|
|
|
|
Proposal Rejected: Live online footage to monitor Bangkok
prison life
by insideprison.com May 2006
The Department of Corrections for the Ministry of Justice, Thailand,
had proposed in January of 2005 that it would begin to broadcast
live footage of life behind the bars of its correctional facilities,
hoping to combat alleged prisoner abuse and staff corruption while
increasing transparency by publicly exposing daily activities.
The only exception would be inmates on death row, who could not
be shown walking to the execution chamber or being executed. Amnesty
International was not as pleased as corrections department officials,
contending that the true solution to correctional injustice and
corruption is stricter security and improved staff policies, not
constant surveillance. After protests that claimed such surveillance
was unconstitutional and violated prisoners' human rights, the
proposal was quashed that same month. Cameras that had already
been installed at Bangkwang prison, a maximum security facility
outside of Bangkok that houses 6,000 inmates and 1,000 condemned
to death row, would remain private, and be used only to monitor
prison activities. Under the new development, only the chief of
the Corrections Department, Nathee Chitsawang, can observe the
prison footage.
|
|
| |
|