[Senate Report 110-128] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] Calendar No. 265 110th Congress Report SENATE 1st Session 110-128 ====================================================================== DEPARTMENT OF STATE, FOREIGN OPERATIONS, AND RELATED PROGRAMS APPROPRIATIONS BILL, 2008 _______ July 10, 2007.--Ordered to be printed _______ Mr. Leahy, from the Committee on Appropriations, submitted the following REPORT [To accompany H.R. 2764] The Committee on Appropriations to which was referred the bill (H.R. 2764), making appropriations for the Department of State, foreign operations, and related programs for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, and for other purposes, reports the same to the Senate with an amendment, and recommends that the bill as amended do pass. Amounts in new budget authority Total of bill as reported to the Senate................. $34,401,900,000 Amount of 2007 appropriations........................... 37,127,661,000 Amount of 2008 budget estimate.......................... 35,102,620,000 Amount of House allowance............................... 34,401,900,000 Bill as recommended to Senate compared to-- 2007 appropriations................................. -2,725,761,000 2008 budget estimate................................ -700,720,000 House allowance..................................................... CONTENTS ---------- Page Glossary of Terms................................................ 4 Introduction..................................................... 6 Summary of Estimates......................................... 6 Transparency in Congressional Directives..................... 6 Title I: Department of State and Related Agency: Diplomatic and Consular Programs......................... 8 Capital Investment Fund.................................. 12 Office of Inspector General.............................. 12 Educational and Cultural Exchange Programs............... 12 Representation Allowances................................ 16 Protection of Foreign Missions and Officials............. 16 Embassy Security, Construction, and Maintenance.......... 16 Emergencies in the Diplomatic and Consular Service....... 18 Repatriation Loans Program Account....................... 18 Payment to the American Institute in Taiwan.............. 18 Payment to the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Fund................................................... 18 Contributions to International Organizations............. 19 Contributions for International Peacekeeping Activities.. 19 International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Mexico...................................... 20 Construction............................................. 20 American Sections, International Commissions............. 21 International Fisheries Commission....................... 21 Payment to the Asia Foundation........................... 22 Center for Middle Eastern-Western Dialogue Trust Fund.... 22 Eisenhower Exchange Fellowship Program Trust Fund........ 22 Israeli Arab Scholarship Program......................... 22 East-West Center......................................... 23 National Endowment for Democracy......................... 23 Broadcasting Board of Governors, International Broadcasting Operations................................ 23 Broadcasting Capital Improvements........................ 24 Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad................................................. 24 Commission on International Religious Freedom............ 25 Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe......... 25 Congressional-Executive Commission on the People's Republic of China...................................... 25 United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission............................................. 25 United States Senate-China Interparliamentary Group...... 26 United States Institute of Peace......................... 26 Title II: Export and Investment Assistance: Export-Import Bank of the United States.................. 27 Overseas Private Investment Corporation.................. 27 Trade and Development Agency............................. 28 Title III: Bilateral Economic Assistance: Funds Appropriated to the President...................... 29 Global Health Programs................................... 29 Development Assistance................................... 35 International Disaster Assistance........................ 43 Transition Initiatives................................... 44 Development Credit Authority............................. 44 Operating Expenses of the United States Agency for International Development.............................. 44 Capital Investment Fund.................................. 44 Operating Expenses of the Office of the Inspector General 44 Other Bilateral Economic Assistance: Economic Support Fund................................ 45 Assistance for Eastern Europe and the Baltic States.. 50 Assistance for the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union....................................... 51 Independent Agencies: Inter-American Foundation............................ 52 African Development Foundation....................... 52 Peace Corps.......................................... 53 Millennium Challenge Corporation..................... 53 Department of State: Global HIV/AIDS Initiative........................... 54 Democracy Fund....................................... 54 International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement.. 56 Andean Programs...................................... 57 Migration and Refugee Assistance..................... 63 United States Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance Fund.................................... 63 Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism, Demining and Related Programs........................................... 63 Department of the Treasury: International Affairs Technical Assistance........... 64 Debt Restructing..................................... 65 Title IV: Military Assistance: International Military Education and Training............ 66 Foreign Military Financing Program....................... 66 Peacekeeping Operations.................................. 67 Title V: Multilateral Economic Assistance: International Financial Institutions Summary............. 69 Global Environment Facility.......................... 69 Contribution to the International Development Association........................................ 69 Contribution to the Enterprise for the Americas Multilateral Investment Fund....................... 70 Contribution to the Asian Development Fund........... 70 Contribution to the African Development Bank......... 70 Limitation on Callable Capital Subscriptions......... 70 Contribution to the African Development Fund......... 70 Contribution to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.................................... 70 Contribution to the International Fund for Agricultural Development........................... 70 International Organizations and Programs............. 70 General Provisions--Titles II-V.................................. 72 Compliance With Paragraph 7, Rule XVI of the Standing Rules of the Sen- ate............................................................ 75 Compliance With Paragraph 7(c), Rule XXVI of the Standing Rules of the Senate.................................................. 76 Compliance With Paragraph 12, Rule XXVI of the Standing Rules of the Senate......................................................... 77 Budget Impact Statement.......................................... 85 GLOSSARY OF TERMS ABA--American Bar Association AP--Andean Programs ADF--African Development Foundation ASHA--American Schools and Hospitals Abroad CEELI--Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative CGIAR--Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research CIPA--Contributions for International Peacekeeping Activities CRSP--Collaborative Research Support Program DA--Development Assistance DF--Democracy Fund DFA--Director for Foreign Assistance DRL--Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor DRC--Democratic Republic of the Congo ERMA--Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance Fund ESF--Economic Support Fund FAA--Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 FAO--Food and Agriculture Organization FMF--Foreign Military Financing FSA--Assistance for the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union GAO--Government Accountability Office GAVI--Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization GEF--Global Environmental Facility GHI--Global HIV/AIDS Initiative GHP--Global Health Programs HRDF--Human Rights and Democracy Fund IAF--Inter-American Foundation IBO--International Broadcasting Operations IDA--International Disaster Assistance IDP--Internally Displaced Person IFAD--International Fund for Agricultural Development IFI--International Financial Institution ILEA--International Law Enforcement Training Academies IMET--International Military Education and Training INCLE--International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement IO&P--International Organization and Programs LWVF--Patrick Leahy War Victims Fund MCC--Millennium Challenge Corporation MEPI--Middle East Partnership Initiative MRA--Migration and Refugee Assistance MTN--Middle East Television Network NADR--Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism, Demining, and Related Programs NED--National Endowment for Democracy NGO--Nongovernmental organization OAS--Organization of American States OBO--Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations OPIC--Overseas Private Investment Corporation PKO--Peacekeeping Operations RFA--Radio Free Asia RFE/RL--Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty SEED--Assistance for Eastern European and Baltic States TB--Tuberculosis TDA--Trade and Development Agency TI--Transition Initiatives U.N.--United Nations UNAIDS--Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS UNICEF--United Nations Children's Fund UNIFEM--United Nations Development Fund for Women USAID--United States Agency for International Development USIP--United States Institute for Peace VOA--Voice of America WFP--World Food Program WHO--World Health Organization WTO--World Trade Organization INTRODUCTION SUMMARY TABLE: AMOUNTS IN NEW BUDGET AUTHORITY ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Committee recommendation Committee compared with Item Budget request recommendation budget estimate increase (+) or decrease (-) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Title I--Department of State and Related Agency........ $10,723,857,000 $10,683,661,000 -$40,196,000 Title II--Export and investment assistance............. -108,100,000FOREIGN OPERATIONS, EXPORT FINANCING, AND RELATED PROGRAMS TITLE II EXPORT AND INVESTMENT ASSISTANCE Export-Import Bank of the United States INSPECTOR GENERAL Appropriations, 2007.................................... $990,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 1,000,000 House allowance......................................... 1,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 1,000,000 SUBSIDY APPROPRIATION Appropriations, 2007.................................... $26,382,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 68,000,000 House allowance......................................... 68,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 68,000,000 ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES Appropriations, 2007.................................... $72,468,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 78,000,000 House allowance......................................... 78,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 78,000,000 The Committee recommends $1,000,000 for the Inspector General, $78,000,000 for Administrative Expenses for the Export-Import Bank, and $68,000,000 for the subsidy appropriation. Overseas Private Investment Corporation SUBSIDY APPROPRIATION DIRECT LOANS Appropriations, 2007.................................... $20,073,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 29,000,000 House allowance......................................... 20,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 21,000,000 ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES Appropriations, 2007.................................... $41,851,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 47,500,000 House allowance......................................... 47,500,000 Committee recommendation................................ 47,500,000 The Committee recommends $47,500,000 for OPIC administrative expenses. Trade and Development Agency Appropriations, 2007.................................... $50,391,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 50,400,000 House allowance......................................... 50,400,000 Committee recommendation................................ 50,400,000 The Committee recommends $50,400,000 for the TDA. TITLE III BILATERAL ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE Funds Appropriated to the President Appropriations, 2007.................................... $4,744,452,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 338,200 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 3,756,827,000 House allowance......................................... 4,834,660,000 Committee recommendation................................ 9,141,903,000 The amounts listed in the above table for fiscal year 2007 appropriations, the fiscal year 2008 budget estimate and the Committee recommendation, include funds appropriated or requested under global health programs, development assistance, USAID operating expenses, USAID Inspector General operating expenses, international disaster and famine assistance, transition initiatives, and credit programs. GLOBAL HEALTH PROGRAMS (INCLUDING TRANSFER OF FUNDS) Appropriations, 2007.................................... $1,718,150,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 161,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 1,564,279,000 House allowance......................................... 1,980,150,000 Committee recommendation................................ 6,531,425,000 The Committee recommends a total of $6,531,425,000 for the Global Health Programs account, which supports health activities abroad, including those to combat HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria and other infectious diseases including neglected tropical diseases, and to reduce child mortality, provide voluntary family planning services, and protect women's health. The Committee consolidates all funding contained in the budget request for HIV/AIDS programs under the GHP account. The Committee recommendation for the GHP account includes $1,481,425,000 for programs and activities requested under the Child Survival and Health Programs Fund account, which is $267,146,000 more than the President's request. Funds are allocated in the following table: GLOBAL HEALTH PROGRAMS (ALL ACCOUNTS) [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Program, by account 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HIV/AIDS: GHP: Global HIV/AIDS Initiative............................ 4,150,000 4,450,000 +300,000 Global Fund........................................... ............... [300,000] .............. UNAIDS................................................ [27,000] [40,000] +13,000 USAID HIV/AIDS............................................ 314,278 350,000 +35,722 Microbicides.......................................... 30,000 [45,000] +15,000 Global Fund............................................... ............... 250,000 +250,000 ------------------------------------------------- Total, HIV/AIDS......................................... 4,494,278 5,050,000 +555,722 ================================================= Total, Global Fund...................................... ............... [550,000] +550,000 ================================================= Child Survival and Maternal Health: GHP....................................................... 345,600 450,000 +104,400 GAVI Fund............................................. 18,411 [75,000] +56,589 Micronutrients........................................ ............... [30,000] +30,000 ESF....................................................... 20,700 20,698 -2 SEED...................................................... 700 700 .............. FSU....................................................... 5,100 5,119 +19 ------------------------------------------------- Total, Child and Maternal Health........................ 372,100 476,517 +104,417 ================================================= Family Planning/Reproductive Health: GHP....................................................... 301,700 395,000 +93,300 ESF....................................................... 14,300 54,250 +39,950 SEED...................................................... 1,700 1,700 .............. FSU....................................................... 7,100 10,110 +3,010 ------------------------------------------------- Total, Family Planning/Reproductive Health.............. 324,800 461,060 +136,260 ================================================= Other Infectious Diseases: Avian Influenza........................................... ............... ............... .............. GHP....................................................... 100,000 100,000 .............. ------------------------------------------------- Total, Avian Influenza.................................. 100,000 100,000 .............. ================================================= Tuberculosis: GHP................................................... 79,400 99,420 +20,020 ESF................................................... 500 500 .............. FSU................................................... 10,000 10,250 +250 ------------------------------------------------- Total, Tuberculosis................................. 89,900 110,170 +20,270 ================================================= Malaria: GHP................................................... 385,000 355,005 -29,995 ESF................................................... 2,500 2,500 .............. ================================================= Total, Malaria...................................... 387,500 357,505 -29,995 ================================================= Polio: GHP................................................ ............... 32,000 +32,000 ================================================= Total, Polio............................................ ............... 32,000 +32,000 ================================================= Neglected Tropical Diseases: GHP.......................... 6,000 15,000 +9,000 ================================================= Total, Neglected Tropical Diseases...................... 6,000 15,000 +9,000 ================================================= Unallocated Infectious Diseases GHP....................... ............... 20,000 +20,000 ================================================= Total, Other Infectious Diseases........................ 583,400 634,675 +51,275 ================================================= Vulnerable Children: GHP....................................................... 4,000 15,000 +11,000 ------------------------------------------------- Total, Vulnerable Children.............................. 4,000 15,000 +11,000 ================================================= Total, Global Health Programs........................... 5,715,978 6,531,425 +815,447 ================================================= Total, All Accounts..................................... 5,778,578 6,637,252 +858,674 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Committee provides $450,000,000 for child survival and maternal health activities under the GHP account, and $26,517,000 under other accounts, for a total of $476,517,000. PROGRAM ISSUES CHILD SURVIVAL AND MATERNAL HEALTH The Committee believes the key to addressing the health crisis in the poorest countries, particularly in Africa, is building public health systems that are capable of providing basic health services, especially for women and children. An essential component of any strategy is to provide training and support for health care workers, many of whom are dying of AIDS, leaving in droves to obtain jobs in foreign countries, or abandoning primary health care to join organizations working to combat HIV/AIDS which can pay higher salaries. The Committee strongly supports HIV/AIDS prevention, care and treatment programs, but they are no substitute for building the public health capacity to prevent the needless deaths of millions of children before the age of five, and more than half a million women from pregnancy-related causes, each year. Accordingly, the Committee has substantially increased funding for child survival and maternal health programs, and directs USAID to consult with the Committee and the public health community on how best to utilize these additional funds to build sustainable public health systems, including by training more health care workers. Disabilities.--The Committee recommends USAID consider funding a proposal of Christian Blind Mission, which addresses physical disabilities in the Great Lakes region of Africa. The Committee recognizes the work of Operation Smile and recommends USAID consider funding a proposal to support its medical and educational activities in developing countries. Holy Family Hospital.--The Committee recommends continued support for the Holy Family Hospital in Bethlehem, and recognizes the quality care that institution provides to the Palestinian people, often those most in need. Iodine Deficiency.--The Committee recommends at least $2,000,000 for the UNICEF iodine deficiency disorders program. Vaccines and Immunization.