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Thursday, 5 October 2017

Justice doesn't last

re: "Corrections chief eyes reform" (BP, October 3)


Dear editor,
It is a welcome hint of reform of bad old thinking to see a chief of prisons who acknowledges grave defects of long standing in Thailand's antiquated prison system. When a society imprisons citizens, those citizens do not stop being human beings and must be treated with the respect any human person deserves, which means that society has an obligation to provide decent conditions for those it locks away to protect itself from them.

And as the new chief says, many of those unjustly crowded into Thailand's prisons should never have been sent there in the first place: it only harms them, their families and Thai society to imprison them when other options would be both more moral and effective in reducing harms to society. As the Portuguese and other evidence consistently shows, for example, we know that decriminalizing drug use (all drug use by adults) is a far more effective solution to the harms of drug abuse than is throwing mainly young offenders of poor means into prison for indefensibly long periods at great cost to all concerned, save of course the mafia scum and their loyal officials who are the sole beneficiaries of such a misguided response to very real drug problems.

With such sound reforms in mind, how long can this man of vision last before being shunted out to avoid upsetting the mafia scum and their colluding officials in all areas of the "justice" system?

 Felix Qui

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The above letter to the editor is the text as submitted by Felix Qui to the Bangkok Post.

The text as edited was published in PostBag on October 5, 2017, under the title "Justice doesn't last" at https://www.bangkokpost.com/opinion/postbag/1336927/religious-business
  

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