Pubdate: Sun, 29 Jun 2014 Source: Las Vegas Review-Journal (NV) Copyright: 2014 Las Vegas Review-Journal Contact: http://www.reviewjournal.com/about/print/press/letterstoeditor.html Website: http://www.lvrj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/233 Page: 2D BORDER CRISIS FIX: END THE DRUG WAR Americans Fund Cartels That Have Kids Fleeing Since Oct. 1, U.S. Border Patrol agents have apprehended more than 52,000 children traveling alone from Central America and Mexico. Many of these kids made the dangerous trip to escape even more dangerous conditions in their home countries. According to a 2013 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees survey of 400 children who fled to the United States from Central America and Mexico, nearly half said drug cartel and gang violence had affected them personally, while 20 percent said they had been abused or otherwise experienced violence in their own homes. Three out of every four children detained by U.S. Customs and the Border Patrol have come from Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala - countries that have seen an escalation in violence associated with drug cartels and gangs. Honduras has the most murders per capita of any country. The danger of their home countries is just the beginning. The perilous trip north puts these children at risk of torment by human traffickers who, according to Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, have been forcing children to, among other things, cut off the fingers or ears of other little boys and girls to extort money from their families. Under U.S. immigration law, children who enter the country illegally and alone from Mexico can be returned immediately to their home country. Children from other countries, however, cannot be removed immediately and must first be taken into U.S. custody. Because of a backlog in the immigration court system that reached as many as 30,000 cases before the recent border surge, it now may be several years before these children's cases are heard. Between now and then, the children will be able to live in American cities, receive health care, attend public schools and likely even work here for years. So what's the answer? This newspaper has long been a proponent of decriminalizing, regulating and taxing the sale of currently illegal drugs. (We support the legalization of recreational marijuana, for example.) We hold to this position because of the supreme costs related to policing, prosecuting and incarcerating drug offenders - not to mention the tragic (and preventable) cost in human lives - and the fact that no amount of government pressure has ever reduced demand for illegal drugs in the United States. In fact, it has done the exact opposite. We have also long advocated stronger border enforcement and the enforcement of existing immigration laws - laws that now must be deemed broken if we have to accept tens of thousands of immigrant children and burden southwestern state taxpayers with the bill for educating them and providing medical care. Selective enforcement of immigration laws certainly isn't helping. These children must be sent home at some point, but they can't be turned around on the spot and told to start walking back. The federal government should bear the cost of this humanitarian crisis, not a handful of states. If the United States wasn't such a profitable marketplace for Mexican and Central American drug lords - so much so that it's crippling governments in those countries - children would not be rushing here in such alarming numbers. The border, and Latin America itself, would look vastly different if we were engaged in lawful, taxed trade that provided legitimate employment to people here and there. Instead we enable the growth of violent, multibillion-dollar criminal enterprises that are expanding into the ransom and extortion trades. This month, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., called the war in Iraq "the biggest foreign policy blunder in the history of the country." Please. The chaos in Iraq still can't touch the international carnage, cruelty and cost in lives and treasure of the war on drugs. No form of immigration reform and no amount of border security is ever going to fix this problem. The best policy solution at this point is to immediately end the war on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom