Sex offenders in Thailand to be offered chemical castration in exchange for shorter prison time

By Alma Fabiani

Published Jul 13, 2022 at 12:51 PM

Reading time: 1 minute

33645

Sex offenders in Thailand may soon be able to accept chemical castration in return for serving less prison time. The idea behind this bill is that a lower testosterone level could decrease the chance of the perpetrator carrying out further sex offences.

The bill was approved by the country’s lower house and passed in March 2021 but it still needs another house vote followed by royal endorsement in order to be valid. When it comes to sex offenders undergoing the procedure, the approval of two doctors would be needed while perpetrators would be monitored for ten years, along with still being required to wear an electronic monitor.

“I want this law to pass quickly,” Justice Minister Somsak Thepsuthin said. “I don’t want to see news about bad things happening to women again,” he added.

However, Jaded Chouwilai, director of the Women and Men Progressive Movement Foundation, a non-governmental organisation that addresses sexual violence, claims that chemical castration wouldn’t tackle sex crime.

“Convicts should be rehabilitated by changing their mindset while in prison,” he said. “To use punishment like execution or injected castration reinforces the idea that the offender can no longer be rehabilitated.”

This proposed solution comes only two months after Australian politician Pauline Hanson made headlines for her calls for tougher acts of corporal punishment against people convicted of sex offences—believing that those specifically guilty of sex crimes against children (paedophiles) should be chemically castrated.

“People are very concerned about their children’s safety and they want strong laws and penalties for those convicted of paedophilia,” Hanson said at the time during an exclusive interview with Daily Mail Australia.

“I support chemical castration and tougher penalties for paedophiles, and the establishment of a national database of paedophiles,” she continued. “For sex offences not involving children, I consider it appropriate for the presiding magistrate or judge to determine the appropriate penalty under the relevant law.”

But things aren’t as ‘simple’ as some may think. As stated by Healthline, “chemical castration is not a one-time treatment. Your doctor administers the drugs by injection or implants them under your skin. Depending on the drug and the dose, this must be repeated as often as once a month or as seldom as once a year.”

Furthermore, according to a 2013 research review, side effects and complications may increase the longer an individual is in treatment. Guess it really all comes down to how much a country’s government cares about the fate of sexual offenders…

Keep On Reading

By Eliza Frost

Hailey Bieber just listed all the beauty treatments she swears by

By Eliza Frost

UK to lower voting age to 16 by next election. A controversial move, but the right one

By Eliza Frost

It now takes 20 hours of work a week to survive as a UK university student

By Eliza Frost

How The Summer I Turned Pretty licensed so much of Taylor Swift’s discography for its soundtrack 

By Eliza Frost

Everyone’s posing like Nicki Minaj: the TikTok trend explained 

By Eliza Frost

NHS makes morning-after pill free at 10,000 pharmacies across England

By Eliza Frost

What is dry begging? And why is it a relationship red flag?

By Eliza Frost

How fans manifested Elle Fanning as Effie Trinket in The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping

By Eliza Frost

Bereavement leave to be extended to miscarriages before 24 weeks

By Eliza Frost

What is the Gen Z stare, and why are millennials on TikTok so bothered by it?

By Eliza Frost

Renters’ Rights Bill becomes law; this is what it means for you

By Eliza Frost

Kim Kardashian wants to know how much a carton of milk costs 

By Eliza Frost

Millie Bobby Brown reportedly accuses Stranger Things co-star David Harbour of harassment and bullying 

By Eliza Frost

Misinformation spread by wellness influencers online is leading to falling contraceptive pill use

By Eliza Frost

If everyone has an AI boyfriend, what does that mean for the future of Gen Z dating?

By Eliza Frost

What is Banksying? Inside the latest toxic dating trend even worse than ghosting

By Eliza Frost

Misogyny, sexism, and the manosphere: how this year’s Love Island UK has taken a step backwards

By Eliza Frost

Do artists really owe us surprise guests at gigs, or are our expectations out of control?

By Eliza Frost

Kylie Jenner now follows Timothée Chalamet on Instagram, but he doesn’t follow her back

By Eliza Frost

Why do people want a nose like the Grinch? The Whoville TikTok trend explained