In 2024, I was forcibly hospitalized in a psychiatric institution — not because I was a danger to myself or others, but because I spoke out.
I am a Libyan doctor and entrepreneur. I built my company from nothing. I believed in freedom, human dignity, and the right to think differently. I shared my ideas on social media: I criticized terrorism, religious extremism, and what I called the “Gaddafi ideology” — a toxic legacy that turned many minds into closed fortresses of fear, hostility toward the West, and blind obedience to authority.
But in Libya, challenging the system often makes you the problem.
One day, I was staying at a hotel in Tripoli when it began. My brothers and father suddenly arrived — with a psychiatrist and a team waiting downstairs. They didn’t come for a family visit. They came to silence me.
I felt it immediately: something was wrong. I slipped away before they reached my room. My heart was racing. I exited through a side door and disappeared into the city. That night, I hid. I knew they would come again. I was right.
The Raid on My House
Days later, they came to my private house. Not the family home, but the one where I lived independently, away from their control. This time, they brought muscle — a coordinated team, an official psychiatrist, and my father’s signature on the involuntary admission papers.
I tried to reason with them. I tried to tell them that I wasn’t sick — just vocal. I was held down, injected with sedatives, and transported to a private psychiatric clinic.
There, I was stripped of my phone, isolated, drugged, and — worst of all — subjected to Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) without my consent. My only “crime” was thinking freely. My “diagnosis” was nonconformity.
The Second Arrest
You might think it ended there. It didn’t.
I fled to Tunisia for recovery, hoping for space to rebuild. But the nightmare followed me. One morning, the Libyan Consulate in Tunisia intervened — not to help, but to detain me. I was forcibly taken again, this time to a clinic in Tunis. They treated me like a criminal, not a patient.
I was then forcibly deported back to Libya and transferred to a public psychiatric hospital. No legal hearing. No judge. No independent medical review. Just silence, coercion, and stigma.
A System Built on Fear, Not Healing
In Libya, psychiatric care — whether public or private — is often built on coercion, not compassion.
In public hospitals, patients may receive adequate meals, but what they are denied is dignity. Many are kept in locked wards, with limited or no access to the outside world. Physical restraints are used not just in emergencies but as routine discipline. Patients are rarely listened to. Instead, they are ordered, threatened, or ignored. Consent is not a process — it is a checkbox signed by family.
In the private sector, the environment may appear more civilized — clean beds, painted walls, better food — but the treatment is no less oppressive. Staff often act as if they are in control of prisoners, not caregivers to people in distress. Patients are belittled, silenced, and given heavy psychiatric drugs without discussion. The psychiatrist’s word is absolute; disagreement is labeled as “noncompliance,” and noncompliance is punished.
Many patients leave with deeper trauma than when they entered.
What I Was Really Fighting
I was never violent. Never suicidal. Never detached from reality. I was fighting something far more dangerous than madness — I was fighting a culture of fear and suppression masquerading as mental health care.
I had used Facebook to question the authorities, to speak of freedom, to dream of a Libya that respects minds instead of medicating them into silence. That alone was enough to put me in handcuffs.
This isn’t just my story. It is the story of many dissidents, artists, reformers, and free spirits across the world — from the Soviet Union to the Middle East — where psychiatry is used not to heal but to erase.
A New Beginning
I will not be silent. That is why I’m launching an advocacy platform for psychiatric survivors, reformers, and critical thinkers across the Arab region. We need a space to challenge forced treatment, restore human rights, and reclaim psychiatry from the hands of power.
I am calling on the global community — from Mad in America to the UN — to listen to our stories and support the struggle for dignity in mental health.
My name is Mohamed. I was forced, drugged, and shocked — but I will never be silent again.
Be careful even if what you’re doing is right. You seem to have powerful enemies.
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Thank you, Jean. You’re right — speaking the truth here carries real risks. But silence was becoming its own kind of death. I’m careful, but I refuse to disappear. Your words mean more than you know.
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run away turn away not for me
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“In Libya, psychiatric care — whether public or private — is often built on coercion, not compassion.”
The same is true in the US.
“I was never violent. Never suicidal. Never detached from reality. I was fighting something far more dangerous than madness — I was fighting a culture of fear and suppression masquerading as mental health care.”
