Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 100 Part 4.djvu/351

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100 STAT. 3207-72
PUBLIC LAW 99-000—MMMM. DD, 1986
100 STAT. 3207-72

PUBLIC LAW 99-570—OCT. 27, 1986

100 STAT. 3207-72

SEC. 2028. INCREASED FUNDING FOR AID DRUG EDUCATION PROGRAMS.

In addition to amounts otherwise authorized to be appropriated, there are authorized to be appropriated to the President for fiscal year 1987 $3,000,000 to carry out chapter 1 of part I of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, which amount shall be used pursuant to section 1260t>)(2) of that Act for additional activities aimed at increasing awareness of the effects of production and trafficking of illicit narcotics on source and transit countries. SEC. 2029. REPORTS TO CONGRESS ON DRUG EDUCATION PROGRAMS ABROAD. The Director of the United States Information Agency and the Administrator of the Agency for International Development shall include in their annual reports to the Congress a description of the drug education programs carried out by their respective agencies.

22 USC 2151. 22 USC 2151x.

22 USC 2291 note.

SEC. 2030. NARCOTICS CONTROL EFFORTS IN MEXICO. (a) CONGRESSIONAL FINDINGS.—The Congress finds—

(1) in their meeting in August 1986, President de la Madrid Hurtado and President Reagan recognized the unique relationship between our two countries and the importance and the ^. desire to respect the sovereignty of each nation; (2) further, the United States Government has actively worked to support the Mexican Government in easing its international debt burden; (3) both Presidents pledged their cooperation in drug eradii cation, enforcement and education; and i (4) this pledge of cooperation has not been realized fully because of the inadequate response of the Mexican Government in— •. (A) fully investigating the 1985 murders of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena Salazar and his pilot, Alfredo Zavala Avelar; (B) fully investigating the 1986 detention and torture of U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agent Victor Cortez, Junior; (C) bringing to trial and effectively prosecuting those responsible for the Camarena and Zavala murders and those responsible for the detention and torture of Cortez; <•»" (D) using effectively and efficiently the fleet of aircraft provided by the United States government for drug eradication and interdiction; and (E) preventing drug trafficking and drug-related violence on the United States-Mexican border. (b) MEASURES TO B E CONSIDERED.—Therefore, it is the sense of President of U.S Congress that unless substantial progress is demonstrated in the near future on the issues described in subsection (A)(4), the President should consider taking one or more of the following measures: (1) imposition of a mandatory travel advisory for all of « Mexico; (2) restrictions on foreign assistance (including further disbursements from the Exchange Stabilization Fund and FedV eral Reserve Bank); (3) denial of favorable tariff treatment for Mexican products; 3^ (4) denial of favorable U.S. votes in multilateral development s banks.