Klong Prem Central Prison

Klong Prem Central Prison
Location Bangkok, Thailand
Coordinates 13°50′50″N 100°33′14″E / 13.84722°N 100.55389°E / 13.84722; 100.55389Coordinates: 13°50′50″N 100°33′14″E / 13.84722°N 100.55389°E / 13.84722; 100.55389
Status Operational
Security class Maximum security
Opened 1944
Managed by Thai Department of Corrections

Klong Prem Central prison (Thai: คลองเปรม) is a high-security prison in Chatuchak District, Bangkok, Thailand. The prison has several separate sections. The compound houses up to 20,000 inmates. Within the perimeter of the compound are the Women's Central Prison, often referred to as "Lard Yao" or "Lard Yao women's prison". There is the Central Correction Institution for Drug Addicts (also known as "Bambat Phiset") "Bangkok Special Prison", and the Central Correctional Hospital. The Lard Yao men's section takes custody of male offenders whose sentence term is not over 25 years. As of 2002 the men's section held 1,158 foreigners from 56 countries out of a total of 7,218 prisoners.[1] It is a part of the Thai Department of Corrections.

The Klong Prem section for women houses female death row inmates.[2][3]

History

Klong Prem Central prison was originally a temporary prison established in 1944 in the Lard Yao district as a consequence of demands during World War II when Thailand was at war with Britain and the United States.[4] In 1959 it was used as a vocational training centre for those who, in the words of the Thai corrections department, "act and behave as gangsters".[5]

In 1960 the old Klong Prem prison on Maha Chai Road (now the Bangkok Corrections Museum) had become especially overcrowded so all prisoners were transferred to the vocational training centre site.[4] The Interior Ministry established a temporary prison within the new compound by dividing one part into a vocational training centre and the other part into the Lard Yao temporary central prison. In 1972 the Interior Ministry issued orders establishing the prison on Maha Chai Road as the "Bangkok Remand Prison" and the prison in the Lard Yao subdistrict was designated the "Klong Prem Central Prison".[4]

Visiting Klong Prem

Klong Prem Central Prison allows the family of inmates to visit prisoners. Visiting rules and times vary and international visitors have some special privileges. Different days are allocated to certain cell blocks. Weekend visits are typically prohibited. Additional privileges (e.g., phones, longer visits) when visiting foreign prisoners can sometimes be attained with a letter from the appropriate embassy or with bribes to prison guards. Food for prisoners can be purchased at the commissary by completing a form listing the items to be purchased and the prisoner's name. After paying for the items, the order is generally delivered that evening or the next day.

As of June 2010, foreign prisoners held at the Bangkok Remand Prison at Klong Prem could be visited Monday through Friday, between the hours of 08:30–15:30. There is a small restaurant outside the main visiting area where meals can be bought for the prisoners. Purchases are sealed by prison store staff in a plastic bag, and then the visitor passes it through the window to the prisoner after a visit. There is also a service for limited fast food, such as KFC or pizza, delivery for prisoners.

Prison World Cup

With the large number of foreign nationals at Klong Prem, the prison is able to hold a football World Cup.[1] Teams of 10 are chosen by prison staff to represent Nigeria, Japan, the US, Italy, France, England, Germany, and Thailand.[1] Games consist of two 20-minute halves on a half-sized pitch. The winners are given a replica of the real World Cup trophy, which is made of wood in the prison workshop.[1]

Current and former notable prisoners

Foreign prisoners are concentrated in Building 2, and those prisoners may have contact visits for several days providing visitors can demonstrate they have traveled from another country. As of June 2010, there are many foreign prisoners in other buildings of the prison complex.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Jason Gagliardi (17 June 2002). "Gaaoooool!". Time. Retrieved 17 May 2009.
  2. Joseph, Joanne and Larissa Focke. Drug Muled: Sixteen Years in a Thai Prison. Jacana Media, 2013. ISBN 1920601201, 9781920601201. p. 195. "Goosen says that[...]when she was on death row,[...]She tells of how, shortly after she arrived at Lard Yao,[...]"
  3. Rao, Nathan. "My despair at the Peru two." The Daily Mail. Friday August 30, 2013. Retrieved on July 4, 2016. "Sandra, 48, was initially handed the death sentence[...]Her sentence was reduced to life, which in Thailand is 99.9 years, before being commuted to 25 years in the notorious Lard Yao jail, dubbed the Bangkok Hilton."
  4. 1 2 3 "Klong Prem Central Prison". Foreign Prisoners Support Site. 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2009.
  5. "Klong Prem Central Prison". correct.go.th. 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2009.
  6. David McMillan. Escape: The True Story of the Only Westerner Ever to Break Out of the Bangkok Hilton (3 July 2008 ed.). Mainstream Publishing. p. 320. ISBN 1-84596-345-8.
  7. David Sapsted (19 June 2001). "I was so stupid, says heroin smuggler pardoned by king". Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 24 December 2008.
  8. AAP (17 December 2008). "Aussie charged over drugs in Thailand". The Age. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  9. AAP (19 December 2008). "Andrew Hoods admits Thai smuggling attempt a 'big mistake'". The Australian. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  10. AAP (20 December 2008). "Heroin accused 'did it for the money'". The Australian. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  11. Justin Vallejo (20 December 2008). "The tragedy of Andrew Hoods - and his little girl". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 20 December 2008.
  12. Ron Corben (5 August 2009). "Aussie Andrew Hood sentenced for attempted smuggling". news.com.au. Retrieved 5 August 2009.

External links

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