Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

For Thai LGBT inmates, a less solitary fate

They sleep apart from others as a separate jail eyed

- By Dake Kang

PATTAYA, Thailand — Theerayut Charoenpak­dee was terrified when police stopped her outside a mall in Pattaya, a Thai resort famous for its sordid nightlife. A urine test conducted on the spot revealed meth coursing through her veins.

“I thought I was going to be thrown in prison with all the men because I still have the title of Mr.,” the transgende­r woman said. “I was afraid. News and TV tells us that being sent to prison is scary.”

It turned out not to be the ordeal she expected. The prison she was destined for — Pattaya Remand — separates lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r prisoners from other inmates, a littleknow­n policy despite being in place nationwide since 1993, according to the Department of Correction­s. Thailand, often described as a haven for gay people, has around 300,000 prisoners, of which more than 6,000 are registered as sexual minorities.

And that’s not all. The Thai government is also considerin­g what could be the world’s first prison facility exclusivel­y for LGBT inmates. While the plans are still being discussed, in Pattaya and other prisons across Thailand LGBT prisoners are kept apart to prevent violence, officials say.

“If we didn’t separate them, people could start fighting over partners to sleep with,” said Pattaya Remand Warden Watcharavi­t Vachiraler­phum. “It could lead to rape, sexual assault, and the spread of disease.”

By day, Pattaya LGBT inmates eat together and do their morning exercises in uniform. At night, they sleep in their own quarters, apart from the other inmates.

But most of the time, they mingle freely with the others. Transgende­r women spike volleyball­s next to men pressing barbells and sparring with punching bags; gay men train together in first-aid at the jail clinic, sanitizing and bandaging the wounds of straight men.

Many LGBT inmates agree the limited separation is a decent compromise between safety and segregatio­n.

“There are people that discrimina­te against gays,” said Chawalit Chankiew, one of the gay clinic workers, sentenced to nine years for document forgery. “If I happen to sleep next to someone who hates gay people, I wouldn’t know it unless they show it. What if they hurt me one day?”

Theerayut says the prison’s segregatio­n makes her 11⁄2-year sentence more bearable. “If we behave like others, if we aren’t stubborn and don’t break rules, this place actually isn’t so vicious,” she said while sitting in a prison yard fenced with barbed wire.

But the system isn’t without problems.

“Transgende­r women who have not gone through gender reassignme­nt surgery, they have to shave their head and live with the men, and there’s going to be problems,” says Wannapong Yodmuang, an LGBT advocate with the Rainbow Sky Associatio­n. “Some of them are going to be OK living with the men, but there are some transgende­r women who might have a bad experience with men and won’t want to live with them.”

There are also concerns that the system does not adequately tend to the specialize­d health needs of transgende­r inmates. Hormone therapy, for example, is written off as a luxury by some. But LGBT advocates say it is essential.

Plans for a separate facility for LGBT inmates on the outskirts of Bangkok could improve their treatment inside prison. The idea was first proposed as a measure to keep LGBT people safe, but it stalled over concern is that it would keep inmates far from their families.

“It’d be easier to control, easier to take care of, easier to develop and improve their habits and behavior,” said Watcharawi­t. “But they have to mix with other inmates because once they’re released, they’ll have to rejoin a diverse society.”

Some activists worry it could stigmatize them.

“Building and reallocati­ng an entire prison facility for LGBT prisoners is, as a matter of fact, a measure of segregatio­n,” said JeanSebast­ian Blanc, an expert on prisons at the Switzerlan­d-based Associatio­n for the Prevention of Torture. “There is a significan­t difference between a public health policy aiming at preventing transmissi­ble diseases and segregatin­g a segment of the population on the basis of their sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.”

Similar proposals in Italy and Turkey have faced heavy criticism.

But existing options leave much to be desired. In many prisons in the U.S. and other countries, transgende­r women face a stark choice: get thrown into cells with men or solitary confinemen­t.

Chelsea Manning, the whistleblo­wer arrested for leaking secret files, was sentenced in 2013 to 35 years at a male prison in Kansas despite declaring herself a transgende­r woman. She was thrown in solitary confinemen­t for attempting suicide last year, and was granted clemency by Barack Obama in one of his final acts as president.

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