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Prison system sets up new accommodations for LGBT inmates

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Prison system sets up new accommodations for LGBT inmates
By THE NATION

 

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Thai transgender inmates who have gone through sex change surgery from male to female sleep inside a separate cell at the female zone of the Pattaya Remand Prison, in Pattaya, Chonburi province, Thailand, 06 March 2017. //EPA Photo

 

BANGKOK’S MIN Buri and Klong Prem prisons as well as Chon Buri’s Pattaya Prison have arranged separate zones to house self-identified lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) prisoners separate from non-LGBT prisoners, Department of Corrections director-general Kobkiat Kasiwiwat said yesterday.

 

The move makes Thailand among the first countries to provide such accommodation for LGBT inmates.

 

Reporting on the progress of the department’s plan to separately house LGBT inmates as proposed by various agencies and human right groups, Kobkiat said prisons did not currently incarcerate many LGBT inmates making it difficult to justify separate facilities for them. He added that transferring LGBT prisoners from various jails to a single facility could also mentally affect them and pose difficulties for family visits, he said.

 

However, the department must consider the matter based on reality, current problematic conditions, the safety of LBGT inmates and the necessity of preventing sexual harassment, he said. 

 

One possible solution was for those prisons with a large number of LGBT inmates to set up special zones, he said, adding that the Min Buri, Klong Prem and Pattaya jails had already done so.

 

Self-identified LGBT prisoners account for slightly more than 1 per cent of the total population of 300,000 inmates in Thai prisons. 

 

LGBT inmates are currently divided into categories including so-called “ladyboy” transsexuals, gay men, “tomboy” lesbians, “lady” lesbians and transgender people.

 

In the past, the department would divide the LGBT inmates according to four groups. Men who had undergone a sex-change operation and were confirmed by physical examination as transgender people would be sent to the women’s jail. Transsexual men with feminine behaviour would initially be sent to the men’s area pending a final court ruling on their criminal cases before they would be sent to spend time in other areas. Homosexual females would be kept in separate sleeping cells. 

 

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Records show that Thailand does not currently incarcerate hermaphrodite inmates but department guidelines state they would be initially treated according to the gender specified on their household registration documents. When allowed by a medical diagnosis or a court order, the person could choose which sex to be treated as while serving their term.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/news/national/30309977

 
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-- © Copyright Thai Visa News 2017-03-23

I can't believe less than 1% of the prison population are ladyboys? At the rate of trouble they cause the prison system  should be full of them. I never heard of any such thing in my country guess if there were segregation the boys in prison would be right onto it. 

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