--The Committee provides $75,000,000 for a contribution to the GAVI Fund. The Committee recommends up to $40,000,000 for assistance for Ethiopia, and recommends that of this amount sufficient funding be provided for childhood immunization programs. The Committee provides $32,000,000 for programs to eradicate polio. Vitamin A and Other Micronutrients.--The Committee provides $30,000,000 for USAID's micronutrient program, of which at least $20,000,000 should be for programs related to Vitamin A deficiency. Zanmi Lasante.--The Committee recommends USAID provide support to Zanmi Lasante to improve health care in Haiti. FAMILY PLANNING/REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH The Committee provides a total of $461,060,000 from all accounts in this act for family planning and reproductive health programs. HIV/AIDS The Committee provides a total of $5,090,000,000 for programs and activities to combat HIV/AIDS. The Committee consolidates funds requested for this purpose in all accounts in this act under the GHP account, including $40,000,000 provided in section 699 of this act as an additional amount for the U.S. contribution to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria. AIDS Vaccine.--The Committee recommends continued funding for the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative. Blood Safety.--The Committee continues to support Safe Blood for Africa, which assists African nations through training and technical assistance to develop systems to ensure that blood supplies are screened for HIV/AIDS and other diseases. Eurasia.--The Committee supports the work of the Eurasian Medical Education Program of the American College of Physicians to address HIV/AIDS and chronic diseases in Russia, and recommends continued funding for this program. Food and Nutrition.--The Global AIDS Coordinator, in consultation with the DFA, should report to the Committee by May 1, 2008, on the following regarding focus countries: (1) the level of funding within the Emergency Plan for fiscal year 2007 that was spent on food and nutritional support for people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS; (2) projected spending on food and nutritional support for people living with and affected by HIV/AIDS for fiscal year 2008; and, (3) the steps the Global AIDS Coordinator has taken to address the challenges identified in the ``Report on Food and Nutrition for People Living with HIV/AIDS'', May 2006. Global Fund.--The Committee provides $590,000,000 in this act for a U.S. contribution to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria. The Committee understands an additional $300,000,000 is provided in the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations act, 2008, for a total contribution from both acts of $890,000,000, an increase of $166,000,000 above fiscal year 2007. Media Programs.--The Committee supports the use of local media in combating HIV/AIDS and recommends continued funding for these programs in Kenya, Nigeria, Ethiopia and other countries in Africa, and increased funding for these programs in India. Microbicides.--The Committee provides $45,000,000 for research on and development of microbicides as a means of combating HIV/AIDS, and recommends continued support for the International Partnership for Microbicides. Mother-to-Child Transmission.--The Committee continues to support programs that prevent mother-to-child transmission [PMTCT] of HIV. The Committee believes that additional resources are required to expand access to these programs, including care and treatment. The Committee directs the Global AIDS Coordinator to provide the resources and technical assistance necessary to expand access to PMTCT services, including effective drug regimes, and to encourage stronger linkages between PMTCT and care and treatment programs. The Committee recommends that USAID consider supporting a proposal from Mothers2Mothers to prevent transmission of HIV/ AIDS from mothers to infants. Nurses Training.--The Committee is aware of a proposal of Catholic Medical Mission Board, in conjunction with the Chinese Nurses Association, to train nurses in HIV/AIDS care, and recommends USAID consider supporting this initiative. Orphans.--The Committee notes that section 403(b) of title IV of Public Law 108-25, the United States Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Act of 2003, mandates not less than 10 percent of HIV/AIDS assistance for orphans and vulnerable children affected by HIV/AIDS. The Committee directs the Global AIDS Coordinator to ensure that at least this level of assistance is made available. Pediatric AIDS.--The Committee recommends the Global AIDS Coordinator consider a proposal by the Baylor Pediatric AIDS Initiative to engage in the Pediatric AIDS Corps. Private Funds.--The Committee notes that the administration has indicated its intention to adopt guidelines for NGOs on how to implement the requirement in section 22 U.S.C. section 7631(f), specifically to adopt a regime that allows for separation of federally-funded activities and privately funded prohibited activities. The Committee welcomes the decision to distinguish between publicly funded activities and those carried out with private funds and urges the administration to impose the least possible burdens so as to avoid requirements that waste resources that could otherwise be used to save lives. The Committee notes that the administration has adopted similar regulations in its faith-based initiative, which should be used as the model in this instance. The Committee will view unfavorably any requirements that impose more costly and burdensome restrictions than those that apply to faith-based grantees. NEGLECTED TROPICAL DISEASES The Committee provides $15,000,000 for continued support of USAID's cooperative agreement in support of an integrated response to the control of neglected tropical diseases, including intestinal parasites, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, trachoma, and leprosy. The Committee requests to be consulted on the uses of these funds, including country-specific allocations. OTHER INFECTIOUS DISEASES The Committee recommends a total of $634,675,000 for other infectious diseases, including avian influenza, tuberculosis, malaria, measles, meningitis, and polio. Avian Influenza Virus.--The Committee provides $100,000,000 for programs and activities to contain and prevent an avian influenza pandemic, an amount equal to the budget request, and notes these funds are in addition to $161,000,000 provided for such purposes in Public Law 110-28. The Committee is aware of the many challenges to combatting avian influenza in developing countries and recognizes that in some circumstances foreign militaries may be well positioned to assist in this endeavor. Therefore, the Committee provides an additional $25,000,000 to enhance the preparedness of militaries in Asia and Africa to respond to an avian influenza pandemic, including through training and equipment. The Committee requests to be consulted prior to the initial obligations of these funds. Malaria.--The Committee provides a total of $357,505,000 for programs to combat malaria. The Committee directs that these funds be made available in accordance with country strategic plans incorporating best public health practices including insecticide-treated bed nets, artemisinin combination therapies, and indoor residual spraying, and with significant support for purchase of commodities and equipment. The Committee supports continued funding for the Malaria Vaccine Initiative and for the Medicines for Malaria Venture. Meningitis.--The Committee is concerned that meningitis has plagued sub-Saharan Africa for over a century, threatening the lives of half a billion people, especially the young. Of those infected, 10 percent die and 25 percent are left with severe neurological damage. The Committee is aware of the Meningitis Vaccine Project, which is supported by private donors to develop an affordable vaccine. The Committee recommends USAID consider funding this initiative. TB.--The Committee provides a total of $110,170,000 for programs to combat tuberculosis from all accounts in this act. The Committee urges the Global AIDS Coordinator to (1) increase funding for TB-HIV coordinated activities with the goal of ensuring that TB screening and treatment is provided to as many co-infected individuals as possible in each focus country; (2) in consultation with appropriate host country officials and multilateral organizations, develop a national strategy for each focus country to ensure that all TB patients are provided HIV testing and counseling as well as referral for AIDS treatment and care; (3) issue guidance that TB-HIV coordinated activities are required in each country operational plan; and (4) provide funding to the World Health Organization for technical support to expand TB treatment and improve coordination of programs to fight HIV and TB, including drug resistant TB. The Committee is concerned with the emergence of drug resistant strains of tuberculosis, including multi-drug resistant-TB [MDR-TB] and extensively drug resistant-TB [XDR- TB], which threaten to undermine progress in AIDS treatment and progress to combat TB control globally. MDR-TB and XDR-TB are new, drug-resistant strains of tuberculosis found mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa where the mortality rate for XDR-TB is roughly 90 percent. The Committee urges USAID to work with the Office of the Global HIV/AIDS Coordinator to strengthen overall TB treatment efforts and to otherwise slow the emergence of MDR and XDR-TB strains. Technology.--The Committee supports the work of HealthTech to develop innovative solutions to public health needs in developing countries. VULNERABLE CHILDREN The Committee provides $15,000,000 for programs and activities that address the needs of vulnerable children. Orphans.--The Committee recommends that USAID consider funding a proposal from Kidsave International for a global intervention to help countries place orphans into permanent homes. Blindness.--The Committee recommends $1,900,000 for children's blindness programs. To the maximum extent practicable, the Committee intends funding for blind children to be focused on eye surgery and vision corrections for children, and is to be implemented in a manner that provides the most funds to the field. The Committee recognizes the work of Helen Keller International and other organizations to assist blind children and children with low levels of vision. UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE Appropriations, 2007.................................... $1,508,760,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 1,041,248,000 House allowance......................................... 1,733,760,000 Committee recommendation................................ 1,455,000,000 The Development Assistance account consists of a wide range of poverty-reduction and long-term development activities including free market development, agriculture and rural development, urban, environment, and energy, basic education, and micro-credit programs. PROGRAM ISSUES AGRICULTURE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS Agriculture Development Strategy.--The Committee notes the critical role of agriculture in developing countries in alleviating hunger and poverty. It is also the backbone of employment that helps stem the tide of immigration to already overcrowded, over-burdened urban areas. The Committee is concerned that support for agriculture-led economic growth lags far behind other foreign assistance programs, and directs the DFA to submit a report, not later than May 1, 2008, describing a multi-year, regional strategy to substantially increase funding for agriculture development programs. In preparing the strategy, the DFA should consult with representatives of foreign governments, U.S. universities, and nongovernmental and international organizations that support agricultural development overseas. Arid Lands.--The Committee recommends USAID support the work of the International Arid Lands Consortium in addressing water, agriculture, and energy issues in the Middle East and Central Asia. Cacao.--The Committee supports the promotion of sustainable cacao production in Ecuador, Colombia, Peru and Bolivia. The Committee recognizes the work of the Andean Countries Cocoa Export Support Opportunity, a partnership between private industry, governments and international organizations to encourage the sustainable development in cacao-producing areas as an alternative to coca cultivation. Coffee.--The Committee is aware that coffee is grown in more than half of the municipalities of Colombia and that coffee growing involves over half a million Colombian farmers and their families, mostly small enterprises, in areas that are still socially and economically vulnerable. The Committee recommends USAID work with the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia to provide assistance to these communities to increase the productivity and marketability of their product. Collaborative Research Support Programs.--The Committee provides $29,000,000 for CRSPs. The Committee supports assistance for research and development of salt-resistant crops. The Committee recommends creation of a CRSP focused on water issues. Crop Diversity.--The Committee notes that crop diversity provides the genetic building blocks for adapting crops to constantly evolving pests, diseases, and changing climates, and is aware that much of the world's crop diversity is neither safely conserved nor readily available to scientists and farmers who rely on it. The Global Crop Diversity Trust was created by the FAO and CGIAR to collect, document and store seeds securely in order to preserve genetic diversity. The United States was an early supporter of the Trust and the Committee recommends USAID contribute in 2008. Dairy Development Programs.--The Committee continues its support for dairy development programs. Fertilizer Programs.--The Committee recommends continued support for the International Fertilizer Development Center. Food Aid Quality.--Under Public Law 480, USAID provides food aid to millions of hungry people each year. However, quality problems and outdated product formulations have damaged our reputation as the world's most generous provider of such aid. There is a critical need to improve product quality and adjust formulations to meet the needs of today's vulnerable populations. The Committee provides $750,000 to support activities underway with the Food Aid Quality Enhancement Program to improve food aid product quality and nutrient delivery, consistent with the authority in 7 U.S.C. section 1736g-2(a)(2)(c). Water.--The Committee provides not less than $300,000,000 of the funds appropriated by this act for safe drinking water and sanitation supply projects, to be expended in accordance with Public Law 109-121, the Senator Paul Simon Water for the Poor Act of 2005. Of this amount, not less than $125,000,000 should be used in Africa. The Committee recognizes the work of the International Rural Water Association in providing training and technical assistance to improve the quality of water and health in Central America and the Caribbean. The Committee recommends USAID consider funding a project in Uganda to increase access to potable water in Kapchorwa District. The Committee recommends USAID consider funding a proposal by Water Leaders Foundation for a reverse osmosis water purification project in a developing country. The Committee supports funding for Ong Tidene, a local NGO that drills wells for Tuareg nomads who live in northern Niger, one of the most arid areas of Africa. AMERICAN SCHOOLS AND HOSPITALS ABROAD The Committee continues to recognize the important contributions made to U.S. foreign policy by institutions funded by the ASHA program and provides that not less than $22,000,000 shall be made available to support these institutions in fiscal year 2008. The Committee, once again, expects USAID to allocate sufficient sums to administer the ASHA program from funds provided for Operating Expenses, so it will not be necessary to expend program funds for administrative purposes. Although the Committee understands that ASHA funds are available for a variety of purposes, such as construction and equipment, libraries, computer technology, curriculum and staff support, and related expenses, the Committee reaffirms its intention that this assistance is not for permanent budget support to ASHA recipients. The Committee encourages ASHA to give priority to institutions which demonstrate a need and a commitment to private fundraising to match government support. The Committee recognizes the contributions made by several institutions and believes that they warrant consideration for further ASHA support, including: Lebanese American University; International College and the American University of Beirut; The Johns Hopkins University's Center in Nanjing, China; the Cancer Center of the American British Cowdray Medical Center in Mexico; the Hadassah Medical Organization; American University in Kosovo; and Shaare Zedek Medical Center. CONFLICT MITIGATION AND HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE Patrick Leahy War Victims Fund.--The Committee continues to support the LWVF which assists persons who are disabled as a result of armed conflict. The Committee recommends $15,000,000 for this Fund administered by USAID. Public Donations.--The Committee is aware of many private American individuals and groups who want to donate assistance to needy people overseas. USAID has a long history of partnering with the U.S. private sector, most recently formalized as the Global Development Alliance, to leverage assistance to meet development objectives. In the context of natural or manmade disasters, the generosity of the American public has been expressed in cash and in-kind donations, often provided through private relief agencies, to the victims of those disasters. The Committee believes there is an increasing desire on the part of the American public, either individually or through community, faith-based, or other local groups, to provide assistance. However, shipping items overseas, such as clothing and shelter that are suitable for affected populations, can be difficult to arrange and prohibitively expensive. These individuals and groups are not looking to the U.S. Government to provide financing for their donations. Instead, they want help in getting their donations to people in need. The Committee believes USAID should support the participation of these groups and individuals in furtherance of foreign assistance objectives. The Committee requests the DFA to submit a report, by May 1, 2008, that addresses ways in which USAID can facilitate the participation of private citizens and community groups in the foreign assistance program. The report should address, in particular, the concept of establishing a clearinghouse for private donations, and should identify U.S. Government mechanisms and programs, as well as recommendations, for assisting in the delivery of such privately donated relief aid. The report should also include legislative changes that might be needed. Sports Programs.--The Committee is aware that sports programs, including those that benefit persons with disabilities, enhance health and development and strengthen communities. The Committee supports the work of organizations involved in these efforts, including Right to Play and Special Olympics. Victims of Torture.--The Committee recommends $10,000,000 for programs and activities that address the needs of victims of torture. The Committee recommends support for centers for victims of torture that provide services consistent with the goals of Public Law 106-87, the Torture Victims Relief Reauthorization Act of 1999. EDUCATION The Committee recommends funding in this act above the current level for basic education programs, including civic education and teacher training. Africa.--The Committee recommends continued funding for programs that increase access to basic education in sub-Saharan Africa through the reduction or elimination of school fees. The Committee recommends $15,000,000 for basic education programs in Ethiopia from all accounts in this act, an increase of $2,200,000 above the budget request. Latin America.--The Committee is aware of the work of Alfalit International in providing literacy and basic education programs in Bolivia and the Dominican Republic. ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY CONSERVATION Biodiversity.--The Committee provides not less than $195,000,000 from the DA account for biodiversity conservation programs and activities. The Committee recognizes USAID's Amazon Basin Conservation Initiative, which supports the work of national and local governments, civil society groups, and indigenous organizations, in the South American countries that share the Amazon watershed, to protect it from illegal logging and mining, destructive agricultural practices, and unsustainable development. The Committee provides $15,000,000 for this program in fiscal year 2008, in addition to the level of funding provided in fiscal year 2006 for other biodiversity conservation activities in these countries. Birds of Prey.--The Committee recommends continued funding for the Peregrine Fund's work in the International Raptor Center, to be matched by private contributions. Energy.--The Committee recommends not less than $195,000,000 from all accounts in this act to support policies and programs in developing countries that promote energy efficiency, renewable energy, and cleaner energy technologies, including $15,000,000 for USAID's Office of Energy and Information Technology. The Committee supports funding for small hydro, solar, and wind projects, particularly in areas where other sources of energy are not available. The Committee expects United States Government agencies to continue to participate in the nine-agency Clean Energy Technology Exports Initiative. Endangered Species.