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Report denounces violation of human rights
Thousands of young offenders in US face life behind bars
By Tom Carter
15 October 2005
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At least 2,225 individuals convicted of crimes they committed
as juveniles are currently serving life terms without parole in
American prisons, according to a joint report released Tuesday
by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. This figure compares
with a total of 12 prisoners in the rest of the world combined
who were given the same sentence as children.
The unique position of the United States in condemning youth
offenders to lifetime imprisonment is a telling expression of
the immense social contradictions and official brutality which
have come to characterize American society. The fact that only
12 children received such sentences outside the US testifies to
the general consensus in the rest of the world that condemning
young offenders to life in prison is a brutal relic from the past.
In second place behind the US is Israel, which has a total of
seven juvenile offenders behind bars.
According to the joint report, entitled The Rest of Their
Lives: Life without Parole for Child Offenders in the United States,
[O]ne third of the youth offenders now serving life without
parole entered prison while they were still children, in violation
of international human rights standards that prohibit the incarceration
of children with adults. In prison, these children face
gangs, sexual predators, extortion, and violence.
Far from being on the decline, the number of Life Without Parole
(LWOP) sentences for children handed out each year is soaring
in the US. From 1990 to 2000, the number of such sentences rose
by 216 percent. According to the report, some 26 percent of these
juvenile offenders are in prison not for crimes they themselves
committed, but for offenses committed by their accomplices, who
are often adults.
It is no coincidence that this development has occurred during
a period of deepening social and political reaction. The entire
political establishment, including both Republicans and Democrats,
has lurched to the right, repudiating any policy of social reform
and instead embracing the nostrums of the so-called free
market. The unbridled operation of the capitalist market
and the removal of restrictions on big business have produced
a massive accumulation of wealth at the pinnacle of American society,
while lowering the living standards of the vast majority of the
people.
This political and economic transformation has been accompanied
by non-stop law-and-order demagogy justifying executions, imprisonment
without parole, and ever more onerous sentences for those who
run afoul of the so-called justice system. The overwhelming
majority of these individuals come from impoverished sections
of the working class.
Meanwhile, the media and the politicians have conducted a relentless
attack on the conception that crime is rooted in social conditions,
and instead promoted the notion that crime is simply a product
of individual character flawsimmorality, inbred criminality,
etc. This Social Darwinist throwback to the darkest periods of
human civilization found consummate expression in the words of
former Republican senator and presidential candidate Robert Dole,
who declared: The cause of crime is criminals.
The most vulnerable and defenseless of Americanschildrenhave
suffered the cruelest blows at the hands of an increasingly depraved
judiciary and political elite.
Fifty-nine percent of child offenders serving life sentences
in the US, according to the report, had no criminal record prior
to the crime for which they were incarcerated. Twenty-six states
in the US have issued edicts mandating adult trials and
life sentences without parole for certain crimes committed by
juveniles, regardless of the circumstances, and this has accounted
for a majority of the life terms imposed on child offenders.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child, an international
agreement ratified by every country except the United States and
Somalia, proscribes explicitly giving life sentences without parole
to juveniles. Amnesty International also points out that the legal
systems of 132 nations other than the US bar such sentences. In
the US, however, children in the thousands, as young as 13, enter
adult prisons and remain there until they die.
Only days before the release of the Amnesty International/Human
Rights Watch report, the New York Times published an article
(To More Inmates, Life in Prison Means Dying Behind Bars)
documenting the explosion over the past three decades in the number
of convicts serving life sentences. In the 1950s and 1960s, when
the population of inmates serving life terms was much smaller,
an average of 12 such inmates were granted paroles each year.
A life sentence in those days usually meant actual prison time
of 10 to 20 years. There was a significant section of official
public opinion that held that prison was not simply, or even primarily,
a means of punishment, but rather of rehabilitation.
The population of lifers since then has skyrocketed
to more than 130,000 (and life nowadays means dying
behind bars), while only a handful of governors have commuted
even a single sentence in the past decade. Because of this political
climate, a further 7,000 incarcerated children who have been given
life sentences with the possibility of parole face less chance
of ever returning to their families.
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch report that Pennsylvania
has the highest number of juvenile crime lifers, with
332 offenders serving life terms without parole. In second place
is Louisiana, with 317. Michigan, with 306 such cases, ranks third.
Youth are told that they will die in prison and are left
to wrestle with the anger and emotional turmoil of coming to grips
with that fact, the report states. They are denied
educational, vocational, and other programs to develop their minds
and skills because access to those programs is typically restricted
to prisoners who will someday be released, and for whom rehabilitation
therefore remains a goal. Not surprisingly, child offenders sentenced
to life without parole believe that US society has thrown them
away.
See Also:
30 years in prison for crime
committed by 12-year-old: US society punishes its most vulnerable
[19 February 2005]
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