Department of Corrections (Thailand) explained

Department of Corrections
Native Name A:Thai: กรมราชทัณฑ์
Native Name R:Krom Ratchathan
Seal:Official emblem of the Department of Corrections (Thailand).png
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Headquarters:Suanyai Sub-district, Mueang Nonthaburi, Nonthaburi, Thailand
Budget:13,430 million baht (FY2019)
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Deputyminister8 Name:-->
Chief1 Name:Sahakarn Phetnarin
Chief1 Position:Director-General
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Parent Agency:Ministry of Justice
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The Department of Corrections (Thai: กรมราชทัณฑ์,) is an agency of the Thai Ministry of Justice. Its mission is to keep prisoners in custody and rehabilitate them.[1] Its headquarters is in Suanyai Sub-district, Mueang Nonthaburi District, Nonthaburi Province.[2], Police Colonel Suchart Wongananchai is director-general of the department.[3] Its FY2019 budget was 13,430 million baht.[4]

Prisons and prison population

Facilities

Bang Kwang houses Thailand's death row for men and execution chamber.[18] The Klong Prem (Lard Yao) section for women houses female death row inmates.[19]

Overcrowding

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) puts the minimum space requirement for inmate accommodation at 3.4 m2 per person in a shared or dormitory accommodation. The Department of Corrections has three different inmate space standards for its prisons: the "standard capacity" spacing regulation is 2.25 m2 floor space for each prisoner. "Full capacity" spacing is 1.1 m2 per female inmate, 1.2 m2 per male inmate. "Full capacity 30%" sets the spacing at 0.85 m2 per inmate. These guidelines allow the DOC to manipulate prison occupancy numbers. When the Director-General of the Department of Corrections says—as he did in December 2019—that the 700,000 inmates behind bars are three times the capacity of the prisons[20] it is unclear which capacity standard he is using. In December 2019, a video was released on YouTube showing a crowded cell at the Lang Suan Prison in Chumphon Province. Justice Minister Somsak Thepsuthin's response was to tell the prison to file a police complaint of an alleged hacking of the video system. He directed the Department of Special Investigation (DSI) to find out how it happened and who was responsible on the grounds that the leak may have violated the rights of inmates.[21] Somsak's attitude has changed somewhat when he realised—as he put it—that some inmates have "...less room for a body [to sleep in] than the inside of a coffin,..."[22]

LGBT facility

The Department of Corrections is moving towards separating lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) prisoners from other prisoners to ensure their safety and security. Min Buri Prison will be used as a prison for LGBT prisoners under a pilot scheme. There are 4,448 prisoners self-identified as LGBT: 2,258 females, 2,156 males, and 34 transgender individuals. LGBT inmates account for about one percent of Thailand's total of 300,000 prisoners.[23]

Death penalty

See also: Capital punishment in Thailand. Thailand, as of 2018, is one of 58 nations that retain the death penalty. Of the 10 ASEAN nations, only Cambodia and the Philippines have outlawed it.[24]

Thailand retains the death penalty, but rarely employs it. Since 1935 Thailand has executed 326 persons, 319 by firing squad (the last was shot on 11 December 2003), and seven by lethal injection, the latest on 19 June 2018., 517 persons remain on death row.[25] [26] Bang Khwang Central Prison contains the nation's primary Death Row, but Death Rows exist in provincial prisons, for both men and women.[24], 59 women are on death row, 58 of them for drug-related offenses.[27]

Even after the Supreme Court has handed down a death sentence, under Thai law it can be stayed by the king if a petition is sent to the palace within 60 days. The king can then ponder the petition indefinitely. King Bhumibol (Rama IX), effectively halted executions in Thailand for nearly a decade by this means. Petitions submitted by condemned prisoners were left unanswered by the palace, leading prison officials to regard them as "under royal deliberation". They did not dare put petitioners to death lest they were seen as intruding on royal prerogative. More than 500 death row inmates were thus spared death. On the other hand, when the king rejects clemency petitions, the prisoner must be put to death within 24 hours.[25]

Thai public opinion on the death penalty is unclear. A 2014 survey reported that only eight percent of the population favored its abolition. Another survey indicated that 41 percent wanted to retain the death penalty as a sentencing option. Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha has said that the death penalty is necessary to maintain peace and order and deter severe crimes in spite of general acknowledgement that the possibility of execution does not serve to deter crime.

