Source: Survey of German Language Press Pubdate: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 Courtesy: Harald Lerch Translator: Pat Dolan TWO MILLION IN AMERICAN 'GULAG' Thus runs the caption in the Austrian 'Der Standard' (http://derstandard.at); sub-heading: In the USA the incarceration rate climbs faster than the crime rate drops. The rigorously prosecuted 'War on Drugs' policy, which arose chiefly in the Reagan era, has led in the interim to massive increases in the number of incarcerations, so that prison costs have risen to 30 billion dollars annually, reports the 'Standard' Washington correspondent, Thomas Rust. Washington - 'Round one third fewer serious criminal offenses than in 1990', announces the US Bureau of Statistics contentedly, commenting on the blunting of the greatest social problem in the country. Yet behind these favorable figures lies buried a dirty secret: the number of prisoners has risen by seven per cent annually, and has doubled in the last nine years. Two million prisoners are behind bars in conditions which 4 star General Barry McCaffrey has called "an American Gulag," that is a situation which many contemporaries compare to conditions pertaining in the former Soviet Union. The number of prisoners in the USA is higher than in Germany, France, the UK and Japan put together. Experts point to the 'Anti-Drug-Abuse-Act', passed in 1986 under Ronald Reagan in the general anxiety caused when the rise in the crime rate was associated with the newly ciruclating drug 'Crack', as being responsible. It targeted those whose crimes were associated with drugs or drug dealing. While only a small percentage of high profile drug dealers were prosecuted, however, the new statutes led to a serious disproportion between the felonies committed and the sentences awarded. The 'world record' for an excessive sentence was won by Gloria Van Winkle. She was prosecuted three times for possession of relatively small amounts of cocaine and on the third occasion received, under the new 'three strikes' statute, a sentence of life imprisonment for the possession of drugs with a value of only 40 dollars. Imprisonment Statutes At the same time a new branch arose which rapidly won political and social influence. Under the new statutes, the building and direction of prisons was let out to private contractors. The stocks of these newly formed companies were the subject of dealings on Wall St. Meanwhile they received federal funding to the tune of 30 billion dollars. Experts are now beginning to raise doubts about the essential soundness of the System. One study came to the conclusion that locking up 2 million persons at a cost of 30 billion dollars per year was 'not effective', since the number of drug users remained roughly the same. According to a 1997 report, around 14 million Americans are regular users of illegal drugs. The figures are about the same as those for 1988 when only half as many were incarcerated. Even some individual Reagan supporters have concluded that the mandated minimum sentencing guidelines should be at least 'reconsidered'. Thus declared Edwin Meese, Reagan’s former justice minister, who is known to be anything but a 'Liberal'. And, as Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey stated recently, "In the long run, we can’t arrest our way out of this problem." DER STANDARD, 12 March 1999 ................. News in Brief The Peace Process In Columbia In Question Since The Murder Of Three US Citizens Hero Buss, writing in 'Die Welt' (http://www.welt.de) under the above caption discusses Columbia’s invidious situation. It holds the macabre world record for murders pro-capita of population with 25.000 and 5,000 kidnappings annually. The recent murder of three American citizens, civil rights activists, has endangered Pastrana's peace negotiations with the 'Farc' guerrillas who control a large part of the crucial territory in which cocaine is harvested from the cocoa crops. The Farc leadership refuses to yield to US demands to turn over the alleged killers. With that, the corner stone of President Andres Pastrana’s peace negotiations with Farc has been torn away. Columbia's strapped financial position does not permit him to finance alternative crops for the cocoa farmers. And the Lockerby affair has shown that when it is a question of pursuing terrorists who have American citizens' blood on their hands, Washington can be relentlessly long-winded. (DIE WELT, 12.3.1999) - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake