Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 103 Part 2.djvu/944

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103 STAT. 1954 PUBLIC LAW 101-231—DEC. 13, 1989 Public Law 101-231 101st Congress An Act Dec. 13, 1989 [H.R. 3611] International Narcotics Control Act of 1989. Law enforcement and crime. 22 USC 2151 note. To combat international narcotics production and trafficking. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE AND TABLE OF CONTENTS. (a) SHORT TITLE. —T h is Act may be cited as the "International Narcotics Control Act of 1989". (b) TABLE OF CONTENTS.—The table of contents for this Act is as follows: Sec. 1. Short title and table of contents. Sec. 2. Andean drug initiative. Sec. 3. Military and law enforcement assistance for Bolivia, Colombia, and Peru. Sec. 4. Acquisition by Special Defense Acquisition Fund of defense articles for narcotics control purposes. Sec. 5. Excess defense articles for certain major illicit drug producing countries. Sec. 6. Waiver of Brooke-Alexander amendment for major coca producing countries. Sec. 7. Mexico. Sec. 8. Nonapplicability of certification procedures to certain major drug-transit countries. Sec. 9. Coordination of United States trade policy and narcotics control objectives. Sec. 10. Debt-for-drugs exchanges. Sec. 11. Multilateral antinarcotics strike force. Sec. 12. Weapons transfers to international narcotics traffickers. Sec. 13. Rewards for information concerning acts of international terrorism. Sec. 14. Waiver of Bumpers Amendment. Sec. 15. Participation in foreign police actions. Sec. 16. Authorization of appropriations for international narcotics control assist- ance. Sec. 17. Revisions of certain narcotics-related provisions of the Foreign Assistance Act. SEC. 2. ANDEAN DRUG INITIATIVE. (a) FINDINGS RELATING TO ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE NEEDS.— The Congress finds that— (1) it is crucial to international antidrug efforts that funds be made available for crop substitution programs and alternative employment opportunities to provide alternative sources of income for those individuals in major coca producing countries who are dependent on illicit drug production activities, as well as for eradication, enforcement, rehabilitation and treatment, and education programs in those countries; and (2) the United States and other major donor countries (includ- ing European countries and Japan) should provide increased economic assistance, on an urgent basis, to those major coca producing countries which have taken concrete steps to attack illicit coca production, processing, and trafficking, by eradi- cation, interdiction, or other methods which significantly reduce the flow of cocaine to the world market. (b) PLAN TO ADDRESS NEED FOR ASSISTANCE.—The Congress, there- fore, urges the Director of National Drug Control Policy to submit to the Congress in February 1990, as part of the National Drug Control