Parole

The corrections department has three criteria for granting parole to inmates:

Two conditions are attached: The inmate must have served at least six months of an ordinary sentence, or—if sentenced to life—the inmate must have served at least 10 years of that sentence. One serial killer was originally sentenced to death in 2005. He confessed to the crime, thus resulting in the commutation of his sentence to life. He then served 14 years of his life sentence and during that time received four sentence reductions for good behaviour. He was then granted parole on a "special national occasion." Seven months after he was paroled he committed murder and was rearrested.[28]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vision & Mission. Department of Corrections. 19 January 2016. 6 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170706130524/http://www.correct.go.th/eng/index.html. dead.
  2. Web site: Contact Us . Department of Corrections, Ministry of Justice . 26 June 2018 . 4 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304090029/http://www.correct.go.th/eng/contact_us.html . dead .
  3. Web site: Executive List . Department of Corrections, Ministry of Justice . 22 March 2020 . 25 February 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200225185156/http://www.correct.go.th/eng/executivelist.html . dead .
  4. Web site: Thailand's Budget in Brief Fiscal Year 2019 . Bureau of the Budget . 88. 20 December 2018. 12 December 2019 .
  5. News: Rojanaphruk . Pravit . Thai Prisons Bursting at Seams, Reforms Needed: Panel . 4 June 2018 . Khaosod English . 3 June 2018.
  6. Web site: Walmsley . Roy . World Female Imprisonment List . World Prison Brief (WPB) . Institute for Criminal Policy Research (ICPR). 3rd. 10 September 2018 . 2.
  7. News: Ekachai . Sanitsuda . Ex-inmates find door to freedom closed . 10 September 2018 . Bangkok Post . 10 September 2018 . Opinion.
  8. News: Cabinet tackles prison overcrowding . 29 January 2020 . Bangkok Post . 29 January 2020.
  9. Web site: Prisons and Correctional Institutions. Department of Corrections. 19 January 2016. 15 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170115124720/http://www.correct.go.th/eng/prisons_correctional_i.html. dead.
  10. Web site: Thailand. World Prison Brief (WPB). 3 August 2017.
  11. News: Thamnukasetchai . Piyanuch . Food budget for prisons runs out mid-year . 11 June 2018 . The Nation . 11 June 2018.
  12. News: Mahavongtrakul . Melalin . Double Jeopardy . 24 September 2018 . Bangkok Post . 24 September 2018.
  13. News: Laohong. King-Oua. Guard fingered in prison sex scandal. 11 December 2017. Bangkok Post. 11 December 2017.
  14. Web site: Number of Convicted Prisoners, by Type of Offences [sic]]. Department of Corrections. 19 January 2016. 9 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170109045541/http://www.correct.go.th/eng/number_by_type_of_offences.html. dead.
  15. News: Following 'sentencing guidelines' creates prison overcrowding . 2019-01-23 . Pratchatai English . 2018-07-04.
  16. News: Laohong . King-Oua . Prisoners to get bank accounts . 27 September 2018 . Bangkok Post . 27 September 2018.
  17. News: Sabpaitoon . Patpon . Breaking the crime cycle through work and training. 2018-12-24 . Bangkok Post . 2018-12-24.
  18. Wongruang, Piyaporn.When the Killing Hour Arrives " (Page 2). Bangkok Post. 30 August 2009. Retrieved on 4 July 2016. Former URL
  19. Book: Joseph. Joanne. Goosen. Vanessa. Drug Muled: Sixteen Years in a Thai Prison. 2013. MF Joberg. 9781920601201. 4 February 2018.
  20. News: Penal system gets it wrong . 21 December 2019 . Bangkok Post . 19 December 2019 . Opinion.
  21. News: Laohong . King-Oua . Hacked security footage from cramped Thai prison posted on Youtube . 25 December 2019 . Bangkok Post . 25 December 2019.
  22. News: Laohong . King-Oua . Hutasingh . Onnucha . Raksaseri . Kornchanok . Prisons buckle under overcrowding . 9 February 2020 . Bangkok Post . 9 February 2020.
  23. News: Laohong . King-Oua . Separate LGBT jails on cards . 6 July 2016 . Bangkok Post. 6 July 2016. dead. https://archive.today/20160709084834/http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/general/1028561/thai-third-sex-to-get-exclusive-prison . 9 July 2016 .
  24. News: Debating the Death Penalty . 20 June 2018 . Bangkok Post . 20 June 2018 . Opinion.
  25. News: Anonymous . Has Rama X revived Thailand's death penalty? . 16 January 2019 . New Mandala . 2018-06-22.
  26. News: Death penalty 'here to stay' . 20 June 2018 . Bangkok Post . 20 June 2018.
  27. Book: International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) . Union for Civil Liberty (UCL). Flawed Models; Implementation of international standards in Thailand's 'model' prisons for women . December 2019 . Paris; Bangkok . 12 December 2019.
  28. News: Laohong . King-Oua . Ngamkham . Wassayos . Parole board under fire . 21 December 2019 . Bangkok Post . 19 December 2019.