--The Committee recommends continued support from funds made available for Indonesia for programs to protect the habitat of orangutans in Borneo and Sumatra. The Committee supports continued funding for programs to protect great apes in Central Africa, including through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NGOs such as the Jane Goodall Institute and members of the International Gorilla Conservation Program. Lead Batteries.--The Committee is aware of the work of Occupational Knowledge International to promote the Better Environmental Sustainability Targets Certification for the lead battery industry, to limit emissions and encourage recycling of lead batteries which threaten health, especially of children, in developing counties where batteries are increasingly used to produce solar and wind energy. HIGHER EDUCATION, TRAINING, AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT The Committee recommends increased funding for programs and activities targeted toward higher education, training and workforce development. The Committee is concerned that over the past 20 years USAID's support for higher education degree training has declined dramatically, from 15,000 trainees to less than 1,000 today. Many of these graduates have contributed to the political and economic development of their countries, but they are now reaching retirement age. The Committee requests USAID to submit a report by May 1, 2008, describing past funding trends for higher education programs and the projected cost of increasing the number of trainees by 3,000. Entrepreneurship.--The Committee recommends USAID consider funding a proposal of the Center of Entrepreneurship for a distance learning program in the Balkans. The Committee also recommends USAID consider funding a proposal from CHOICE Humanitarian to improve the quality of life in Africa and Latin America through microenterprize and leadership training. The Committee is aware of the work of the Education for Employment Foundation to create jobs through vocational, technical and managerial training for youth in predominantly Muslim countries, where unemployment among youth is as high as 50 percent. Recognizing that as many as 100 million new job seekers will enter the workforce in these countries in the next 15 years, the Committee recommends USAID consider funding this initiative. Scholarships.--The Committee recommends continued funding for the CASS program to provide scholarships at U.S. colleges for students with high financial need from Latin America and elsewhere. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS Artisans.--The Committee is aware of a project initiated by Aid to Artisans to promote lead-free pottery glazes used by Mexican ceramists. The Committee recommends USAID consider funding a proposal to expand this initiative to other countries where there are serious health and environmental risks associated with leaded pottery production. Microenterprise Development Programs.--The Committee provides $250,000,000 from all accounts in this act for microfinance and microenterprise development programs for the poor, especially women. The Committee expects USAID to preserve the viability of leading private NGO microfinance networks and PVOs in order to maximize assistance to poor clients. The Committee directs that 50 percent of funds available should be for grants to private nongovernmental organizations, networks, and practitioner institutions, and that $30,000,000 should be provided to USAID's Office of Microenterprise through a central funding mechanism for contracts, cooperative agreements and grants. The Committee recommends $20,000,000 be used for microfinance service providers working with people infected by HIV/AIDS. Cooperative Development Program.--The Committee provides $12,000,000 for USAID's Cooperative Development Program within the Office of Private and Voluntary Cooperation. Professional Services.--The Committee supports continued funding for the Financial Services Volunteer Corps. Property Rights.--The Committee is aware of the Institute of Liberty and Democracy and the International Real Property Foundation [IRPF], which create private real estate markets and promote property rights abroad. The Committee recommends that USAID continue support for these initiatives. Rural Electrification.--The Committee notes that rural electric cooperative projects have provided electricity, local economic development, increased living standards and greater political stability in developing countries. The Committee recommends continued support through the International Rural Power Access and Cooperative Electrification program, and the use of local currencies to meet the capital costs of international rural electrification programs and projects sponsored by U.S. rural electric cooperatives, and for co- finance planning, advisory and training assistance in concert with other international partners. Telecommunications.--The Committee recommends continued funding for the United States Telecommunications Training Institute. UNIVERSITY PROGRAMS Each fiscal year the Committee receives a large number of requests to fund specific activities at or through American institutions of higher education. The Committee strongly supports activities that advance international development and U.S. foreign policy goals. The Committee has reviewed the concepts proposed for funding, and recommends that USAID and/or the Department of State (as appropriate for the proposed project) consider proposals submitted by the following organizations. Unless a proposal demonstrates a unique, innovative, or proprietary capability, or demonstrates special considerations that justify limited or non-competitive treatment, the Committee expects that competitive procedures will be applied with regard to the proposals on the list that follows. The Committee also expects USAID to give priority to proposals that have technical merit, realistic budgets, matching contributions, and achievable objectives. Proposals are to be submitted to USAID and/or the Department of State for consideration within 90 days after the date of enactment of this act. No later than 60 days after the submission of the report required by section 653(a) of the FAA, USAID should submit a report to the Committee on the status of each activity identified below. Such a report should include: (1) the status of the funding proposal by the organization associated with each activity; (2) the degree to which the proposal is consistent with and would advance international development and U.S. foreign policy goals for the country or region in which the activity would take place; (3) the degree to which matching or other funds would be provided by the organization to complement the Federal contribution; (4) to the extent known at the time, any decision by USAID or the Department of State on funding the activity, including the funding level; and (5) any other relevant information deemed important by USAID or the Department of State. The Committee also expects to receive a second report on the status of these proposals no later than July 1, 2008. With the foregoing in mind, the Committee recommends the following proposals for USAID and the Department of State's consideration: Brandeis University.--A proposal to fund the International Center for Democracy and Governance. Catholic Medical Mission Board.--A proposal, in conjunction with the Chinese Ministry of Health and the Chinese Nurses Association, to train nurses in HIV/AIDS care. DeKalb International Training Center.--A proposal for training student athletes from newly emerging democracies. EARTH University Foundation.--A proposal to train leaders in small business in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Franklin Pierce University.--A proposal in conjunction with the Luhansk National Pedagogical University in Ukraine for business education. Indiana University at Bloomington.--A proposal to establish a database of Burmese human rights abuses. Iowa State University.--A proposal to establish a program to reduce poverty in Mexico. New Mexico State University.--A proposal to facilitate on- line communication between American and Mexican students, as well as Israeli and Palestinian students, concerning issues of mutual interest. Northeastern University.--A proposal to support the Athletes for Human Rights initiative. Monmouth University.--A proposal, in conjunction with the University of Ghana, to increase primary school enrollment and performance. SUNY College of Technology at Delhi.--A proposal for a professional development program to improve nursing skills and care in the Republic of Georgia. Temple University.--A proposal to expand the criminal law procedure program with Tsinghua University. Texas A&M University.--A proposal to support the Borlaug Fellows Program to strengthen agriculture, science and technology in developing countries. University of Alabama.-- A proposal to establish a pilot program which will promote Central American food products in foreign markets and increase exports. University of Hawaii at Manoa.--A proposal, in conjunction with universities in Northern Iraq and in the United States, to train a diverse cadre of workers in Iraq in technical skills that will promote reconstruction and self-sufficiency. University of Iowa.--A proposal to establish a Center for Digital Communications in Development and Education to improve primary and secondary education in Africa. University of Iowa.--A proposal to train teachers and educational administrators in Timor-Leste. University of Kentucky.--A proposal for coal mine safety programs in the former Soviet Union. University of Kentucky.--A proposal, in conjunction with Indonesian universities, to further economic development in Indonesia. University of Miami.--A proposal to continue a collaborative initiative to improve child health in the Ukraine. University of Missouri at Columbia.--A proposal to apply biotechnology to grain legumes to improve nutrition in Vietnam. University of Nebraska at Lincoln.--A proposal to develop a joint program with the Gimlekollen School of Journalism & Communication in Norway and the Government of Norway to train journalists from Ethiopia and Kosovo. University of Nebraska at Omaha.--A proposal to establish a community-based education program to provide teacher training and vocational training in Afghanistan. University of Nebraska at Omaha.--A proposal for a community-based education project in Afghanistan, and a proposal to support the Afghanistan Young Leaders Program. University of Notre Dame.--A proposal to continue work to eliminate lymphatic filariasis in Haiti. Utah State University.--A proposal, in conjunction with Texas A&M University, to develop an irrigation research, education and training program in the Middle East. Utah Valley State College.--A proposal to combat HIV/AIDS in Ghana. Western Kentucky University.--A proposal for the continued funding of an international journalist training program. Western Kentucky University.--A proposal to address environmental health issues in China. WOMEN'S PROGRAMS Afghanistan.--As in past years, the Committee has provided funding to address the critical needs of Afghan women and girls, including support for women-led Afghan NGOs. The Committee directs the DFA to submit a report by May 1, 2008, detailing the uses of funds appropriated for these purposes for each year since fiscal year 2002. The Committee directs that the report assess the impacts of this assistance on healthcare, education and training, protection, and women led organizations; and to recommend new approaches that could better address the growing and unique needs, vulnerabilities, and potential of girls in Afghanistan. Additionally, the Committee directs the DFA to report on best practices or programs currently being implemented in Afghanistan for women and girls which could be replicated in other countries in the region. Creative Wellness Institute.--The Committee requests USAID consider funding a proposal of the Creative Wellness Institute to address the needs of high-risk Guatemalan women and their families. GROWTH Fund.--The Committee supports the establishment of the GROWTH Fund, which is intended to enhance economic opportunities for very poor, poor, and low-income women in developing countries. Programs supported by the Fund should increase women-owned enterprise development; property rights for women; women's access to financial services; women in organizational leadership positions; women's ability to benefit from global trade; and improve women's employment benefits and conditions. Women's Leadership.--The Committee recommends USAID consider funding a proposal from Women's Campaign International to expand political participation of women. Girls' Empowerment.--The Committee directs the DFA to submit a report to the Committee by May 1, 2008, that includes: (1) an assessment, including data disaggregated by gender where possible, of current U.S.-funded efforts to improve access of girls in developing countries to healthcare, education and training, and protection (including from child marriage, human trafficking, gender-based violence, HIV/AIDS, and other sexually transmitted diseases); (2) examples of best practices or programs that could be replicated; and (3) a strategy to address the unique needs, vulnerabilities, and potential of girls in developing countries. INTERNATIONAL DISASTER ASSISTANCE Appropriations, 2007.................................... $361,350,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 165,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 297,300,000 House allowance......................................... 322,350,000 Committee recommendation................................ 322,350,000 The Committee recommends $322,350,000 for International Disaster Assistance. The Committee noted that significant resources are required to address international disasters and famines, and urges the administration to request sufficient funds for these purposes in fiscal year 2008. TRANSITION INITIATIVES Appropriations, 2007.................................... $39,600,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 37,200,000 House allowance......................................... 40,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 50,000,000 The Committee recommends $50,000,000 for Transition Initiatives. DEVELOPMENT CREDIT AUTHORITY (INCLUDING TRANSFER OF FUNDS) PROGRAM ACCOUNT Appropriations, 2007.................................... $21,790,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 21,000,000 House allowance......................................... 21,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 21,000,000 ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES Appropriations, 2007.................................... $7,920,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 7,400,000 House allowance......................................... 7,400,000 Committee recommendation................................ 8,920,000 OPERATING EXPENSES OF THE UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT Appropriations, 2007.................................... $626,832,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 8,700,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 609,000,000 House allowance......................................... 625,700,000 Committee recommendation................................ 645,700,000 The Committee recommends $645,700,000 for USAID's operating expenses, an increase of $36,700,000 above the budget request. CAPITAL INVESTMENT FUND Appropriations, 2007.................................... $69,300,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 126,000,000 House allowance......................................... 87,300,000 Committee recommendation................................ 90,508,000 The Committee recommends $90,508,000 for the Capital Investment Fund, due to budget constraints. OPERATING EXPENSES OF THE OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL Appropriations, 2007.................................... $35,640,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 3,500,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 38,000,000 House allowance......................................... 38,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 38,000,000 The Committee recommends $38,000,000 for Operating Expenses of the Office of the Inspector General. Other Bilateral Economic Assistance ECONOMIC SUPPORT FUND (INCLUDING TRANSFER OF FUNDS) Appropriations, 2007.................................... $2,455,010,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 2,624,300,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 3,319,567,000 House allowance......................................... 2,668,206,000 Committee recommendation................................ 3,015,000,000 The Committee recommends $3,015,000,000 for the ESF account. Funds are allocated in the following table: ECONOMIC SUPPORT FUND [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Country/Program 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Country: Burma...................................................... 2,790 11,000 +8,210 Cambodia................................................... 12,170 15,000 +2,830 Cuba....................................................... 45,700 15,000 -30,700 Dominican Republic......................................... 10,000 15,000 +5,000 Egypt...................................................... 415,000 415,000 .............. Guatemala.................................................. 10,000 12,000 +2,000 Haiti...................................................... 63,394 73,394 +10,000 Indonesia.................................................. 60,000 65,000 +5,000 Iran....................................................... 75,000 25,000 -50,000 Jordan..................................................... 263,547 363,547 +100,000 Lebanon.................................................... 42,100 45,000 +2,900 Libya...................................................... 500 300 -200 Nepal...................................................... .............. 10,000 +10,000 Philippines................................................ 25,996 30,000 +4,004 Tibet...................................................... .............. 5,000 +5,000 Timor-Leste................................................ 8,640 16,000 +7,360 Vietnam.................................................... 5,700 10,700 +5,000 West Bank/Gaza............................................. 63,500 75,000 +11,500 Program: Afghan Civilian Assistance................................. .............. 10,000 +10,000 Disability Programs........................................ .............. 4,000 +4,000 East Asia and Pacific Environment.......................... 490 2,500 +2,010 Extractive Industries Transparency......................... .............. 3,000 +3,000 Israeli-Palestinian Fund................................... .............. 7,000 +8,000 Kimberley Process.......................................... .............. 3,000 +3,000 Marla Ruzicka Fund......................................... .............. 5,000 +5,000 Middle East Partnership Initiative......................... 75,000 55,000 -20,000 Iraqi Scholar Rescue....................................... .............. [5,000] +5,000 Middle East Regional Cooperation........................... 3,800 5,000 +1,200 Reconciliation Programs.................................... .............. 20,000 +20,000 Special Court Sierra Leone................................. .............. 12,000 +12,000 Trafficking in Persons..................................... 6,700 10,000 +3,300 Wheelchairs................................................ .............. 5,000 +5,000 Unallocated ESF............................................ 2,129,540 1,671,559 -457,981 ------------------------------------------------ Total, ESF............................................... 3,319,567 3,015,000 -304,567 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Afghanistan.--The Committee supports funding for revitalization and preservation of the historic center of Kabul in partnership with organizations which provide labor training in traditional crafts and artistry. Burma.--The Committee recommends not less than $12,500,000 for assistance for Burma from all accounts in this act, an increase of $7,870,000 above the budget request. The Committee has restored funding for the reductions proposed in the budget request for democracy and human rights programs in Burma, and believes that the failure to include these funds is evidence of flaws in the administration's foreign assistance reform efforts. The Committee expects sufficient support for programs that address the needs of Burmese refugees and IDPs. The Committee again calls for the immediate and unconditional release of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and all prisoners of conscience in Burma whereby national reconciliation may occur. Cambodia.--The Committee recommends not less than $57,000,000 for assistance for Cambodia from all accounts in this act, including $15,000,000 in ESF assistance. The Committee has restored funding for critical HIV/AIDS, rule of law, and democracy programs that were proposed for reductions in the budget request. The Committee notes the concerns of indigenous reformers with the proposed reductions, and urges the administration to make clear its support for democracy and human rights in Cambodia. The Committee again recommends not less than $15,000,000 be made available for democracy programs. The Committee urges the administration to exercise Presidential Proclamation 7750 to prohibit corrupt Cambodian officials identified in the June 2007 Global Witness report entitled ``Cambodia's Family Trees: Illegal Logging and the Stripping of Public Assets by Cambodia's Elite'' from entering the United States. The Committee encourages other countries, particularly in Europe and Asia, to implement similar restrictions. Conflict Diamonds.