Pubdate: Wed, 23 Sep 2009 Source: Gulf Islands Driftwood (CN BC) Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/RlQ0b43u Copyright: 2009 Black Press Website: http://www.bclocalnews.com/vancouver_island_south/saltspringislanddriftwood/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/862 Author: Sean McIntyre Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Cited: Luna-Rose Prisoner Support http://luna-rose.ca/ INITIATIVE HEARTENS FORGOTTEN PRISONERS Justice Jam fundraiser set for Oct. 3 When Heather Luna-Rose stepped nervously into Bangkok's Bangkwang Central Prison five years ago, she had no idea she'd end up with a lasting friendship, let alone a string of avid pen pals. In a letter Luna-Rose received earlier this month, Soepaing, a 38-year-old Burmese inmate, talks about prison life, his dreams, and his health. He adds that the medicine Luna-Rose sent in March still hasn't arrived. Luna-Rose shrugs as she reads the passage. She figures prison guards have made off with the $250 worth of ulcer medication before it got anywhere near its intended recipient. While in jail, she said, Soepaing has learned to read and write in both Thai and English. His immaculately written letters look as if they were typed up and printed off on a laser printer. But there are no computers in Bangkwang Central. From the sound of things, there's not much of anything except hard times and desperation. "They are living in medieval-like conditions, suffering with illnesses nobody here would even blink an eye at," she said. That's precisely why Luna-Rose's letters have come to mean so much to the handful of inmates she corresponds with on a regular basis. Most of the prison's foreign inmates have been convicted, under questionable legal proceedings, of drug trafficking offences. Soepaing's Thai employer, for example, demanded he transport meth amphetamine into northern Thailand from Burma, where the drug is legal, cheap and readily available. Soepaing was relatively lucky; he was convicted and sentenced to 40 years in prison. Soepaing's friend wasn't so fortunate and was gunned down on site by Thai border guards. Luna-Rose's stories stand in striking contrast to the idyllic Thailand many of us imagine. Even for most Thais, she added, what happens behind Bangkwang's walls is out of sight and well out of mind. The Salt Springer's work over the past few years has done a lot to shed light on the prisoners' plight. Based on the progress she's already made, she's just getting started. "I'm determined this is just going to get bigger and bigger," she said in a recent interview. Luna-Rose started a website (www.luna-rose.ca) to spread the word and is two months away from obtaining registered non-profit status for her prisoner support group. She's even got a few other Salt Springers writing letters to Soepaing's fellow inmates. "People have come up to me asking how they can help," she said. "The response has been really encouraging." To raise funds for urgently needed antibiotics and other basic necessities, Luna-Rose is organizing the Justice Jam, a fun-filled event at the Harbour House Hotel featuring local bands and performers like the Barley Brothers, Sue Newman, and Simone Lamers. A silent auction and emcee antics from island funny man Arvid Chalmers will round out the entertainment. All proceeds from the Sat., Oct. 3 event go towards supplies Luna-Rose will deliver in person in January. Tickets for the Justice Jam, $20, are available at the Harbour House Hotel and Salt Spring Books. For more information, contact Luna-Rose at 250-537-5571 or 250-526-0265. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom