Wow....what an eye opener! Having learned so much about Indonesia itself and the ways in which the people think and operate, I was not expecting such a blatantly open book about such a corrupt and dishonest place as Kerobokan Prison....known to the inmates as Hotel K. Kathryn Bonella has done a remarkable job in collecting such intimate information and putting it into print. I had no idea until I read this book about the injustices and disgusting conditions in this and many other Indonesian prisons. The book is now on loan to a friend, but I will keep it and re-read it in the future because it was a book I just found so difficult to put down.
One expects a prison to be some sort of punishment site where people are in fact kept in confinement to pay penalties for breaking the law. Not so Hotel K. Run by the inmates, with token governor and guards (who incidentally are almost all involved in the drug trafficking or producing business, or taking rake-offs from the inmates), with almost all of the inmates taking drugs of any type, fully under the eyes of the authorities. Most of the guards simply supplement their meagre incomes by assisting in the trafficking, earning much more in the illegal trade in a month, than they would earn in a year in their legal positions.
Practically unknown to the western world until the arrest of their star inmate, Schapelle Corby, Hotel K has been involved in the manufacture of drugs for many years and is touted as being the largest manufacturer of drugs in Bali.
The inmates come and go from the prison to the outside world of daily life, basically as they please, as long as they can bribe a guard, they can get away with it. Some bribe the guards to take them to a 'dentist appointment' when really they go off to the beach for a few hours, or wherever they like. Tourists can be walking along the streets of Kuta and they may have murderers or rapists or drug traffickers walking alongside them, all without knowing.
The conditions in this prison are horrific and the western inmates are popular due to having money to improve their own conditions; such as for $100 to bribe the guards, they can have a mattress brought in from outside to make sleeping more comfortable, instead of sleeping on the stone floor, which is often covered in urine and feaces and rats running over those sleeping on the floors.
There is no proper sanitation, a toilet is a squat toilet....a hole in the floor....which more often than not, overflows and spreads the disgusting contents all over the floors, fouling the blankets, clothes or mattresses of those forced to sleep there.
The corruption in Hotel K is rife and goes right through the entire place. Sex is permitted on a weekly basis where anyone wanting conjugal visits (or even just sex with another inmate or prostitute), is taken to 'The blue Room', and in front of guards and everyone else, perform any type of sexual act they fancy. Often the room is so crowded people are elbow to elbow having sex with someone else, or in front of other visitors children. There is no privacy and the odd guard will join in as well on occasion, as well as being onlookers.
Not all the guards are corrupt, but most of them will take any bribe in order to make more money for themselves and families.
When the police decide to 'raid' the prison for drugs, Hotel K is forewarned so all the drugs and paraphernalia, is hidden or dug hurriedly into the gardens or whatever. Sometimes some get caught but mostly they don't.
I was surprised to read just how widespread the drug situation was in Hotel K as well as Bali, and due to the information in this book, found it very difficult ...on a humanitarian basis....to understand just why the Balinese government (and the Australian Federal Police - who knew all about this before Schapelle Corby went to Bali) are making such a big fuss about Schapelle's drug situation....when there is clearly so much more money (millions) being MADE within the prison walls, and almost everyone in the grossly overcrowded prison, being involved in it. That just didn't make sense to me, although I do understand that both the Indonesian and Australian governments (under pressure from the AFP) are making an example of her.
The book mentioned also many other westerners, including the Bali Nine, who are all in one way or another, inside due to drug crimes of one form or another. I found also that the westerners are often given very harsh sentences for minor offences whereas more often than not, the locals are given much less sentence time for far more serious crimes. Without the western prisoners, there is not as much money to be made by the guards so I assume that is why they are given harsher sentences....so they can be kept there longer and the local guards and authorities can extort more money to line their own pockets, at least, that is how it seems.
Some make serial habits of returning there.
The laws are very strict but the punishments are far too stringent for the loose rules within the walls of the Indonesian prisons. This is a book primarily about Kerobokan Prison but also touches on the atrocious conditions and corruption apparent in other Indonesian jails.
This book is a MUST READ for anyone even thinking of going to Bali, even for a holiday.