--The Committee provides $3,000,000 to implement the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme, including by strengthening the role and capacity of civil society groups in the Kimberley Process. Cyprus.--The Committee continues to support assistance for scholarships, administrative support of the scholarship program, bicommunal projects, measures aimed at reunification of the island of Cyprus and to reduce tension and promote peace and cooperation. The Committee is aware of concerns that some projects on Cyprus have been funded without advance consultation with the Government of Cyprus. The Committee recommends that such consultation occur whenever practicable in the interest of transparency in the allocation of funds. The Committee understands that U.S. assistance does not go to the Government of Cyprus, but rather to private and nongovernmental organizations, and therefore the Committee intends that with respect to the provision of such assistance, the organizations implementing such assistance and the specific nature of that assistance shall not be subject to the prior approval of any foreign government. Disabilities.--The Committee provides $4,000,000 to address the needs and protect the rights of people with disabilities in developing countries, and commends the work of the Advisory Committee on Persons with Disabilities at the Department of State and USAID. Of this amount, $1,500,000 should be made available to organizations that advocate for people with disabilities. Dominican Republic.--The Committee recognizes the long and close relationship between the United States and the Dominican Republic, and provides $5,000,000 above the budget request for GHP and DA assistance. The Committee is concerned with racially motivated discrimination and violence in the Dominican Republic and urges the Dominican Government to affirm and protect the fundamental rights of all people within its borders. A related concern is that some children born in the Dominican Republic are being denied the right to nationality guaranteed under Dominican law, thereby rendering them defacto stateless. The Committee also urges the Dominican Government to take effective measures to prevent labor rights abuses of Haitian migrant workers. East Asia and Pacific Funding.--The Committee regrets that, excluding HIV/AIDS funding for Vietnam, the budget request for programs and activities in East Asia and the Pacific reflects a $39,000,000 decrease below the fiscal year 2006 level. The Committee is concerned that this reduction may give the wrong impression, and urges the administration to request funding for fiscal year 2009 that reflects the importance of this region to U.S. strategic interests. Environmental Security and Sustainability.--The Committee recognizes the work of the Foundation for Environmental Security and Sustainability [FESS] to address critical national security issues, including regional instability arising from resource scarcity and management practices, natural hazards, and other environmental stresses. The Committee recognizes the importance of the Foundation's conflict management and mitigation programs, particularly initiatives to develop regional and global approaches to combat corruption, implement extractive industries' best practices, and promote effective reconstruction of post-conflict countries to promote stability and security. The Committee recommends continued support to FESS for these activities. Haiti.--The Committee recommends $73,394,000 for Haiti, an increase of $10,000,000 above the budget request. The Committee remains concerned with the problem of pretrial detention in Haiti, as well as the myriad of other challenges Haiti faces as it struggles to rebuild after years of political violence and upheaval. Today, thousands of Haitians languish in the National Penitentiary and police lock-ups, often for months or years, without having been charged with any crime. This is a potentially explosive situation that is also inhumane. For over a decade, the Committee has repeatedly urged USAID to address this problem through its judicial reform programs, but the situation remains as bad as ever. The Committee provides $5,000,000 specifically to address the problem of pre-trial detention and to reform Haiti's dysfunctional judicial case management system. The Committee also provides $5,000,000 to support USAID watershed reforestation program in Haiti, to stabilize Haiti's fragile hillsides and support sustainable agriculture. Indonesia.--The Committee recommends $65,000,000 for assistance for Indonesia, an increase of $5,000,000 above the budget request, and expects not less than $15,500,000 be provided for humanitarian and development programs in Aceh from all accounts in this act, particularly those that address the needs of noncombatants. The Committee recognizes the significant political gains in Aceh following the recent election of a former Free Aceh Movement [GAM] leader as Governor, and encourages the administration and other international donors to increase engagement in order to cement the peace process. Iran.--The Committee supports the goals of promoting democracy in Iran, but received a total of only one page of justification material for the request of $75,000,000 for this program. The Committee is particularly concerned that grantees suspected of receiving U.S. assistance have been harassed and arrested by the Government of Iran for their pro-democracy activities. The Committee provides $25,000,000 for democracy programs in Iran, and recommends the administration seek future funding for these activities under a different appropriations function. The Committee also provides $22,287,000 for broadcasting, including Radio Farda, to Iran by VOA and RFE/RL in title I of the act. Iraq.--The Committee encourages the Department of State to collaborate with the Iraq Memory Foundation to complete the Legacy of Evil Project and to develop the Virtual Site of Remembrance Project, including the annotation of Ba'ath Party regime documents. The Committee is aware of the Youth Center/Work Study Program in Iraq that is administered by the Iraqi Ministry of Youth and Sport and recommends USAID consider a proposal for funding. Israeli-Palestinian Fund.--The Committee provides $8,000,000 for the Israeli-Palestinian Peace, Reconciliation, and Democracy Fund. The Committee intends these funds be used to support people-to-people reconciliation programs, and that grants be made on a transparent, competitive basis. Jordan.--The Committee provides $363,547,000 for assistance for Jordan, an increase of $100,000,000 above the budget request. The Committee requests the additional funds be used to address social and economic development needs, including for Iraqis seeking refuge in Jordan. Lebanon.--The Committee provides $500,000 to the U.S. Forest Service to support its forest management and wildlife conservation programs in Lebanon. Marla Ruzicka Iraqi War Victims Fund.--The Committee provides $5,000,000 for this Fund administered by USAID. MEPI.--The Committee recommends $55,000,000 for the Middle East Partnership Initiative, of which $9,000,000 is for scholarship programs for students from countries with significant Muslim populations at not-for-profit U.S. educational institutions in the Middle East. MERC.--The Committee recommends $5,000,000 for continued support for the Middle East Regional Cooperation Program. Nepal.--The Committee believes this critical time of transition is no time to be reducing assistance for Nepal, one of the world's poorest countries, as it struggles to end a decade of civil conflict. Nepal faces the near Herculean tasks of building democratic institutions, disarming and reintegrating Maoist combatants, and overcoming centuries of caste discrimination, corruption, poverty and injustice. The Committee believes the United States should play a more active and visible role in supporting this process, and provides $10,000,000 in ESF assistance to more than make up for the proposed cuts in the budget request. The Committee intends that not less than $2,000,000 be made available for training and capacity building to promote the role of women in civil society, political parties, and the Parliament of Nepal. North Korea.--The Committee recommends $3,000,000 for democracy and human rights programs in North Korea, as authorized by Public Law 108-333, the North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004. Philippines/Mindanao.--The Committee provides $30,000,000 for assistance for the Philippines, and expects a portion of these funds to be used to support peace efforts between the Government of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, including through the United States Institute for Peace. The Committee urges the administration to request additional support if a permanent peace accord is achieved. Special Court for Sierra Leone.--The Committee provides not less than $12,000,000 for a contribution to the Special Court for Sierra Leone. Regional Strategies.--The Committee is concerned that the administration has not articulated coherent strategies for pursuing U.S. interests in East Asia, the Middle East, or Central America, and directs the Secretary of State to submit a report not later than 120 days after enactment of this act detailing United States interests and objectives in these regions, on a country-by-country and regional basis, and a 5- year funding strategy proposed to advance those interests and achieve those objectives. Religious Tolerance.--The Committee recognizes the need to counter Islamic extremism, and is aware of the successes of LibforAll's tolerance and moderation programs in Indonesia. The Committee supports expansion of these types of programs globally, particularly in the Middle East, and recommends the Department of State and USAID consider funding proposals from LibforAll for this purpose. Vietnam.--The Committee supports judicial and economic reform programs in Vietnam which strengthen the rule of law, protect human rights, and expand economic opportunities. The Committee is disappointed with the budget request for Vietnam, particularly as relations continue to normalize. The Committee provides $10,700,000 in ESF assistance for Vietnam, almost double the request, to support the STAR program and other activities. West Bank and Gaza.--The Committee continues to support the First Regional Cooperative Program for Health to be conducted by the Hebrew University's Kuvin Center and Al Quds University. Wheelchairs.--The Committee recommends not less than $5,000,000 for wheelchair programs in developing countries. The Committee intends funding for wheelchair programs to be allocated through a fully open and competitive process based on merit. The Committee supports programs that encourage local initiative, utilize appropriate technology, and are sustainable. The Committee recommends the Department of State and USAID consider a proposal by the Wheelchair Foundation to provide wheelchairs to the needy in developing countries. Reconciliation Programs.--The Committee provides $20,000,000 for reconciliation programs and activities which bring together individuals of different ethnic, religious and political backgrounds in countries affected by civil conflict and war. This global program seeks to promote understanding, mutual respect and reconciliation through the active participation of members of opposing groups. The Committee supports funding of local organizations in affected countries and believes that the following organizations are among those deserving consideration for support under this program or under the Israeli-Palestinian Peace, Reconciliation, and Democracy Fund: The Arava Institute for Environmental Studies.--A proposal to bring Arab and Israeli college students together to promote understanding and solve common environmental problems. Interns for Peace.--A proposal to unite youth, women, and diverse ethnic groups in cooperative development in the Middle East and elsewhere. Facing History and Ourselves.--A proposal to expand international conflict resolution and promote democracy. Jerusalem YMCA.--A proposal to foster inter-faith, interracial and inter-group understanding. Project Children.--A proposal to bring together Protestant and Catholic children from Ireland. Seeds of Peace.--A proposal to promote understanding between teenagers in the Middle East, South Asia, Cyprus, and the Balkans. ASSISTANCE FOR EASTERN EUROPE AND THE BALTIC STATES Appropriations, 2007.................................... $273,900,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110--28)............. 214,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 289,322,000 House allowance......................................... 297,332,000 Committee recommendation................................ 294,568,000 The Committee recommends $294,568,000 for Eastern Europe and the Baltic States. Funds are allocated in the following table: ASSISTANCE FOR EASTERN EUROPE AND THE BALTIC STATES (SEED) [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Fiscal year Committee Change from Country 2007 enacted 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Albania......................................... 21,100 16,200 17,200 +1,000 Bosnia and Herzegovina.......................... 32,100 22,900 27,422 +4,522 Kosovo.......................................... 77,700 151,246 151,246 .............. Macedonia....................................... 28,100 18,900 18,900 .............. Montenegro...................................... 8,500 7,572 8,000 +428 Serbia.......................................... 60,000 51,300 53,300 +2,000 Europe Regional................................. 46,400 21,204 18,500 -2,704 =============================================================== Total, SEED............................... 273,900 289,322 294,568 +5,246 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bosnia-Herzegovina.--The Committee is aware that the Government of Bosnia-Herzegovina has taken steps to prosecute war criminals in its domestic courts. The Committee recognizes that for these cases to be handled properly and justice to be done in a timely manner, assistance is needed. The Committee recommends $3,000,000 be made available to support investigations, prosecutions and trials of war criminals in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Legal Reform.--The Committee recommends continued funding for the ABA Rule of Law Initiatives including the CEELI program and programs in other regions. These programs should be carried out through cooperative agreements. ASSISTANCE FOR THE INDEPENDENT STATES OF THE FORMER SOVIET UNION Appropriations, 2007.................................... $452,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 351,585,000 House allowance......................................... 397,585,000 Committee recommendation................................ 401,885,000 The Committee recommends $401,885,000 for the FSA account. Funds are allocated in the following table: ASSISTANCE FOR INDEPENDENT STATES OF FORMER SOVIET UNION (FSA) [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Country 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Europe and Eurasia: Armenia..................................................... 35,000 39,000 +4,000 Azerbaijan.................................................. 18,000 22,000 +4,000 Belarus..................................................... 10,000 11,000 +1,000 Georgia..................................................... 50,500 55,500 +5,000 Moldova..................................................... 13,300 15,300 +2,000 Russia...................................................... 50,000 74,000 +24,000 Ukraine..................................................... 71,000 72,000 +1,000 Eurasia Regional............................................ 22,219 22,414 +195 ----------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Europe and Eurasia.............................. 270,019 311,214 +41,195 =============================================== South and Central Asia: Kazakhstan.................................................. 14,397 15,397 +1,000 Kyrgyz Republic............................................. 23,815 26,500 +2,685 Tajikistan.................................................. 26,880 26,800 -80 Turkmenistan................................................ 5,500 8,000 +2,500 Uzbekistan.................................................. 8,474 8,474 .............. Central Asia Regional....................................... 2,500 5,500 +3,000 ----------------------------------------------- Subtotal, South and Central Asia.......................... 81,566 90,671 +9,105 =============================================== Total, FSA................................................ 351,585 401,885 +50,300 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Children and Orphans.--The Committee remains concerned with the plight of children and orphans in the former Soviet Union, and recommends the Department of State and USAID consider proposals from Kidsave and New Life Ministries to address these urgent needs in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, and Latvia. Civilian Research and Development.--The Committee is aware of the work of the Civilian Research and Development Foundation [CRDF], which has helped to channel the research activities of weapons scientists in the Former Soviet Union in constructive directions. The Committee recommends continued support for CRDF from this account and with MEPI funds, to enable CRDF to expand its activities to work with scientists and engineers from the Middle East, North Africa, and elsewhere outside the FSU region. Central Asia.--The Committee recognizes the work of the Eurasia Foundation in promoting democratic institutions, independent media, and business education throughout the former Soviet Union. The Committee supports funding for the Foundation at a level comparable to previous fiscal years to continue this work. The Committee continues to support the Institute for Sustainable Communities, which works to strengthen civil society groups in Eastern Europe and Central Asia that are involved in environmental conservation and democracy building. Hellenicare.--The Committee supports the Primary Health Care Initiative in countries of the former Soviet Union, and recommends funding for this program. Nagorno Karabakh.--The Committee continues to be concerned about the plight of the victims of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, and recommends funds be made available to address ongoing humanitarian needs in Nagorno Karabakh. North Caucasus.--The Committee is concerned that armed conflicts and continuing low-intensity violence have caused great suffering and resulted in enormous humanitarian and development needs in the North Caucasus, and provides $8,000,000 to address these needs. The Committee intends for funds to be spent for the provision of both immediate and long term basic services to conflict-affected populations (including housing, water, sanitation, public health), support for education and youth, economic development, the promotion of good governance (including citizen participation, human rights, free media, development of NGOs), and conflict mitigation. The funds should be dispersed through a transparent and competitive process. U.S.-Ukraine.--The Committee recognizes the community partnership programs of the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation that support grassroots reform and civic participation in Ukraine and recommends consideration of a proposal from the Foundation. U.S. Forest Service.--The Committee notes the work of the U.S. Forest Service in the Russian Far East to promote sustainable forestry management, habitat protection for endangered species, protected area management and ecotourism, and fire management. The Committee provides $500,000 to support and expand these efforts. Independent Agencies INTER-AMERICAN FOUNDATION Appropriations, 2007.................................... $19,305,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 19,000,000 House allowance......................................... 19,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 22,000,000 The Committee recommends $22,000,000 for the Inter-American Foundation. AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION Appropriations, 2007.................................... $22,770,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 30,000,000 House allowance......................................... 30,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 30,000,000 The Committee recommends $30,000,000 for the African Development Foundation. PEACE CORPS (INCLUDING TRANSFER OF FUNDS) Appropriations, 2007.................................... $319,640,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 333,500,000 House allowance......................................... 333,500,000 Committee recommendation................................ 323,500,000 The Committee recommends $323,500,000 for the Peace Corps. MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION Appropriations, 2007.................................... $1,752,300,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 3,000,000,000 House allowance......................................... 