Exclusive: Singapore wants a prison without guards
Interview with Soh Wai Wah, Commissioner of Singapore Prisons.

This pivot to rehabilitation required Soh to change the culture of the institution. Every official has to be mindful of how they interact with prisoners and the words they use, he says. This was harder than just implementing systems and programmes: “It was a challenge to tell my staff that they can be better”, he says.
The pivot has changed each official’s role in the prison. Officers have to think of how they treat inmates because that affects their rehabilitation process. At the same time, counsellors have to be mindful of the safety and security of prisoners.
New skills will also be needed to continually improve the Prisons Service. “The corrections officer of the future must be a person who is well-versed in social skills,” he says. They must be able to read inmates’ body language, enter into a conversation with them, interpret their responses - and from there - gather intelligence of what is going on in the prisons population, he believes. Tech takes away the other role, so the human touch becomes more important.
Moving ahead
Soh’s career in the public service is also changing. After 34 years in the Ministry of Home Affairs, he is leaving to become Principal and Chief Executive Officer of Singapore Polytechnic. This is fitting for a man who has created a learning hub at an unlikely institution, and teachers could potentially learn a thing or two about giving detentions.
He sees his purpose as creating strong organisation visions with a human touch. “The work still involves interaction with people”, he says, and in a rapidly changing workplace he wants to “make sure people find purpose in what they do”.
Perhaps that is also why he likens his correctional work to a football game.”Being focused on security and safety is like having a strong defence, but to win the game you need to have a powerful attack - a strong rehabilitation”, he says. And on a football field, he sees himself as a player manager: interacting with the players and being on the floor when the occasion rises.
On October 1, Soh will be succeeded by his current deputy, Desmond Chin Kim Tham. The commissioner has a piece of parting advice for the next leader and all 2,500 officials of the Prisons Service: “We must believe that ex-offenders can be reformed. And we must believe that what we do can help in their reformative journey.”