Exhibition
Visa pour l'image 2012: Robin Hammond

A mentally ill woman is shackled to an engine part in Juba Central Prison. Juba, Sudan. January 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond

A mentally ill woman is shackled to an engine part in Juba Central Prison. Juba, Sudan. January 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond

The mentally ill men and women in Juba Central Prison are held in separate cells at night but during the day will mingle with the general prison population. Juba, Sudan. January 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond

This 14 year old boy has been tied up for six years. His mother refuses to have him admitted to Gulu Hospital which is only two kilometers away. Gulu, Northern Uganda. April 2011. Photo Robin Hammond/Panos © 2012 Robin Hammond

A chained patient awaits treatment at the clinic of traditional healer Dr Serwadda Hassan. April 2011. Kampala, Uganda. © 2012 Robin Hammond

The Mental Ward at Hargeisa Group Hospital. Hargeisa, Somaliland. May 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond

13 year old Ahmed Adan Ahmed spends his days walking in circles, or sitting running his hands through the sand at his feet. For 10 years he has been tied to a stick under the tarpaulin of a tent in a camp for Internally Displaced People in Galkayo. His mother Fawzia sees no other option – if she doesn’t tie him he will run away. Galkayo, Puntland, Somalia. May 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond

Many Somalis will take their mentally ill relative to traditional or Khoranic healers for treatment. Mogadishu, Somalia. May 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond

Dr Habeb: “Every bullet, every mortar shell increases the number of mental disorder patients.” May 2011. Habeb Mental hospital, Mogadishu, Somalia. © 2012 Robin Hammond

Abdi Rahman Shukri Ali, 26, has lived in a locked tin shack for two years. He stays with his family in Dadaab in Eastern Kenya, the world’s largest refugee camp, where Somalis fleeing conflict and famine have sought safety. Dadaab Refugee Camp, Kenya. June, 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond
A mentally ill woman is shackled to an engine part in Juba Central Prison. Juba, Sudan. January 2011. © 2012 Robin Hammond
Condemned : Mental Health in African Countries in Crisis
Robin Hammond / Panos
“We are working in the most dangerous place in the world, Mogadishu!” shouts Dr Habeb who runs the only mental health clinic in Mogadishu, Somalia. The World Health Organisation (WHO) says 1 in 3 Somali’s suffer from some kind of mental illness. From the camps for Internally Displaced People dotted around the region to the bombed out streets of Mogadishu is a generation of Somalis who’ve only known war, famine, displacement, and loss. Mass psychological trauma is the result.
The most common response to mental illness is forcible restraint. The use of chains in homes – or as is more common in huts or under trees outside the home - to restrain a family member with a mental illness is widespread. It is also accepted practice in the few institutions that exist. The WHO says that in the last decade 90% of the treated patients it surveyed were subjected at least once in their lifetime to chaining. Chaining patients is seen as an alternative medication, which not only leaves the patients stigmatized but also causes physical injuries on hands and legs. Some of the chained patients end up committing suicide. The person is usually shackled not only during the ‘acute crisis’ but throughout his or her life.
Robin Hammond
Photojournalist Robin Hammond traveled to Sudan, Uganda, Somalia, Kenya, and the Democratic Republic of Congo to document the plight of the mentally ill in regions facing crises. He intends to cover 10 more countries for his long term project on mental health in Africa.
Condemned : Mental Health in African Countries in Crisis - Robin Hammond
From september 1st to september 21st
Couvent des Minimes
Rue François Rabelais
66000 Perpignan - France
Links
http://www.visapourlimage.com/exhibition/5339.do
http://www.robinhammond.co.uk/
http://www.panos.co.uk/
http://lejournaldelaphotographie.com/archives/by_date/2011-09-02/3704/condemned-robin-hammond
Contributors