1,800,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 1,200,000,000 The Committee recommends $1,200,000,000 for the MCC. Since fiscal year 2004 the Committee has provided a total of $6,000,000,000 for the MCC, of which $5,100,000,000 is available for compact assistance. The Committee is aware that according to the GAO, only $3,000,000,000 of that amount had been obligated for 11 compacts, of which less than one- thirtieth has been disbursed. The slow rate of disbursement reflects, in part, the MCC's overly optimistic estimates of compact countries' capacity to meet compact requirements, which may result in significant unobligated but undisbursed balances when compacts expire. There are few tangible results that can be measured from any of these compacts. The unobligated balance currently available for compact assistance is $2,100,000,000. According to the MCC, four compacts are projected for signature in fiscal year 2008, for a total of $1,776,000,000. Other expenses ($200,000,000) and threshhold country programs ($190,000,000) are projected to total $390,000,000. The MCC requires $1,386,000,000 to sign the four projected compacts in fiscal year 2008 (in addition to the planned use of $578,000,000 in carry over funding). Accordingly, and partly due to budget constraints, the Committee provides $1,200,000,000 for the MCC in fiscal year 2008. The Committee notes that as of March 2007, the average size of compacts is $271,000,000, but that for fiscal year 2008, the average size would increase to $485,000,000. The Committee further notes that one of these compacts, for Tanzania, a country of 37 million people, would require $699,000,000, exceeding the combined total of the fiscal year 2008 budget requests under the DA and ESF accounts for all of sub-Saharan Africa. The Committee questions whether this is the most effective use of scarce resources for a continent of close to a billion people, most of whom are impoverished. The Committee supports the goals of the MCC to provide assistance in a manner that promotes economic growth, reduces extreme poverty, and strengthens good governance, economic freedom, and investments in people. However, the Committee has been disappointed in several respects by the way it has been implemented. Compacts have been signed with some countries of little if any strategic importance to the United States. Only a miniscule portion of funding has been devoted to improving health, education or governance, which are necessary to alleviate poverty. No compacts have included judicial reform as a primary component, although violent crime, corruption and dysfunctional judicial systems are an impediment to development in many of the countries that have signed compacts. The Committee was faced with difficult choices, caused in part by the administration's decision to not include any funds for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria in its budget request for State, Foreign Operations, as well as by arrears owed in connection with binding treaty obligations. The Committee directs the MCC to proceed judiciously regarding future compacts until the results of compacts previously signed can be evaluated. The Committee directs the Comptroller General to audit and assess the financial management and oversight of MCC programs. Report.--The Committee notes that MCC compacts often focus on infrastructure to improve trade capacity and the movement of goods to markets. The Committee urges the MCC and compact countries to consider environmental factors in the planning and development of infrastructure. The Committee directs the MCC to submit a report not later than 90 days after enactment of this act, detailing the programmatic measures and investments the MCC intends to undertake to address any adverse social and environmental consequences of infrastructure investments. In addition, the Committee encourages the MCC to consult with environmental experts to develop infrastructure planning mechanisms to enable recipient countries to minimize the environmental and social costs of their compact proposals at the outset, and actively encourage such countries to set aside an adequate portion of compact funds to implement effective environmental mitigation measures. Department of State GLOBAL HIV/AIDS INITIATIVE Appropriations, 2007.................................... $3,246,520,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 4,150,000,000 House allowance......................................... 4,450,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ [5,090,000,000] The Committee consolidates all funds for health programs contained in the budget request under the GHP account. The Committee provides a total of $5,090,000,000 for HIV/ AIDS programs under the GHP account. DEMOCRACY FUND Appropriations, 2007.................................... $94,050,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 109-28).............. 260,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................................... House allowance......................................................... Committee recommendation................................ 177,000,000 The Committee recommends $177,000,000 for the Democracy Fund, of which $75,000,000 is for the HRDF and $102,000,000 is for the NED. To increase oversight and coordination of programs and activities that promote democracy globally, the Committee strongly recommends the administration request funding for democracy programs under the Democracy Fund account in subsequent fiscal years. Definition.--To ensure a common understanding of democracy programs among United States Government agencies, the Committee defines the term ``promotion of democracy'' as it is used in this act to include programs that support good governance, human rights, independent media, and the rule of law, and otherwise strengthen the capacity of democratic political parties, governments, civil society organizations, and citizens to support the development of democratic institutions. Democracy and Foreign Aid Reform.--The budget request includes $1,447,965,000 for the promotion of democracy globally under the ``Governing Justly and Democratically'' pillar, an amount which, according to the Department of State, is $214,766,000 above the fiscal year 2006 funding level. The Committee notes, however, that if proposed funding levels for activities in Iraq ($171,820,000), Afghanistan ($202,000,000), and Pakistan ($41,600,000), and proposed new start programs in Iran ($75,000,000), Libya ($300,000), North Korea ($2,000,000), and Middle East Regional ($300,000), are backed out of both the fiscal year 2008 budget request and fiscal year 2006 level, $996,845,000 remains for the advancement of democracy abroad. This reflects a decrease of $78,005,000 below the fiscal year 2006 level. The Committee believes that funding for programs to promote democracy in Iraq and Afghanistan should not come at the expense of ongoing activities to advance democracy in other important regions of the world. HRDF.--The Committee recommends $75,000,000 for the Human Rights and Democracy Fund, an increase of $35,000,000 above the budget request, of which $15,000,000 is for democracy, human rights, and rule of law programs in the People's Republic of China, Hong Kong and Taiwan and $10,000,000 is for the continuation of programs to promote democracy in countries outside the Middle East with a significant Muslim population. NED.--The Committee recommends $102,000,000 for core support for the NED, an amount $22,000,000 above the budget request. Funds are allocated in the following table: NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR DEMOCRACY [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Organization 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Africa.......................................................... 9,600 16,750 +7,150 Asia............................................................ 10,640 17,250 +6,610 Middle East..................................................... 24,070 18,000 -6,070 Central and Eastern Europe...................................... 4,260 5,000 +740 Independent States of the Former Soviet Union................... 8,530 15,000 +6,470 Latin America/Caribbean......................................... 8,240 12,000 +3,760 Multiregional................................................... 4,260 6,500 +2,240 Administration.................................................. 8,800 9,500 +700 Democratic Activities........................................... 1,600 2,000 +400 ----------------------------------------------- Total, National Endowment for Democracy................... 80,000 102,000 +22,000 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Committee recommends an additional $18,000,000 for NED from funds requested under the headings ``Development Assistance'', ``Economic Support Fund'', and ``Assistance for the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union'' to support ongoing programs funded under those accounts in prior fiscal years. Reports Required.--The Committee is particularly perplexed by the proposed reductions in funding for democracy programs for Zimbabwe (-$3,586,000), Burma (-$3,621,000), and the Philippines (-$5,071,000), and requests the Department of State to provide a report to the Committees, not later than 60 days after enactment of this act, justifying these cuts on a project-by-project basis. The Committee requests the Comptroller General of the United States to conduct an assessment of democracy promotion programs conducted by USAID and the Department of State, to include: the process by which democracy promotion strategies are formulated and budgeted within, and between, relevant United States Government bureaus and agencies; the coordinating mechanisms for democracy promotion programs between USAID and the Department of State; the process by which decisions are made by USAID for utilizing for-profit contractors and not-for- profit grantees in democracy programs and activities; and a comparison of programmatic innovation, effectiveness and administrative efficiency between USAID and DRL. Responsibilities.--The Committee recommends that the Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy Human Rights and Labor have responsibility for all HRDF policy, funding and programming decisions in this act and subsequent acts making appropriations for foreign operations, export financing and related programs. In addition, the Committee recommends the Assistant Secretary have responsibility for the development of strategies for the promotion of democracy globally and the coordination of programs between the Department of State and USAID. INTERNATIONAL NARCOTICS CONTROL AND LAW ENFORCEMENT Appropriations, 2007.................................... $472,616,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 252,000,000 Rescission.............................................. -13,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 634,600,000 House allowance......................................... 568,475,000 Committee recommendation................................ 558,449,000 The Committee recommends $558,449,000 for INCLE. ILEAs.--The Committee recommends an increase of $2,500,000 to the budget request from within funds provided under this account, to be allocated equally among the four ILEAs, with an equal share reserved for a new Latin America ILEA if it is established during fiscal year 2008. El Salvador.--The Committee is concerned with the rise of violent crime in El Salvador where police are poorly trained and underpaid, perpetrators are rarely arrested, witnesses are afraid to testify, and impunity is the norm. An example is the unsolved murder of Gilberto Soto, a native of El Salvador, an American citizen, and an official with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The initial police investigation and prosecution was badly flawed, and the Committee urges the Salvadoran Government to conduct a new, credible investigation and to bring to justice those responsible. Guatemala.--The Committee is concerned with the rise in organized crime and gang violence, as well as the murders of young women, in Guatemala. Corruption and a dysfunctional justice system have prevented an effective response to these serious problems. In a particularly disturbing case, on February 19, 2007, three Salvadoran lawmakers and their driver were brutally murdered. Soon thereafter, four Guatemalan police officers who had been imprisoned in connection with the crime were also murdered. Although several Guatemalan law enforcement officials resigned in the wake of these killings, there has been little progress in solving the case. The Committee believes that establishing the rule of law in Guatemala is imperative for the future economic, social and political development of the country, and that this will not be possible until the perpetrators of these heinous acts are brought to justice. Jordan.--The Committee previously provided $120,000,000 to construct the Jordan International Police Training Center [JIPTC] which has trained some 40,000 Iraqi police. The Committee is concerned that a facility which reflects both a significant U.S. investment and has provided a safe location for training Iraqi police recruits may not be utilized in the future. The Committee directs the Secretary to provide the Committee with a plan for future use of this important resource consistent with the investment and with U.S. interests in the region. Missing and Exploited Children.--The Committee recognizes the work of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and supports activities overseas, such as information sharing, tracking incidents, and identifying patterns of international child pornography. The Committee recommends the Department of State consider a proposal for this purpose. ANDEAN PROGRAMS Appropriations, 2007.................................... $721,500,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 442,812,000 House allowance......................................... 312,460,000 Committee recommendation................................ 415,050,000 The Committee recommends $415,050,000 for Andean Programs, a decrease of $27,762,000 below the budget request for programs and activities requested under the ``Andean Counterdrug Initiative''. Funds are allocated in the following table: ANDEAN PROGRAMS [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Country 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bolivia......................................................... 30,000 30,000 .............. Brazil.......................................................... 1,000 1,000 .............. Colombia........................................................ 366,968 337,206 -29,762 Ecuador......................................................... 7,000 8,000 +1,000 Panama.......................................................... 1,000 1,000 .............. Peru............................................................ 36,844 37,844 +1,000 =============================================== Total, Andean Programs.................................... 442,812 415,050 -27,762 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Committee requires that all reprogramming of funds under this heading shall be subject to the same review and approval procedures by the Department of State as apply to the reprogramming of ESF funds. Funds for Colombia are allocated in the following table: COLOMBIA [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Fiscal year Committee Change from Program ESF AP NADR IMET FMF 2008 request recommendation request ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ PEACE AND SECURITY Counterterrorism: Governments' Capabilities.................... .............. .............. 3,315 .............. .............. 3,315 3,315 .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Counterterrorism............................... .............. .............. 3,315 .............. .............. 3,315 3,315 .............. ================================================================================================================================ Stabilization Operations and Security Sector Reform: Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR)........ 10,442 1,000 .............. .............. .............. 11,442 11,442 .............. Destruction and Security of Conventional Weapons........... .............. .............. 427 .............. .............. 427 427 .............. Defense, Military, and Border Restructuring, Reform and .............. .............. .............. 1,500 78,000 79,500 59,500 -20,000 Operations................................................ (Manual Eradication Protection, by transfer from AP)... .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. [10,000] +10,000 Law Enforcement Restructuring, Reform and Operations....... .............. 20,000 .............. .............. .............. 20,000 15,000 -5,000 Program Support (Stabilization)............................ 650 424 .............. .............. .............. 1,074 1,074 .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Stabilization Operations and Security Sector 11,092 21,424 427 1,500 78,000 112,443 87,443 -25,000 Reform.................................................. ================================================================================================================================ Counternarcotics: Eradication................................................ .............. 189,651 .............. .............. .............. 189,651 139,000 -50,651 (Transfer to FMF)...................................... .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. -10,000 -10,000 Alternative Development and Alternative Livelihoods........ 67,566 .............. .............. .............. .............. 67,566 97,566 +30,000 Interdiction............................................... .............. 142,023 .............. .............. .............. 142,023 142,023 .............. Drug Demand Reduction...................................... .............. 214 .............. .............. .............. 214 214 .............. Program Support (Narcotics)................................ 3,136 7,027 .............. .............. .............. 10,163 5,163 -5,000 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Counternarcotics............................... 70,702 338,915 .............. .............. .............. 409,617 373,966 -35,651 ================================================================================================================================ Transitional Crime: Financial Crimes and Money Laundering...................... .............. 861 .............. .............. .............. 861 861 .............. Program Support (Crime).................................... .............. 18 .............. .............. .............. 18 18 .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Transitional Crime............................. .............. 879 .............. .............. .............. 879 879 .............. ================================================================================================================================ Total, Peace and Security................................ 81,794 361,218 3,742 1,500 78,000 526,254 465,603 -60,651 GOVERNING JUSTLY and DEMOCRATICALLY Rule of Law and Human Rights: Constitutions, Laws and Legal Systems...................... .............. 250 .............. .............. .............. 250 250 .............. Justice System............................................. 5,740 5,371 .............. .............. .............. 11,111 42,000 +30,889 Human Rights............................................... 8,000 .............. .............. .............. .............. 8,000 8,000 .............. Program Support (Rule of Law).............................. 1,116 129 .............. .............. .............. 1,245 1,245 .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Rule of Law and Human Rights................... 14,856 5,750 .............. .............. .............. 20,606 51,495 +30,889 ================================================================================================================================ Good Governance: Local Government and Decentralization...................... 2,479 .............. .............. .............. .............. 2,479 2,479 .............. Program Support (Governance)............................... 421 .............. .............. .............. .............. 421 421 .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Good Governance................................ 2,900 .............. .............. .............. .............. 2,900 2,900 .............. ================================================================================================================================ Political Competition and Consensus-Building: Political Parties.......................................... 687 .............. .............. .............. .............. 687 687 .............. Program Support (Political Competition).................... 63 .............. .............. .............. .............. 63 63 .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Political Competition and Consensus-Building... 750 .............. .............. .............. .............. 750 750 .............. ================================================================================================================================ Total, Governing Justly and Democratically............... 18,506 5,750 .............. .............. .............. 24,256 55,145 +30,889 INVESTING IN PEOPLE Social and Economic Services and Protection for Vulnerable 35,000 .............. .............. .............. .............. 35,000 40,000 +5,000 Populations: Assistance....................................... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Social and Economic Services and Protection for 35,000 .............. .............. .............. .............. 35,000 40,000 +5,000 Vulnerable Populations.................................. ================================================================================================================================ Total, Investing in People............................... 35,000 .............. .............. .............. .............. 35,000 40,000 +5,000 ECONOMIC GROWTH Trade and Investment: Trade and Investment Capacity.............................. 4,000 .............. .............. .............. .............. 4,000 ............... .............. Program Support (Trade).................................... 200 .............. .............. .............. .............. .............. ............... .............. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Trade and Investment................................. 4,200 .............. .............. .............. .............. 4,000 ............... -4,000 ================================================================================================================================ Total, Economic Growth................................... 4,200 .............. .............. .............. .............. 4,000 ............... -4,000 ================================================================================================================================ Total, Colombia.......................................... 139,500 366,968 3,742 1,500 78,000 589,510 560,748 -28,762 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Colombia.--The Committee affirms its strong support for Colombia and provides a total of $560,748,000, which is $28,762,000 below the budget request and $4,677,000 above the fiscal year 2007 level. Within this amount, the Committee has increased the percentage of the total that is available for alternative development and justice programs and directs that at least $15,000,000 of these funds be used for programs which specifically benefit Afro-Colombian communities. The Committee also designates a portion of the assistance for the Colombian military to provide security for manual eradication programs, which the Committee believes is more likely to reduce coca cultivation over the long term than aerial eradication. The Committee notes that after spending in excess of $5,000,000,000 in support of Plan Colombia since 2000, some areas of the country are safer and Colombia's economic indicators are, for the most part, positive. However, reports of unlawful killings by the army have increased in the past 2 years, and impunity for such crimes remains the norm. After predictions 6 years ago that Plan Colombia would cut by half the amount of coca production by 2005, the availability and price of cocaine on America's streets remain unchanged. There is no indication that the ability of Colombian drug traffickers to meet the demand for cocaine in the United States and elsewhere has been appreciably diminished. Coca is now grown in small, hard to eradicate plots in every department of the country, as coca growers continue to adapt to aerial eradication and destroy more forest as they replant. The Committee is convinced that the majority of coca growers would voluntarily shift to licit crops in order to avoid the dangers and difficulties of growing coca, if provided viable alternatives. Specialty varieties of coffee and cacao offer such alternatives, but require considerable training and support. To date, far too few resources have been devoted to such programs. The Committee has also been disappointed with the paltry support for justice programs in a country where impunity poses a serious impediment to peace, security, and economic and political development. The Committee has included additional funds to support the Office of the Colombian Attorney General and other justice programs, including the Human Rights Unit, the Justice and Peace Unit, the Procuraduria General de la Nacion, and the Defensoria del Pueblo. A portion of the funds made available for the Human Rights Unit should be used to support investigations of killings of trade unionists. The Committee is concerned with the plethora of units within the Office of Attorney General with overlapping authority to investigate violations of human rights, and urges close cooperation and coordination to ensure that cases are properly and thoroughly investigated. Funds provided to support the Defensor del Pueblo should be used, in part, to advise and assist victims in connection with the paramilitary demobilization process. The Committee provides $9,000,000 to enable the Attorney General to expeditiously develop a credible witness protection program so victims of paramilitaries and other armed groups can safely provide testimony. The Committee provides $3,000,000 to immediately improve the quality of forensic investigations of mass graves, some of which have been conducted without the capacity to properly identify or safeguard remains, or to determine the cause of death. The Committee provides $40,000,000, which is $5,000,000 above the budget request, for assistance for Colombia's large population of internally displaced persons. MIGRATION AND REFUGEE ASSISTANCE Appropriations, 2007.................................... $833,033,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 130,500,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 773,500,000 House allowance......................................... 829,900,000 Committee recommendation................................ 889,000,000 The Committee recommends $889,000,000 for the MRA account. Montagnards.--The Committee requests the Secretary of State to submit a report by March 1, 2008, on the estimated number of Montagnards who are refugees in Cambodia and are seeking to resettle in the United States, and their reasons for departing Vietnam. North Korea.--The Committee supports programs to meet the needs of refugees fleeing North Korea, as authorized by Public Law 108-333, the North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004. Tibetan Refugees.--The Committee supports assistance for Tibetan refugees who have fled their homeland and are in transit in Nepal or resettled in India. Unaccompanied Minors.--The Committee notes the shortage of referrals for refugee processing of unaccompanied minors, including orphans and children with disabilities and recommends that the Department of State Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration work with other Federal agencies, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, and refugee resettlement organizations, to prioritize identification, screening and registering of vulnerable unaccompanied refugee minors to facilitate their resettlement. UNITED STATES EMERGENCY REFUGEE AND MIGRATION ASSISTANCE FUND Appropriations, 2007.................................... $55,000,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110--28)............. 55,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 55,000,000 House allowance......................................... 45,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 45,000,000 The Committee provides $45,000,000 for the ERMA account and notes that an additional $55,000,000 was included in Public Law 110-28. NONPROLIFERATION, ANTI-TERRORISM, DEMINING AND RELATED PROGRAMS Appropriations, 2007.................................... $405,999,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 57,500,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 464,000,000 House allowance......................................... 467,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 499,000,000 The Committee provides $499,000,000 for the NADR account. Funds are allocated in the following table: NONPROLIFERATION, ANTI-TERRORISM, DEMINING AND RELATED PROGRAMS [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Program 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Nonproliferation Programs: Nonproliferation and Disarmament Fund..................... 30,000 32,000 +2,000 Export Control and Related Border Security Assistance..... 41,270 51,270 +10,000 Global Threat Reduction (formerly NWMDE).................. 53,500 62,500 +9,000 Biosecurity Engagement Program............................ [20,000] [30,000] +10,000 IAEA Voluntary Contribution............................... 50,000 53,000 +3,000 CTBT International Monitoring System...................... 18,000 28,000 +10,000 ------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Nonproliferation Programs..................... 192,770 226,770 +34,000 ================================================= Anti-Terrorism Programs: Anti-terrorism Assistance................................. 124,311 124,311 .............. Terrorist Interdiction Programs........................... 18,345 18,345 .............. CT Engagement with Allies................................. 1,000 1,000 .............. Counterterrorism Financing................................ 6,368 6,368 .............. ------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Anti-terrorism Programs....................... 150,024 150,024 .............. ================================================= Regional Stability and Humanitarian Assistance: Humanitarian Demining Program............................. 66,485 66,485 .............. International Trust Fund.................................. 10,000 11,000 +1,000 Small Arms/Light Weapons Destruction...................... 44,721 44,721 .............. ------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Regional Stability and Humanitarian Assistance 121,206 122,206 +1,000 ================================================= Total, NADR............................................. 464,000 499,000 +35,000 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Biosecurity Engagement Program.--The Committee supports efforts to secure dangerous pathogens worldwide, particularly in South and Southeast Asia, and recommends $30,000,000, an increase of $10,000,000 above the budget request, for this global threat reduction program. Materials of Mass Destruction.--The Committee supports sections 10-12 of Public Law 109-472 which strengthens U.S. efforts to interdict illicit shipments of weapons or materials of mass destruction and secure vulnerable stockpiles of conventional weapons. The Committee provides $46,059,000 to implement these programs, of which $10,000,000 is under Export Control and Related Border Security Assistance, and $36,059,000 is under the Small Arms and Light Weapons Destruction program. An additional $2,000,000 for these programs is under the Nonproliferation and Disarmament Fund. Department of the Treasury INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE Appropriations, 2007.................................... $19,800,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 2,750,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 24,800,000 House allowance......................................... 18,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 22,800,000 The Committee provides $22,800,000 for the International Affairs Technical Assistance program. DEBT RESTRUCTURING Appropriations, 2007.................................... $64,350,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 207,300,000 House allowance......................................... 200,300,000 Committee recommendation................................ 200,300,000 The Committee provides $200,300,000 for bilateral Heavily Indebted Poor Country [HIPC] and poorest country debt reduction, HIPC Trust Fund, and Tropical Forest Conservation Act debt reduction programs. The Committee recommends $20,000,000 to support implementation of the Tropical Forest Conservation Act. TITLE IV MILITARY ASSISTANCE Funds Appropriated to the President INTERNATIONAL MILITARY EDUCATION AND TRAINING Appropriations, 2007.................................... $85,877,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 89,500,000 House allowance......................................... 85,076,000 Committee recommendation................................ 85,877,000 The Committee provides $85,877,000 for the IMET program, a decrease of $3,623,000 below the budget request. Foreign Military Financing Program Appropriations, 2007.................................... $4,815,800,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 265,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 4,536,000,000 House allowance......................................... 4,509,236,000 Committee recommendation................................ 4,579,000,000 The Committee provides $4,579,000,000 for the FMF account. Funds are allocated in the following table: FOREIGN MILITARY FINANCING PROGRAM [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Country 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Colombia....................................................... 78,000 58,000 -20,000 Egypt.......................................................... 1,300,000 1,300,000 .............. Fiji........................................................... 110 ............... -110 Georgia........................................................ 10,000 10,000 .............. Guatemala...................................................... .............. 500 +500 Indonesia...................................................... 15,700 15,700 .............. Israel......................................................... 2,400,000 2,400,000 .............. Jordan......................................................... 200,000 300,000 +100,000 Lebanon........................................................ 9,600 9,600 .............. Pakistan....................................................... 300,000 300,000 .............. Philippines.................................................... 11,100 30,000 +18,900 Sudan.......................................................... 100 ............... -100 Thailand....................................................... 500 ............... -500 Tunisia........................................................ 2,064 8,413 +6,349 ------------------------------------------------ Subtotal, Allocated FMF.................................. 4,327,174 4,432,213 -105 Transfer from AP for Colombia.................................. .............. [10,000] +10,000 Unallocated FMF................................................ 208,826 136,787 -72,039 ------------------------------------------------ Total, Foreign Military Financing Program................ 4,536,000 4,579,000 +43,000 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Monitoring of Assistance.--The Committee is concerned that the Department of State's capacity and procedures for monitoring the use of U.S. military equipment provided to foreign security forces is uneven and inadequate. While some effort is made to track this assistance, U.S. embassies do not have the personnel to do the job effectively. The Committee notes that the negative consequences of U.S. equipment ending up in the wrong hands are potentially so serious that more resources are needed for monitoring its use, and has therefore included a provision to address this need. Bangladesh.--The Committee is concerned with the continuing political crackdown by the Bangladeshi military-backed ``care taker'' government. According to reports, tens of thousands of people have been arrested and several have died in custody. The Committee notes that among the purposes for which NADR and FMF assistance was requested for Bangladesh in fiscal year 2008 is to enhance the security forces' capacity to counter terrorist activity and violent extremism. The Committee is concerned that this assistance may be misused to support the government's use of emergency powers to stifle peaceful political dissent. Ethiopia.--The Committee is aware that Ethiopia has supported U.S. counter-terrorism policies in the Horn of Africa. However, the Committee is concerned with reports of serious and pervasive human rights abuses by the Ethiopian military against civilians, particularly in the Somali, Oromia, and Gambella regions of the country. The Committee seeks assurance that monitoring is adequate to prevent U.S. equipment from going to units that commit abuses, and the Ethiopian Government is taking effective measures to bring to justice military personnel who commit such crimes. Indonesia.--The Committee provides $15,700,000 for assistance for Indonesia, an amount equal to the budget request. The Committee recognizes the significant strides Indonesia has made in Aceh, democratic governance and counter- terrorism cooperation. The Committee regards the U.S.- Indonesian relationship to be one of strategic importance, and anticipates further assistance as more progress is made particularly in strengthening the rule of law, military reform including budget transparency, and resolving the situation in Papua. The Committee remains concerned with the lack of progress in accountability for human rights violations. The Committee recommends an additional $2,000,000 for Indonesia when the Secretary of State reports that the Indonesian Government has provided plans for effectively addressing these concerns. Jordan.--The Committee provides $300,000,000 for assistance for Jordan, an increase of $100,000,000 above the budget request. The Committee requests the additional funds be used for border security and counterterrorism programs. PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS Appropriations, 2007.................................... $223,250,000 Emergency supplemental (Public Law 110-28).............. 230,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 221,200,000 House allowance......................................... 293,200,000 Committee recommendation................................ 273,200,000 The Committee provides $273,200,000 for the PKO account which supports multilateral peacekeeping operations and training. MFO.--The Committee recommends $25,000,000 for a United States contribution to the Multinational Force and Observer mission in the Sinai, an increase of $4,000,000 above the budget request. The Committee notes the security challenges associated with this mission as the situation in Gaza continues to deteriorate, and expects additional funds to meet pressing security needs. To the maximum extent practicable, the Committee recommends that additional funds for security requirements to be matched by sources other than the United States. TITLE V MULTILATERAL ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE Funds Appropriated to the President International Financial Institutions Summary Appropriations, 2007.................................... $1,273,220,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 1,498,950,000 House allowance......................................... 1,352,862,000 Committee recommendation................................ 1,346,882,000 The Committee provides the total amount of paid-in capital funding shown above to provide for contributions to the International Development Association, the Global Environment Facility, the Inter-American Development Bank's Multilateral Investment Fund, the Asian Development Fund, the African Development Bank and Fund, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and the International Fund for Agriculture Development. GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT FACILITY Appropriations, 2007.................................... $79,200,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 106,763,000 House allowance......................................... 106,763,000 Committee recommendation................................ 106,763,000 The Committee provides $106,763,000 for a contribution to the GEF, an amount equal to the request. CONTRIBUTION TO THE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION Appropriations, 2007.................................... $940,500,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 1,060,000,000 House allowance......................................... 950,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 1,000,000,000 The Committee provides $1,000,000,000 for a U.S. contribution to IDA, which is $60,000,000 below the budget request and $59,500,000 above the fiscal year 2007 level. The Committee supports IDA's mission, but is concerned with reports of an acceleration of World Bank financing of large infrastructure projects without adequate consideration of the potential adverse environmental impacts, including in the Amazon region. Given the World Bank's history of supporting projects in environmentally sensitive areas that have caused lasting harm to tropical forests, biodiversity, and indigenous people living in these areas, the Committee requires a report by the Secretary of the Treasury that the World Bank will not support projects which would contribute to such harm. The Committee is aware that the World Bank is establishing a fund for the Advanced Market Commitments for pneumococcal vaccines. The Committee recommends that the Department of the Treasury consult with the Committee on the necessary steps for the United States to participate in this fund. CONTRIBUTION TO THE ENTERPRISE FOR THE AMERICAS MULTILATERAL INVESTMENT FUND Appropriations, 2007.................................... $1,725,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 29,232,000 House allowance......................................... 25,000,000 Committee recommendation................................ 25,000,000 CONTRIBUTION TO THE ASIAN DEVELOPMENT FUND Appropriations, 2007.................................... $99,000,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 133,906,000 House allowance......................................... 115,306,000 Committee recommendation................................ 90,000,000 CONTRIBUTION TO THE AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK Appropriations, 2007.................................... $3,602,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 2,037,000 House allowance......................................... 