Man blamed the escalating campaign against methamphetamine for
jamming the country's prisons and suggested that officials ease
up on young users to help stem prison overcrowding.
"When methamphetamine was made a grade 1 drug like heroin,
anyone caught with a few pills ended up in jail," he said.
"Teenagers should be given rehabilitation and put on probation
so they can hopefully return to the right path," Man added,
"but if they go to jail, they may become cruel criminals
because prisons are hell on earth."
Man also brazenly referred to police corruption, asking the police
to refrain from planting drugs on people they dislike. "The
righteous performance of the police could also help relieve prisons,"
he added.
A few months later, Man's notion got a second when Senator Kavi
Spathira called for legalization of amphetamines. The senator,
a member of the senate's government affairs committee, told the
Thai News Agency in October that state stores should sell the
drug.
"The government should set up drug stores nationwide to
sell the drug at one baht a tablet to control the supply and demand
of the drug," he told Interior Ministry officials.
Kavi said such a policy would undermine the United Wa State Army,
which has been giving Thai authorities fits for years even as
they have moved aggressively to reduce opium production at home.
"The Wa would be severely hurt by this measure," he
said.
Interior Minister Purachai Piemsomboon didn't mention the Wa
last week when he announced the plan to move drug offenders out
of the prisons and shift enforcement emphasis from users and small-scale
drug sellers to big-time traffickers. Instead, he spoke of prison
overcrowding and the need for rehabilation -- not jail -- for
drug addicts.
"Prisons are meant for serious criminals. We will propose
new ways for the courts to punish petty criminals," Purachai
told a press conference in Bangkok.
It doesn't appear, however, that Thai drug offenders can now
expect Betty Ford Center-style help. They will be sent to military
and police bases, Purachai said, and supervised by police or soldiers.
It is not known what sort of drug treatment capabilities the Thai
police and military possess.
sources :
http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/175/thailand.shtml