I was never any of those things either. But it is rather sick, now that the psych industries have been found to be “invalid,” how desperate they’ve become.
I do appreciate the MDs who are speaking out against the insanity of the debunked psych industries. Thank you, Mohamed.
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Your words give me strength. Sometimes, I feel like I’m screaming from a cage, and I’m not sure if anyone hears me. Knowing that someone far away sees what I see — and feels what I feel — is no small thing. Thank you for standing with me.
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Thank you, Mohamed, for standing with us.
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Mohamed, I salute your courage and integrity and your plans to challenge coercion in psychiatry in the Arab world. I learned here in Canada some psychiatrists are not at all compassionate or caring. Many are self serving, ego driven and what they get to inflict on innocent people is chilling. It’s even more chilling they did this to you when you are a physician standing up for the oppressed and doing what is right for humanity. I wish you all the best on your endeavors and I also hope you are careful and stay safe.
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Dear Rosalee,
Thank you deeply for your kind words and solidarity. Your message touched me more than I can express. It’s heartbreaking that even in countries like Canada, where one expects more humane standards, people still face such coldness and cruelty in psychiatric settings. What you described resonates painfully with what I’ve witnessed — a system that too often empowers ego over empathy.
As someone who has seen this both as a doctor and as a patient, I believe our shared voices are vital in pushing back against the normalization of coercion. Your support gives me strength, and I’m truly grateful for it. I promise to carry this mission forward with care, conviction, and caution. Please stay safe too, and thank you for standing with me.
Warm regards,
Mohamed
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Get well soon, Mohammed. Mainstream psychopath psychiatry is the same all over the world. It probably… maims and kills millions of people every year. Mainstream psychopath psychiatry (and psychopath psychiatrists)… secretly perpetrates the greatest atrocities and genocides of the 21st century EVERY YEAR.
Probably… EVERY DAY, hundreds of millions of people are subjected to permanent chemically induced brain damage (chemical lobotomies) caused by psychiatric drugs. In EVERY YEAR, at least one million (perhaps more) are being caught to chemical lobotomies. By mainstream psychopath psychiatrists. Hundreds of millions of people worldwide who take psychiatric drugs… (the vast majority of whom are in their own homes) are exposed to permanent brain damage caused by chemicals in their homes.
The interesting thing is… no one is aware of this psychiatric brutality and genocide. Probably… not even the world-renowned researchers who uncovered the harmful effects of psychiatric medications are aware of it. Or they are aware of it but they probably don’t seem to have any ‘demonstrable evidence’ for it.
***
In fact, there is compelling evidence. For example… There are who must remain in mental health facilities such as ‘mental hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, nursing homes, care homes and rehabilitation centers’ until they die millions of people with intellectual disabilities. In fact, this is the best evidence that can be presented.
It is important to know that it is the psychiatric medications that cause these innocent people to suffer from ‘chemical brain damage’. This real, ‘revealable’ evidence. If this is uncovered… mainstream psychopath psychiatry is DONE.
And mainstream psychopath psychiatry… begins to be held accountable in the courts. They are tried. They are tried for killing and maiming millions of people every year.
Psychiatry must be removed from medical schools immediately. Psychiatric medications should be banned. Drug-free treatment methods and human behavioral therapies should be implemented in mental health treatments. Again, I hope you get well soon. Best regards.
With my best wishes. 🙂 Y.E. (Researcher blog writer (Blogger))
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Dear Yildirim,
Thank you for your passionate and powerful words. While the scale and severity you describe may seem unbelievable to those who haven’t lived it, for many of us, your message reflects a reality we have endured — one that remains hidden behind the polished facade of “care.”
Your framing of this as a silent, ongoing global atrocity resonates deeply. Chemical lobotomy, coercion disguised as treatment, and the systemic silencing of survivors — these are not isolated incidents, but patterns embedded in the structure of modern psychiatry. And the most disturbing part is how invisible it all remains to the public, cloaked in the language of “help” and “science.”
I stand with your call for accountability, for humane and truly healing alternatives, and for the exposure of psychiatric harm in all its forms. I am especially grateful for independent voices like yours who are not afraid to speak out.
Thank you for your solidarity, and for reminding us that this is not just a personal story — it’s a global fight for truth and dignity.
With respect and appreciation,
Mohamed
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