces could only reach
their counselors through telephone.
The inmates rarely want to talk to male wardens, yet
open up easily before female counselors, Wang said, adding that life behind bars
has made quite a few inmates uneasy mentally.
China has very few psychotherapists, even for the
general public, experts said, and prisons are inclined to train their own staff
into professionals instead of hiring somebody from outside.
Wang said the 152 female wardens working as
psychotherapists inShandong's prisons all earned themselves a certificate to
provide professional counseling. But we need more, Wang said, we are trying to
assign at least one professional counselor for every 200inmates.
According to the Hubei Prison Society in central
China, over 90percent of the 153 prison psychotherapists are women. Over the
past year, they have prevented 133 cases of mental crisis, including a few
suicide attempts.
The society's survey last year found that more than
72 percent of inmates held in Hubei Province said they preferred to have their
mental problems resolved through on-line chatting and 69 percent said they felt
refreshed after talking with female wardens.
Women are unassuming, easy to talk to, and more
capable of defusing conflicts, and they could manage the jail staff as well as
men, if not better, said Vivien Stern, a senior research fellow at University of
London at the ongoing prison management forum held at the coastal city of
Qingdao in east China.
About 120 local prison wardens, Chinese and foreign
law experts attended the four-day forum.
Hu Shaowen, vice-president of the society, said among
the mental problems of male inmates, over 25 percent were caused by broken love,
marriage crises, and problems in the family.
Another 18 percent were caused by worries over
reintegration upon release, he said, and some 17 percent were resultant from
frustration with prison management.
Noticing the need to maintain inmate's mental health,
many prisons in China's affluent regions have given inmates sandbags, gloves,
and rubber-men to vent their anger.
And in most prisons, the inmates have music room
where they canplay rock and roll. The women's prison in Shandong also set up a
special room where, the warders said, female inmates can speak out their
frustration without being humiliated. Enditem |