追悼資料2(東京新聞田原牧さんによる記事)Memorial document 2 (article by Maki Tahara, Tokyo Shimbun).

 本資料は、東京新聞論説委員・編集委員の田原牧さんが去る7月24日付コラム<視点>に執筆頂いた追悼記事から引用したものです。
元記事は東京新聞2024年7月24日<視点>参照をお願いします。
  This material is taken from an obituary written by Tokyo Shimbun editorial writer and editorial board member Maki Tahara in her 24 July column <Shiten (Viewpoint>. For the original article, please refer to the 24 July 2024 edition of the Tokyo Shimbun: https://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/342155?rct=shiten

   以下記事本文を以下に引用させて頂き、英訳も添付します。
The text of the article is quoted below and an English translation is attached.

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およそ悲報は突然届く。精神障害者の当事者団体である全国「精神病」者集団元事務局長で、精神障害者権利主張センター・絆を主宰した山本真理(筆名・長野英子)さんが亡くなった(享年71)。
 彼女と知り合ったのは20余年前。心神喪失者等医療観察法制定を巡る取材だった。
 心神喪失などの状態で他害行為に及んだため、刑事責任を問われない人への強制治療を定めた法律で、2005年に施行された。事実上の予防拘禁(保安処分)につながるとの懸念から反対論も根強かったが、強行採決された。
 その国会審議で山本さんも反対の立場から参考人として発言したが、その言葉に彼女らしさが集約されている。
 「(法律の対象者となる人びとは)精神病院の閉鎖病棟の奥深く、あるいは保護室に監禁されています。彼らこそがここに来て参考人として話していただきたい。(私の言葉は)本人抜きの審議に加担した裏切り者の言葉だと受け取られるかもしれません」
 当事者第一。権威ある医師や法律家にも物おじしない。それが山本さんだった。
 不登校から17歳で精神科病院に入院させられた。病名はうつ病。医師に「だまされ」て、電気けいれん療法を施され、記憶の一部を失った。
 22歳で大学入学資格検定を経て早稲田大入学。20代後半に「病」者集団と出会う。
 堂々と自らを語る人びとを見て「私も怒っていい、感情表現してもいいんだ」と気づいた。病気を隠さなくてもよい仲間がいた。否定された誇りの回復が促され、それが当事者主義の原点になった。
 ときに毒舌を吐いたが、情が深く、舌鋒(ぜっぽう)の鋭さと笑顔の落差が魅力的な人だった。
 取材で自宅を訪れた際、彼女の携帯電話は鳴り続けていた。「台所で料理をしているんだけど、包丁で自分を刺しそうになって動けない」。当事者からだった。ゆっくりと話し、緊張を解いていた。
 慕われることは大切だが、彼女も当事者だ。激務だったに違いない。北海道の若い活動家が役所に抗議の焼身自殺をしたときは「あまり報じないで」と電話がきた。自殺の連鎖を恐れたためだった。
 彼女も立案作業に加わった障害者権利条約は06年に国連で採択された。国連障害者権利委員会は22年に日本を初めて審査し、精神障害者の強制入院を「差別」と断定。関連法規の全廃を要請した。
 しかし「精神科病院大国」である日本の状況は変わっていない。近年でも、神戸市の神出病院や東京都八王子市の滝山病院で患者への暴行虐待事件が発覚。「丁寧な治療と社会復帰」を旗印にした医療観察法も施行後、70人以上の対象者が自殺している。
 山本さんは数年前にがんで入院した。棺(ひつぎ)の中の顔は二回りも小さくなっていた。
 入院中「彼女ならどう考えるだろう」としばしば自問した。自分だけではなかったろう。
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(英訳)

The sad news arrives suddenly. Mari Yamamoto (pen name Eiko Nagano), former secretary-general of the National Group of the “Mentally Ill”, an association of people with mental disabilities, and chairperson of the Centre for the Rights of the Mentally Ill, Kizuna, has died (aged 71).
I got to know her more than 20 years ago. I met her more than 20 years ago when I was covering the enactment of the Medical Observation Law for Persons of Insanity.
The law, which came into force in 2005, provides for compulsory treatment for persons who are not held criminally responsible because they have committed other harmful acts while insane or in other states. Although there was strong opposition to the law due to concerns that it would lead to de facto preventive detention (security measures), it was forcefully adopted.
During the parliamentary debate, Mz Yamamoto spoke as a witness against the law, and her words sum up her character.
She said: “[People subject to the law] are locked up deep in the closed wards of psychiatric hospitals or in protection rooms. They are the ones who should come here and speak as witnesses. (My words) may be perceived as the words of a traitor who took part in the deliberations without the person in question.”
Parties first. He was not intimidated by authoritative doctors or lawyers. That was Mz Yamamoto.
He was admitted to a psychiatric hospital at the age of 17 because he had stopped attending school. The name of his illness was depression. He was ‘tricked’ by doctors and given electroconvulsive therapy and lost part of his memory.
At the age of 22, he passed the University Entrance Qualification Examination and entered Waseda University, where he met a group of ‘sick’ people in his late 20s.
Seeing people who talked about themselves openly, she realized that it was okay for her to be angry and to express her feelings. I had friends who did not have to hide their illness. It encouraged me to recover my denied pride, which became the starting point of my partyism.
Although she sometimes spoke with a venomous tongue, she was a deeply compassionate person, with an appealing difference between the sharpness of her tongue and the smile on her face.
When we visited her at home for an interview, her mobile phone was ringing continuously. ‘I’m cooking in the kitchen, but I can’t move because I’m about to stab myself with a knife’. It was from the person concerned. She spoke slowly and released the tension.
It is important to be adored, but she is also a party. It must have been hard work. When a young activist in Hokkaido burnt herself to death in protest at a government office, I received a call telling me not to report too much. This was because they feared a chain of suicides.
The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, of which she was part of the drafting process, was adopted by the UN in 2006. The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities examined Japan for the first time in 2010 and declared the forced hospitalization of people with mental disabilities to be “discrimination”. It called for the total abolition of related legislation.
However, the situation in Japan, a ‘psychiatric hospital powerhouse’, has not changed. Even in recent years, incidents of assault and abuse of patients have been uncovered at Kamide Hospital in Kobe and Takiyama Hospital in Hachioji, Tokyo. More than 70 people have committed suicide since the implementation of the Medical Probation Law, which was designed to ensure “careful treatment and social reintegration”.
Mr Yamamoto was hospitalized for cancer several years ago. Her face in her coffin had become twice as small.
During her hospitalization, I often asked myself: ‘What would she think? I am sure I was not the only one.