BangkokPost-Dec 23

Prisoners in Thailand are being forced to make fishing nets for private companies under threat of punishment including beatings and delayed release, a Thomson Reuters Foundation investigation has found. Jails around the country are using inmates to fulfil high-value contracts with Thai manufacturers, including one that exports nets to the United States, according to documents obtained under freedom of information (FOI) rules. Former prisoners interviewed said prison officers threatened to beat them with batons, withdraw the right to wash or push back their release date if they did not meet stringent targets. The Corrections Department did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication. Most prisoners who spoke to the Thomson Reuters Foundation said they were earning the equivalent of about 30 baht a month, though some said they received no pay at all. Thailand has the largest prison population in Southeast Asia, with about 282,000 inmates in the country’s 143 jails, mostly on drug convictions. Read more at: https://www.bangkokpost.com/thailand/general/2236711/prisoners-forced-to-make-fishing-nets-under-threat-of-violence