Justice Minister Somsak Thepsutin has suggested the Corrections Department could consider using foreign inmates to teach English to fellow prisoners to supplement their occupational training.
Mr Thepsutin floated the idea yesterday when he and Labour Minister Mr Chatu Mongol Sonakul signed an agreement to step up cooperation between the Justice and Labour ministries to address the problem of ex-convict unemployment.
Mr Chatu Mongol said that under the agreement, the Employment and Skill Development departments of the Labour Ministry will provide training courses in various occupations for inmates before they are released and issue them a certificate to help convince business operators to hire them.
The Labour Ministry is also looking for employers, both inside and outside the country, to accept trained inmates who suit their requirements, he said.
Mr Mongol said the two ministries are already cooperating to provide skills training for inmates. In 2019, 8,084 inmates received occupational training and 70-80% of them found jobs after being released.
In 2020, the two ministries aim to train 1,840 inmates for jobs that are in demand, including those such as construction workers, carpenters and electricians.
Mr Thepsutin said the Corrections Department is responsible for selecting inmates for training. Between 20,000-30,000 inmates have been targeted.
Those seeking jobs abroad need to learn English or other languages used in countries where jobs are available, he said. As there are now about 2,000 foreign inmates in prisons, the Corrections Department has been assigned to select the ones with the potential to teach English to other inmates.