The Asian Age

Thai prisoners clean Bangkok sewers

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Bangkok, June 29: Flecked with sewage, a Thai prisoner grapples with an overflowin­g bucket as he and his fellow inmates clean Bangkok's congested drains for the first time in two years.

Pre-pandemic, convicts could volunteer to clear the sewers of Thailand’s capital — which sits only 1.5 metres (five feet) above sea level and is perenniall­y beset by flooding — earning time off their sentences. But fears of spreading the virus meant the gutterdivi­ng work has been done by city authoritie­s and workers, until now.

“It is a pretty tough and exhausting job,” said one 33-year-old prisoner, who was not permitted to give his name, adding — not unsurprisi­ngly — that the work was “smelly”.

He is one of roughly 80 inmates shipped in from three prisons to an eastern Bangkok suburb and set to labour, earning money and a day off their sentences for each day worked.

“I still want to do this job, so I can return home to my family earlier,” explained the man, wearing a bright blue baseball cap and a dark blue prison uniform. After hauling up the concrete slabs covering the drains, the inmates — wearing protective waders and heavy-duty gloves — drop down and scrabble out the grime, filling large iron tubs with stinking slop. They work through the day, fuelled by donations from grateful shopkeeper­s pleased to see the drains outside their stores finally cleared.

“This is the first time since the pandemic” that the drains have been cleared by prisoners, said a Bangkok Remand Prison guard, who declined to be identified as he was not authorised to speak to the press.

Once dubbed the “Venice of the East”, the capital endures flooding during the rainy season — from roughly July to October — with backed-up drains contributi­ng.

“The increased cleaning when the rainy season starts will help the drains (remove water) quicker,” said a Bangkok Metropolit­an Administra­tion official.

And for at least one of the prisoners, who had less than a year remaining to serve, cleaning the sewers helped him feel better about his past.

HE IS one of roughly 80 inmates shipped in from three prisons to an eastern Bangkok suburb and set to labour, earning money and a day off their sentences for each day worked.

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