2,037,000 Committee recommendation................................ 2,037,000 LIMITATION ON CALLABLE CAPITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS Appropriations, 2007.................................... ($88,334,000) Budget estimate, 2008................................... (31,918,770) House allowance......................................... (31,918,770) Committee recommendation................................ (31,918,770) CONTRIBUTION TO THE AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT FUND Appropriations, 2007.................................... $134,343,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 140,584,000 House allowance......................................... 135,684,000 Committee recommendation................................ 105,000,000 CONTRIBUTION TO THE EUROPEAN BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT Appropriations, 2007.................................................... Budget estimate, 2008................................... $10,159,000 House allowance......................................................... Committee recommendation................................ 10,159,000 CONTRIBUTION TO THE INTERNATIONAL FUND FOR AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT Appropriations, 2007.................................... $14,850,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 18,072,000 House allowance......................................... 18,072,000 Committee recommendation................................ 18,072,000 International Organizations and Programs Appropriations, 2007.................................... $326,163,000 Budget estimate, 2008................................... 289,400,000 House allowance......................................... 333,400,000 Committee recommendation................................ 313,925,000 The Committee provides $313,925,000 for the IO&P account. Funds are allocated in the following table: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PROGRAMS [Budget authority in thousands of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal year Committee Change from Organization 2008 request recommendation request ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Center for Human Settlements (U.N.-Habitat)..................... $1,000 $1,000 .............. IMO Maritime Security Programs.................................. 400 400 .............. International Civil Aviation Organization....................... 950 950 .............. International Conservation Programs............................. 5,906 6,500 +594 International Contributions for Scientific, Educational, and 1,000 1,000 .............. Cultural Activities............................................ International Development Law Organization...................... 300 300 .............. International Panel on Climate Change/U.N. Framework on Climate 5,320 5,500 +180 Change......................................................... Montreal Protocol Multilateral Fund............................. 19,000 19,000 .............. OAS Development Assistance Programs............................. 5,225 5,500 +275 OAS Fund for Strengthening Democracy............................ 2,500 3,500 +1,000 Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe............. 4,000 4,500 +500 U.N. Children's Fund............................................ 123,000 129,000 +6,000 U.N. Democracy Fund............................................. 14,000 .............. -14,000 U.N. Development Fund for Women................................. 950 3,500 +2,550 U.N. Development Program........................................ 75,300 100,000 +24,700 U.N. Environment Program........................................ 9,524 10,500 +976 U.N. Innovation and Entrepreneurship Initiative................. 10,000 .............. -10,000 U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs........ 2,000 3,000 +1,000 U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights......................... .............. 7,000 +7,000 U.N. Voluntary Fund for Technical Cooperation in the Field of 1,425 1,425 .............. Human Rights................................................... U.N. Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture...................... 4,750 7,000 +2,250 UNIFEM Trust Fund............................................... .............. 1,500 +1,500 World Meteorological Organization............................... 1,900 1,900 .............. World Trade Organization........................................ 950 950 .............. ----------------------------------------------- Total, International Organizations and Programs........... 289,400 313,925 +24,525 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Inter-American Human Rights Commission.--The committee supports the Inter-American Human Rights Commission which adjudicates cases of alleged violations of human rights in OAS member states. However, the Committee is concerned that some cases brought before the Commission have languished for years, and that justice delayed is justice denied. The Committee provides $3,500,000 for a contribution to the OAS Fund for Strengthening Democracy, which is $1,000,000 above the budget request, and $500,000 of this amount is subject to the regular notification procedures of the Committees on Appropriations. GENERAL PROVISIONS--TITLES II-V Sec. 601. Compensation for United States Executive Directors to International Financial Institutions. Sec. 602. Allocations. Sec. 603. Limitation on Residence Expenses. Sec. 604. Unobligated Balances Report. Sec. 605. Limitation on Representational Allowances. Sec. 606. Prohibition on Taxation of United States Assistance. Sec. 607. Prohibition Against Direct Funding for Certain Countries. Sec. 608. Military Coups. Sec. 609. Transfers. Sec. 610. Commercial Leasing of Defense Articles. Sec. 611. Availability of Funds. Sec. 612. Limitation on Assistance to Countries in Default. Sec. 613. Commerce and Trade. Sec. 614. Surplus Commodities. Sec. 615. Reprogramming Notification Requirements. Sec. 616. Limitation on Availability of Funds for International Organizations and Programs. Sec. 617. Independent States of the Former Soviet Union. Sec. 618. Prohibition on Funding for Abortions and Involuntary Sterilization. Sec. 619. Export Financing Transfer Authorities. Sec. 620. Special Notification Requirements. Sec. 621. Definition of Program, Project, and Activity. Sec. 622. Global Health Activities. Sec. 623. Afghanistan. Sec. 624. Notification on Excess Defense Equipment. Sec. 625. Global Fund Management. Sec. 626. Prohibition on Bilateral Assistance to Terrorist Countries. Sec. 627. Debt-for-Development. Sec. 628. Separate Accounts. Sec. 629. Enterprise Fund Restrictions. Sec. 630. International Family Planning. Sec. 631. Authorities for the Peace Corps, Inter-American Foundation and African Development Foundation. Sec. 632. Impact on Jobs in the United States. Sec. 633. Comprehensive Foreign Assistance Report. Sec. 634. Special Authorities. Sec. 635. Arab League Boycott of Israel. Sec. 636. Eligibility for Assistance. Sec. 637. Reservations of Funds. Sec. 638. Asia. Sec. 639. Prohibition on Publicity or Propaganda. Sec. 640. Prohibition of Payments to United Nations Members. Sec. 641. Requests for Documents. Sec. 642. Prohibition on Assistance to Foreign Governments that Export Lethal Military Equipment to Countries Supporting International Terrorism. Sec. 643. Withholding of Assistance for Parking Fines and Real Property Taxes Owed by Foreign Countries. Sec. 644. Limitation on Assistance for the PLO for the West Bank and Gaza. Sec. 645. War Crimes Tribunals Drawdown. Sec. 646. Landmines. Sec. 647. Restrictions Concerning the Palestinian Authority. Sec. 648. Prohibition of Payment of Certain Expenses. Sec. 649. Western Hemisphere. Sec. 650. Limitation on Assistance to the Palestinian Authority. Sec. 651. Limitation on Assistance to Security Forces. Sec. 652. Foreign Military Training Report. Sec. 653. Authorization Requirement. Sec. 654. Avian Influenza Preparedness. Sec. 655. Palestinian Statehood. Sec. 656. Colombia. Sec. 657. Illegal Armed Groups. Sec. 658. West Bank and Gaza Assistance. Sec. 659. War Criminals. Sec. 660. User Fees. Sec. 661. Funding for Serbia. Sec. 662. Community-Based Police Assistance. Sec. 663. Special Debt Relief for the Poorest. Sec. 664. Authority to Engage in Debt Buybacks or Sales. Sec. 665. Reconciliation Programs. Sec. 666. Sudan. Sec. 667. Transparency and Accountability. Sec. 668. Excess Defense Articles for Central and South European Countries and Certain Other Countries. Sec. 669. Zimbabwe. Sec. 670. Development Grants Program. Sec. 671. Monitoring of Military Assistance. Sec. 672. Disaster Assistance and Recovery. Sec. 673. United States Agency for International Development Management (Including Transfer of Funds). Sec. 674. OPIC Transfer Authority Including Transfer of Funds. Sec. 675. Reporting Requirement. Sec. 676. Environment and Energy Conservation Programs. Sec. 677. Uzbekistan. Sec. 678. Central Asia. Sec. 679. Disability Programs. Sec. 680. Neglected Tropical Diseases. Sec. 681. Orphans, Displaced and Abandoned Children. Sec. 682. Coordinator for Indigenous Peoples Internationally. Sec. 683. Oversight of Iraq Reconstruction. Sec. 684. Demobilization and Disarmament in Colombia. Sec. 685. Indonesia. Sec. 686. Assistance for Guatemala. Sec. 687. Child Soldiers. Sec. 688. Philippines. Sec. 689. Pakistan. Sec. 690. Sri Lanka. Sec. 691. Peace Corps Separation Pay. Sec. 692. Multilateral Development Banks. Sec. 693. Millennium Challenge Corporation. Sec. 694. Material Support. Sec. 695. Cluster Munitions. Sec. 696. Cuba. Sec. 697. Libya. Sec. 698. Carry Forward of Unused Special Immigrant Visas Sec. 699. Global Fund Contribution. Sec. 699A. References. COMPLIANCE WITH PARAGRAPH 7, RULE XVI OF THE STANDING RULES OF THE SENATE Rule XVI, paragraph 7 requires that every report on a general appropriation bill filed by the Committee must identify each recommended amendment, with particularity, which proposes an item of appropriation which is not made to carry out the provisions of an existing law, a treaty stipulation, or an act or resolution previously passed by the Senate during that session. Items providing funding for fiscal year 2008 which lack authorization are as follows: Administration of Foreign Affairs; International Organizations; International Commissions; Other Department of State; Broadcasting Board of Governors; Commission on International Religious Freedom; U.S. Institute of Peace; Child Survival and Health Programs Fund; Development Assistance; International Disaster and Famine Assistance; Transition Initiatives; Development Credit Authority; USAID Operating Expenses; USAID Operating Expenses, Office of Inspector General; USAID Capital Investment Fund; Economic Support Fund; Assistance for Eastern Europe and the Baltic States; Assistance for the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union; Inter-American Foundation; African Development Foundation; Peace Corps; Millennium Challenge Corporation; Democracy Fund; International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement; Andean Counterdrug Initiative; Migration and Refugee Assistance; United States Emergency Migration and Refugee Assistance Fund; Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism, Demining and Related Assistance; International Affairs Technical Assistance; Debt Restructuring; International Military Education and Training; Foreign Military Financing Program; Peacekeeping Operations; International Organizations and Programs; Asian Development Fund; and African Development Fund. COMPLIANCE WITH PARAGRAPH 7(C), RULE XXVI, OF THE STANDING RULES OF THE SENATE Pursuant to paragraph 7(c) of rule XXVI, on June 28, 2007, the Committee ordered reported en bloc: an original bill (S. 1745) making appropriations for the Departments of Commerce and Justice, science, and related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, and authorized the chairman of the committee or the chairman of the subcommittee to offer the text of the Senate bill as a committee amendment in the nature of a substitute to the House companion measure; an original bill (S. 1751) making appropriations for energy and water development and related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, and for other purposes, and authorized the chairman of the committee or the chairman of the subcommittee to offer the text of the Senate bill as a committee amendment in the nature of a substitute to the House companion measure; and H.R. 2764, making appropriations for the Department of State, foreign operations, and related programs for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2008, and for other purposes, with an amendment in the nature of a substitute; with each bill subject to amendment and subject to the budget allocations, by a recorded vote of 28-1, a quorum being present. The vote was as follows: Yeas Nays Chairman Byrd Mr. Brownback Mr. Inouye Mr. Leahy Mr. Harkin Ms. Mikulski Mr. Kohl Mrs. Murray Mr. Dorgan Mrs. Feinstein Mr. Durbin Mr. Johnson Ms. Landrieu Mr. Reed Mr. Lautenberg Mr. Nelson Mr. Cochran Mr. Stevens Mr. Specter Mr. Domenici Mr. Bond Mr. McConnell Mr. Shelby Mr. Gregg Mr. Bennett Mr. Craig Mrs. Hutchison Mr. Allard Mr. Alexander COMPLIANCE WITH PARAGRAPH 12, RULE XXVI OF THE STANDING RULES OF THE SENATE Paragraph 12 of rule XXVI requires that Committee report on a bill or joint resolution repealing or amending any statute or part of any statute include ``(a) the text of the statute or part thereof which is proposed to be repealed; and (b) a comparative print of that part of the bill or joint resolution making the amendment and of the statute or part thereof proposed to be amended, showing by stricken-through type and italics, parallel columns, or other appropriate typographical devices the omissions and insertions which would be made by the bill or joint resolution if enacted in the form recommended by the Committee.'' In compliance with this rule, the following changes in existing law proposed to be made by the bill are shown as follows: existing law to be omitted is enclosed in black brackets, new matter is printed in italic, and existing law in which no change is proposed is shown in roman. TITLE 5--GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION AND EMPLOYEES * * * * * * * APPENDIX * * * * * * * Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction. Act Nov. 6, 2003, P.L. 108-106, Title III, Sec. 3001, 117 Stat. 1234; Oct. 28, 2004, P.L. 108-375, Title XII, Subtitle A, Sec. 1203(a), (c)-(j), 118 Stat. 2078, 2079; Nov. 14, 2005, P.L. 109-102, Title V, Sec. 599, 119 Stat. 2240; Oct. 17, 2006, P.L. 109-364, Div A, Title X, Subtitle F, Sec. 1054(b), Subtitle H, Sec. 1071(g)(13) (effective 10/28/2004, and as if included in Act Oct. 28, 2004), 120 Stat. 2397, 2403; Dec. 20, 2006, P.L. 109-440, Sec. 2, 120 Stat. 3286; May 25, 2007, P.L. 110-28, Title III, Ch. 8, Sec. 3801, 121 Stat. 147, provides: * * * * * * * ``(o) Termination.-- (1) * * * (A) The Office of the Inspector General shall terminate 10 months after 80 percent of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available to the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund have been expended. ``(B) For purposes of calculating the termination of the Office of the Inspector General under this subsection, any United States funds appropriated or otherwise made available for [fiscal year 2006 or fiscal year 2007] fiscal years 2006 through 2008 for the reconstruction of Iraq, irrespective of the designation of such funds, shall be deemed to be amounts appropriated or otherwise made available to the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund. * * * * * * * TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY * * * * * * * CHAPTER 12--IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY IMMIGRATION * * * * * * * Sec. 1182. Inadmissible aliens (a) * * * * * * * * * * (1) * * * * * * * * * * (3) Security and related grounds (A) In general * * * * * * * (B) Terrorist activities. (i) * * * * * * * * * * (ii) Exception. [Subclause (VII)] Subclause (IX) of clause (i) does not apply to a spouse or child-- * * * * * * * (iv) * * * * * * * * * * (VI) * * * * * * * * * * (aa) * * * * * * * * * * (dd) to a terrorist organization described in clause (vi)(III), or to any member of such an organization, unless the actor can demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that the actor did not know, and should not reasonably have known, that the organization was a terrorist organization. It shall be an affirmative defense to inadmissibility under this subsection that the actor provided material support under duress. * * * * * * * (vi) Terrorist organization defined. [As] Except as provided in clause (vii), as used in this section, the term ``terrorist organization'' means an organization-- (I) designated under section 219; (II) otherwise designated, upon publication in the Federal Register, by the Secretary of State in consultation with or upon the request of the Attorney General or the Secretary of Homeland Security, as a terrorist organization, after finding that the organization engages in the activities described in subclauses (I) through (VI) of clause (iv); or (III) that is a group of two or more individuals, whether organized or not, which engages in, or has a subgroup which engages in, the activities described in subclauses (I) through (VI) of clause (iv). (vii) Notwithstanding clause (vi), for purposes of this section the Hmong, the Montagnards, the Karen National Union/Karen Liberation Army (KNU/KNLA), the Chin National Front/Chin National Army (CNF/CNA), the Chin National League for Democracy (CNLD), the Kayan New Land Party (KNLP), the Arakan Liberation Party (ALP), the Mustangs, the Alzados, and the Karenni National Progressive Party shall not be considered to be a terrorist organization on the basis of any act or event occurring before the date of enactment of this section. Nothing in this subsection may be construed to alter or limit the authority of the Secretary of State and Secretary of Homeland Security to exercise their discretionary authority pursuant to 212(d)(3)(B)(i) (8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(3)(B)(i)). * * * * * * * (d) Temporary admission of nonimmigrants (1) * * * * * * * * * * (3)(A) * * * (B)(i) [The Secretary of State, after consultation with the Attorney General and the Secretary of Homeland Security, or the Secretary of Homeland Security, after consultation with the Secretary of State and the Attorney General, may conclude in such Secretary's sole unreviewable discretion that subsection (a)(3)(B)(i)(IV)(bb) or (a)(3)(B)(i)(VII) shall not apply to an alien, that subsection (a)(3)(B)(iv)(VI) shall not apply with respect to any material support an alien afforded to an organization or individual that has engaged in a terrorist activity, or that subsection (a)(3)(B)(vi)(III) shall not apply to a group solely by virtue of having a subgroup within the scope of that subsection. The Secretary of State may not, however, exercise discretion under this clause with respect to an alien once removal proceedings against the alien are instituted under section 240.] The Secretary of State, after consultation with the Attorney General and the Secretary of Homeland Security, or the Secretary of Homeland Security, after consultation with the Secretary of State and the Attorney General, may determine in such Secretary's sole unreviewable discretion that subsection (a)(3)(B) shall not apply with respect to an alien, within the scope of that subsection, unless that alien is described in subsection (a)(3)(B)(i)(V), or that subsection (a)(3)(B)(vi)(III) shall not apply to a group. Such a determination shall neither prejudice the ability of the United States Government to commence criminal or civil proceedings involving a beneficiary of such a determination or any other person, nor create any substantive or procedural right or benefit for a beneficiary of such a determination or any other person. Notwithstanding any other provision of law (statutory or non-statutory), including but not limited to section 2241 of title 28, or any other habeas corpus provision, and sections 1361 and 1651 of such title, no court shall have jurisdiction to review such a determination or revocation except in a proceeding for review of a final order of removal pursuant to section 242 and only to the extent provided in section 242(a)(2)(D). The Secretary of State may not exercise the discretion provided in this clause with respect to an alien at any time during which the alien is the subject of pending removal proceedings under section 1229a of title 8. (ii) Not later than 90 days after the end of each fiscal year, the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Homeland Security shall each provide to the Committees on the Judiciary of the House of Representatives and of the Senate, the Committee on International Relations of the House of Representatives, the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, and the Committee on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives a report on the aliens to whom such Secretary has applied clause (i). Within one week of applying clause (i) to a group, the Secretary of State or the Secretary of Homeland Security shall provide a report to such Committees. (iii) Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and Secretary of State shall each publish in the Federal Register regulations establishing the process by which the eligibility of a refugee, asylum seeker, or individual seeking to adjust his or her immigration status is considered eligible for any of the exceptions authorized by clause (i), including a timeline for issuing a determination. * * * * * * * TITLE 22--FOREIGN RELATIONS AND INTERCOURSE * * * * * * * CHAPTER 39--ARMS EXPORT CONTROL * * * * * * * SUBCHAPTER III--MILITARY EXPORT CONTROLS * * * * * * * Sec. 2778. Control of arms exports and imports NOTE Anti-personnel landmine export moratorium. Act Oct. 23, 1992, P.L. 102-484, Div A, Title XIII, Subtitle G, Sec. 1365, 106 Stat. 2561; Nov. 30, 1993, P.L. 103-160, Div A, Title XI, Subtitle H, Sec. 1182(c)(3), Title XIV, Subtitle C, ' 1423(c), 107 Stat. 1772, 1832; Feb. 12, 1996, P.L. 104-107, Title V, Sec. 558, 110 Stat. 743; Sept. 30, 1996, P.L. 104-208, Div A, Title I, Sec. 101(c) [Title V, Sec. 556], 110 Stat. 3009-161; Nov. 29, 1999, P.L. 106-113, Div B, Sec. 1000(a)(2), 113 Stat. 1535 (enacting into law Sec. 553 of Title V of H.R. 3422 (113 Stat. 1501A-99), as introduced on Nov. 17, 1999); Jan. 10, 2002, P.L. 107-115, Title V, Sec. 548, 115 Stat. 2156, provides: ``(a) * * * * * * * * * * ``(c) Moratorium on transfers of anti-personnel landmines abroad. [During the 16-year period beginning on October 23, 1992] During the 22 year period beginning on October 23, 1992.