
BANGED UP: Thai jails have a bad reputation
Voice reader tells of how dream holiday became a nightmare
A BRITISH man is facing a two-year sentence in a hellish Thai prison for being ‘rude’ to an official.
Voice reader Simon Burrowes, from Wembley, north London, was ending a holiday with a friend when
Thai authorities in Phuket airport detained him on January 31, preventing him from returning to the UK.
Immigration officials suspected Burrowes’ passport was a forgery. Speaking to The Voice via phone from Thailand, Burrowes said: “A woman at immigration was looking at my passport and then handed it to the man
behind her. I was ushered to sit down whilst he took out a magnifying glass and proceeded to check my passport
for half an hour,” he explained.
He was told that he was not getting on the plane and was taken to a detention centre, whilst his friend
Matthew was able to fly back to the UK. Burrowes said: “I’m a black man so I’m used to getting hassle
at airports, but I was shocked by this.” For three weeks, the 44-year old was held with 126 men in a cramped prison cell.
“Thai prisons are notorious for being some of the worst. There is no privacy. You go to the toilet in the open
and there is no toilet paper. There were guys in there that had scabies and were next to me,” said Burrowes.
He contacted the British Consulate, who confirmed his passport was genuine. However, the disgruntled Brit claims that the Consulate should have done more, saying that they took long to react to his case.
“I was disgusted and beside myself. People talk of them [the British Consulate] like they are the cavalry. If you have issues abroad they come charging to help. But they didn’t really help me,” he fumed. Burrowes was later charged with ‘rude and aggressive behaviour’ towards an immigration officer, a claim he denies, and was released on £2,000 bail. He must remain in Thailand until his trial begins on April 26, and his lawyer has warned
he could face a two-year jail sentence.
“I have to find some way to sustain myself financially while I am here. I went to Thailand to enjoy the land, learn the culture and spend some money. It’s turned into a nightmare,” he said. Burrowes is hoping that he
will soon be able to fly back to the UK.
“If they find me guilty, who knows what will happen. I met people in prison who are doing five years for having two spliffs on them. It’s very difficult to hold yourself up in a Thai prison. I feel very bitter about what has happened,” he said. A spokesman for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London told The Voice they are
looking into the case.
Published: 02 March 2009
Issue: 1361