The
country of 15.8 million people has at least 80 unlicensed drug and
alcohol rehab clinics, many that are also used for anti-gay conversion
therapy, Health Minister Carina Vance, who is openly gay, said.
Two
people, admitted for addiction issues, died last year at the
clandestine centers, she told foreign reporters at a press conference,
adding that authorities have begun to crack down. At these centers, "we have reports of physical attacks, the use of ice water on inmates," Vance said. "We
have lesbians who have reported what the clinics called 'sex therapy,'
but which consists of being raped by men," the minister said.
Freire, now 25, was just 15 when her mother discovered her in her room with a female schoolmate. Outraged, she sent her daughter to a "Christian camp" in a remote area in southeastern Ecuador. There,
Freire said, "they tortured me with electric shocks, didn't let me
bathe for three days, gave me almost nothing to eat, hit me a lot, hung
me by my feet.
"They told me it was for my own good."
There were also sexual punishments, all aimed at ridding the young girl of her homosexuality. The
center was nominally a evangelical Christian rehabilitation clinic for
drug and alcohol addiction. But Freire said she was there with four
other young people -- all because they were gay. After two months, Freire escaped. Her
case was not an isolated one. Authorities say the inhumane practice is a
wide-ranging problem that has ensnared even government officials --
such as the health ministry official who was recently the subject of a
criminal complaint after it emerged she owned a clandestine clinic
offering therapy against homosexuality.
"We are talking here about
a mafia, a network that operates nationally in each of the provinces,
which are violating human rights," Health Minister Vance said. Since
March 2012, authorities have closed 18 rehab clinics: 15 for human
rights violations and three for violations of health standards, the
ministry said. Still, more clinics remain.
In June, Zulema
Constante, a 22-year-old psychology student, escaped a clinic in the
eastern city of Tena, where she said her family had forcibly admitted
her to cure her of homosexuality. She was handcuffed and locked in
a straightjacket. "I had to pray, they gave me food poisoning, forced
me to clean toilets with my hands, and told me I was wrong to be a
lesbian," she told reporters. The clinic is owned by a health official in the region.
Constante's
girlfriend, Cynthia Rodriguez, launched a social media campaign to
report the case, building public pressure that allowed her to be set
free after three weeks. But activists say too many complaints are unsuccessful. "Why?"
asks Leah Burbano of the Lesbian Women and Woman Movement. Because the
people forcing the victims into the clinics "are family and that creates
an emotional weight."
"But this is not a struggle between parents and children. It's a struggle against these clinics."
Ecuadoran law authorizes forced treatment for addicts with approval from a judge. But health minister Vance emphasized in no case is the forced treatment allowed to seek to "cure" homosexuality.
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