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US: Bush's Drugs Boss Is Unfit For Office, Say Civil Rights Groups

Duncan Campbell

The Guardian

Saturday 08 Sep 2001

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The man President George Bush has nominated to lead the
fight against drugs is unfit for office because of his views
on race and crime, according to civil rights and drug reform
groups. The claims are likely to lead to a clash next
Tuesday when John Walters, Mr Bush's choice as "drugs tsar"
has his Senate nomination hearing.

There is concern that Mr Walters represents the reactionary
wing of the drugs debate in that he favours more frequent
use of jail for users, and increased military spending in
Latin America. His nomination hearing in front of the Senate
judiciary committee on September 11 represents the latest
clash over the president's attempts to appoint hardliners to
key posts.

A coalition of civil rights and drug reform groups this week
launched a critical analysis of Mr Walters' policies, saying
that they represented a step backwards. The Coalition for
Compassionate Leadership on Drug Policy expressed concern
that he appeared ignorant of the realities of the drugs
world.

"It's truly disturbing to have our nation's nominee for the
top drug policy spot be a throwback to a more intolerant and
reactionary way of thinking," said Vincent Schiraldi of the
Centre on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, one of the groups
in the coalition, which advocates a greater concentration of
efforts on prevention and treatment.

At the heart of the concerns expressed about Mr Walters are
remarks he made in May when he told the Weekly Standard:
"What really drives the battle against law enforcement and
punishment is not a commitment to treatment, but the widely
held view that, first, we are imprisoning too many people
for merely possessing illegal drugs; second, drug and other
criminal sentences are too long and harsh, and third, the
criminal justice system is unjustly punishing young black
men. These are among the great urban myths of our time."

The coalition says these are far from being urban myths, and
that the concern about prison numbers and race are backed up
by official statistics.

Of the 1,559,100 arrests for drug law violations in 1998,
78.8% were for possession of drugs and more than 100,000
people were in state or federal prison solely because of
this. The average federal sentence for a drug offence in
1997 was 78 months, more than twice the average sentence for
manslaughter (30 months).

According to the coalition, whites and blacks use drugs at
equal rates, but black men are admitted to state prisons for
drug offences at a rate that is 13.4 times that of whites,
despite the fact that seven times more whites than blacks
use drugs.

A letter sent by a number of groups separate from the
coalition, asking senators to vote against Mr Walters'
nomination, states: "His views on race and crime make him
unfit for a position that requires sensitivity to racial
fairness." Hilary Shelton, of the National Association for
the Advancement of Coloured People, said that the concerns
were being expressed to the Senate judiciary committee.

Mr Walters has described the current step-up of US
involvement in military operations in Colombia as "cheap and
effective", and has urged an intensification of the policy.

A White House spokeswoman described Mr Walters as a
"respected and experienced leader in drug policy. She added:
"The White House is committed to a balanced approach toward
the problem of drug abuse in the United States, with
emphasis both on demand reduction and prevention."


 

 

 

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