-- * * * * * * * CHAPTER 84--MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE ACT OF 2003 * * * * * * * Sec. 7706. Eligible countries (a) * * * (b) Criteria. * * * * * * * (1) * * * * * * * * * * (2) economic freedom, including a demonstrated commitment to economic policies that-- (A) encourage citizens and firms to participate in global trade and international capital markets; (B) promote private sector growth [and the sustainable management of natural resources]; * * * * * * * (3) investments in the people of such country, particularly women and children, including programs that-- (A) promote broad-based primary education; [and] (B) strengthen and build capacity to provide quality public health and reduce child mortality[.]; and (C) promote the protection of biodiversity and the sustainable management and use of natural resources. * * * * * * * FOREIGN ASSISTANCE ACT OF 1961, PUBLIC LAW 87-195 * * * * * * * Sec. 620I. Prohibition on Assistance to Countries That Restrict United States Humanitarian Assistance.-- (a) * * * * * * * * * * (c) Notice.--Prior to making any determination under subsection (b), the President shall notify the Committee on International Relations, the Committee on Foreign Relations, and the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and House of Representatives of his intention to make such a determination, the effective date of the determination, and the reasons for making the determination. SEC. 620J. LIMITATION ON ASSISTANCE TO SECURITY FORCES. (a) In General.--No assistance shall be furnished under this Act or the Arms Export Control Act to any unit of the security forces of a foreign country if the Secretary of State has credible evidence that such unit has committed gross violations of human rights. (b) Exception.--The prohibition in subsection (a) shall not apply if the Secretary determines and reports to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives, and the Committees on Appropriations that the government of such country is taking effective measures to bring the responsible members of the security forces unit to justice. (c) Duty to Inform.--In the event that funds are withheld from any unit pursuant to this section, the Secretary of State shall promptly inform the foreign government of the basis for such action and shall, to the maximum extent practicable, assist the foreign government in taking effective measures to bring the responsible members of the security forces to justice. * * * * * * * FOREIGN OPERATIONS EXPORT FINANCING, AND RELATED PROGRAMS APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 1990, PUBLIC LAW 101-167 * * * * * * * TITLE V--GENERAL PROVISIONS * * * * * * * establishing categories of aliens for purposes of refugee determinations Sec. 599D. (a) * * * (b) Establishment of Categories.-- (1) * * * * * * * * * * (3) Within the number of admissions of refugees allocated for each of fiscal years 1990, 1991, and 1992 for refugees who are nationals of the Soviet Union under section 207(a)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and within the number of such admissions allocated for each of fiscal years 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, [and 2007] 2007, and 2008 for refugees who are nationals of the independent states of the former Soviet Union, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania under such section, notwithstanding any other provision of law, the President shall allocate one thousand of such admissions for such fiscal year to refugees who are within the category of aliens described in paragraph (2)(B). * * * * * * * (e) Period of Application.-- (1) Subsections (a) and (b) shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act and shall only apply to applications for refugee status submitted before October 1, [2007] 2008. (2) Subsection (c) shall apply to decisions made after the date of the enactment of this Act and before October 1, [2007] 2008. (3) Subsection (d) shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act and shall only apply to reapplications for refugee status submitted before October 1, [2007] 2008. * * * * * * * adjustment of status for certain soviet and indochinese parolees Sec. 599E. (a) * * * (b) Aliens Eligible for Adjustment of Status.--The benefits provided in subsection (a) shall only apply to an alien who-- (1) * * * (2) was inspected and granted parole into the United States during the period beginning on August 15, 1988, and ending on September 30, [2007] 2008, after being denied refugee status. * * * * * * * PUBLIC LAW 106-113 * * * * * * * APPENDIX E--H.R. 3425 * * * * * * * TITLE V--INTERNATIONAL DEBT RELIEF SEC. 501. ACTIONS TO PROVIDE BILATERAL DEBT RELIEF. (a) * * * * * * * * * * (i) Authorization of Appropriations.--For the cost (as defined in section 502(5) of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990) of the cancellation of any debt under this section, there are authorized to be appropriated to the President such sums as may be necessary for each of the [fiscal years 2000 through 2004, which] fiscal years 2000-2010, which shall remain available until expended. * * * * * * * CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2005, PUBLIC LAW 108-447 * * * * * * * DIVISION D--FOREIGN OPERATIONS, EXPORT FINANCING, AND RELATED PROGRAMS APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2005 * * * * * * * Sec. 591. (a) Section 801(b)(1) of Public Law 106-429 is amended-- (1) by inserting ``(i)'' after ``appropriated''; and (2) by inserting before the period ``; and (ii) for [fiscal years 2004-2006] fiscal years 2004-2010, not more than $150,000,000, for purposes of additional United States contributions to the HIPC Trust Fund administered by the Bank, which are authorized to remain available until expended''. * * * * * * * JOHN WARNER NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2007, PUBLIC LAW 109-364 * * * * * * * TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS * * * * * * * Subtitle F--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations on Availability and Use of Funds * * * * * * * SEC. 1054. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO THE SPECIAL INSPECTOR GENERAL FOR IRAQ RECONSTRUCTION. (a) Duties.--For purposes of carrying out the duties of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction under section 3001(f) of the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense and for the Reconstruction of Iraq and Afghanistan, 2004 (Public Law 108-106; 117 Stat. 1235 et seq.; 5 U.S.C. App., note to section 8G of Public Law 95-452), any United States funds appropriated or otherwise made available for [fiscal year 2006] fiscal years 2006 through 2008 for the reconstruction of Iraq, irrespective of the designation of such funds, shall be deemed to be amounts appropriated or otherwise made available to the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund. (b) Termination.--Section 3001(o) of the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense and for the Reconstruction of Iraq and Afghanistan, 2004 (Public Law 108- 106; 117 Stat. 1238; 5 U.S.C. App., note to section 8G of Public Law 95-452) is amended to read as follows: ``(o) Termination.--The Office of the Inspector General shall terminate on October 1, 2007, with transition operations authorized to continue through December 31, 2007.''. (p) Rule of Construction.--For the purposes of carrying out the duties of the Inspector General, any United States funds appropriated or otherwise made available for fiscal years 2006 through 2008 for the reconstruction of Iraq, irrespective of the designation of such funds, shall be deemed to be amounts appropriated or otherwise made available to the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund. * * * * * * * BUDGETARY IMPACT OF BILL PREPARED IN CONSULTATION WITH THE CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE PURSUANT TO SEC. 308(a), PUBLIC LAW 93-344, AS AMENDED [In millions of dollars] ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Budget authority Outlays --------------------------------------------------- Committee Amount of Committee Amount of allocation bill allocation bill ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Comparison of amounts in the bill with Committee allocations to its subcommittees of amounts in the Budget Resolution for 2008: Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations: Mandatory............................................... 159 159 159 \1\159 Discretionary........................................... 34,243 34,243 33,540 \1\33,511 Projection of outlays associated with the recommendation: 2008.................................................... ........... ........... ........... \2\17,270 2009.................................................... ........... ........... ........... 9,128 2010.................................................... ........... ........... ........... 3,463 2011.................................................... ........... ........... ........... 2,103 2012 and future years................................... ........... ........... ........... 2,137 Financial assistance to State and local governments for NA ........... NA ........... 2008....................................................... ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- \1\Includes outlays from prior-year budget authority. \2\Excludes outlays from prior-year budget authority. NA: Not applicable. COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF NEW BUDGET (OBLIGATIONAL) AUTHORITY FOR FISCAL YEAR 2007 AND BUDGET ESTIMATES AND AMOUNTS RECOMMENDED IN THE BILL FOR FISCAL YEAR 2008 [In thousands of dollars] ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Senate Committee recommendation compared with (+ or ) Item 2007 Budget estimate House allowance Committee ----------------------------------------------------- appropriation recommendation 2007 appropriation Budget estimate House allowance ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ TITLE I--DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND RELATED AGENCY DEPARTMENT OF STATE Administration of Foreign Affairs Diplomatic and consular programs.................................. 3,656,564 3,977,940 3,782,318 3,885,375 +228,811 -92,565 +103,057 (Transfer out)................................................ (-3,949) ................ ................ (210,000) (+213,949) (+210,000) (+210,000) Worldwide security upgrades................................... 681,949 964,760 964,760 909,598 +227,649 -55,162 -55,162 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 870,658 ................ ................ ................ -870,658 ................ ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28) (Transfer out)... (-20,000) ................ ................ ................ (+20,000) ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Diplomatic and consular programs..................... 5,209,171 4,942,700 4,747,078 4,794,973 -414,198 -147,727 +47,895 Emergency appropriations................................ 870,658 ................ ................ ................ -870,658 ................ ................ Capital investment fund........................................... 58,143 70,743 59,062 63,743 +5,600 -7,000 +4,681 Office of Inspector General....................................... 29,914 32,508 32,508 35,508 +5,594 +3,000 +3,000 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 36,500 ................ ................ ................ -36,500 ................ ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28) Special IG for (35,000) ................ ................ ................ (-35,000) ................ ................ Iraq reconstruction (By transfer)............................ Educational and cultural exchange programs........................ 445,671 486,400 501,400 509,482 +63,811 +23,082 +8,082 (Transfer out)................................................ ................ ................ (-6,000) ................ ................ ................ (+6,000) Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 20,000 ................ ................ ................ -20,000 ................ ................ Representation allowances......................................... 8,175 8,175 8,175 8,175 ................ ................ ................ Protection of foreign missions and officials...................... 9,270 18,000 28,000 14,000 +4,730 -4,000 -14,000 Embassy security, construction, and maintenance................... 592,277 792,534 729,898 792,534 +200,257 ................ +62,636 Worldwide security upgrades................................... 898,575 806,900 806,900 649,278 -249,297 -157,622 -157,622 Emergencies in the diplomatic and consular service................ 4,940 19,000 14,000 9,000 +4,060 -10,000 -5,000 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28) (By transfer).... (20,000) ................ ................ ................ (-20,000) ................ ................ (By transfer)................................................. ................ ................ ................ (10,000) (+10,000) (+10,000) (+10,000) Repatriation Loans Program Account: Direct loans subsidy.......................................... 703 678 678 678 -25 ................ ................ Administrative expenses....................................... 599 607 607 607 +8 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Repatriation loans program account................... 1,302 1,285 1,285 1,285 -17 ................ ................ Payment to the American Institute in Taiwan....................... 15,826 16,351 16,351 16,351 +525 ................ ................ Payment to the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Fund..... 125,000 122,500 158,900 158,900 +33,900 +36,400 ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Administration of Foreign Affairs.................... 7,454,764 7,317,096 7,103,557 7,053,229 -401,535 -263,867 -50,328 International Organizations Contributions to international organizations, current year assess- 1,151,318 1,354,400 1,354,400 1,374,400 +223,082 +20,000 +20,000 ment............................................................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 50,000 ................ ................ ................ -50,000 ................ ................ Contributions for international peacekeeping activities, current 1,135,275 1,107,000 1,302,000 1,352,000 +216,725 +245,000 +50,000 year............................................................. Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 283,000 ................ ................ ................ -283,000 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, International Organizations.......................... 2,619,593 2,461,400 2,656,400 2,726,400 +106,807 +265,000 +70,000 Emergency appropriations................................ 333,000 ................ ................ ................ -333,000 ................ ................ International Commissions International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Mexico: Salaries and expenses......................................... 27,718 30,430 30,430 30,430 +2,712 ................ ................ Construction.................................................. 5,232 71,725 15,725 88,425 +83,193 +16,700 +72,700 American sections, international commissions...................... 9,962 10,395 10,630 11,250 +1,288 +855 +620 International fisheries commissions............................... 23,694 21,000 26,000 27,054 +3,360 +6,054 +1,054 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, International commissions............................ 66,606 133,550 82,785 157,159 +90,553 +23,609 +74,374 Other Payment to the Asia Foundation.................................... 13,821 10,000 15,000 16,000 +2,179 +6,000 +1,000 Center for Middle Eastern-Western Dialogue........................ 750 875 875 875 +125 ................ ................ Eisenhower Exchange Fellowship program............................ 494 500 500 500 +6 ................ ................ Israeli Arab scholarship program.................................. 370 375 375 375 +5 ................ ................ East-West Center.................................................. 18,994 10,000 ................ 20,000 +1,006 +10,000 +20,000 National Endowment for Democracy.................................. 74,042 80,000 80,000 ................ -74,042 -80,000 -80,000 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Department of State.................................. 10,249,434 10,013,796 9,939,492 9,974,538 -274,896 -39,258 +35,046 Emergency appropriations................................ 1,260,158 ................ ................ ................ -1,260,158 ................ ................ ============================================================================================================================= Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad Salaries and expenses............................................. 493 499 499 499 +6 ................ ................ Commission on International Religious Freedom Salaries and expenses............................................. 3,000 3,300 3,400 3,000 ................ -300 -400 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28) (By transfer).... (258) ................ ................ ................ (-258) ................ ................ Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe Salaries and expenses............................................. 2,004 2,037 2,037 2,037 +33 ................ ................ Congressional-Executive Commission on the People's Republic of China Salaries and expenses............................................. 1,876 2,000 2,000 2,000 +124 ................ ................ United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission Salaries and expenses............................................. 2,962 4,000 4,000 2,962 ................ -1,038 -1,038 United States Senate-China United States Senate Interparliamentary Groups Salaries and expenses............................................. 149 ................ ................ 150 +1 +150 +150 United States Institute of Peace Operating expenses................................................ 22,064 30,000 26,000 25,000 +2,936 -5,000 -1,000 RELATED AGENCIES Broadcasting Board of Governors International Broadcasting Operations............................. 639,126 618,777 671,632 662,727 +23,601 +43,950 -8,905 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 10,000 ................ ................ ................ -10,000 ................ ................ Broadcasting to Cuba.............................................. ................ 38,700 ................ ................ ................ -38,700 ................ Broadcasting capital improvements................................. 7,624 10,748 10,748 10,748 +3,124 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Broadcasting Board of Governors...................... 656,750 668,225 682,380 673,475 +16,725 +5,250 -8,905 ============================================================================================================================= Total, title I, Department of State and Related Agencies.... 10,938,732 10,723,857 10,659,808 10,683,661 -255,071 -40,196 +23,853 Appropriations.......................................... (9,668,574) (10,723,857) (10,659,808) (10,683,661) (+1,015,087) (-40,196) (+23,853) Emergency appropriations................................ 1,270,158 ................ ................ ................ -1,270,158 ................ ................ (Transfer out).......................................... (-3,949) ................ (-6,000) (210,000) (+213,949) (+210,000) (+216,000) TITLE II--EXPORT AND INVESTMENT ASSISTANCE EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF THE UNITED STATES Subsidy appropriation............................................. 26,382 68,000 68,000 68,000 +41,618 ................ ................ Administrative expenses........................................... 72,468 78,000 78,000 78,000 +5,532 ................ ................ Inspector General................................................. 990 1,000 1,000 1,000 +10 ................ ................ Negative subsidy.................................................. -45,000 ................ ................ ................ +45,000 ................ ................ Offsetting collections............................................ ................ -146,000 -146,000 -146,000 -146,000 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Export-Import Bank of the United States.............. 54,840 1,000 1,000 1,000 -53,840 ................ ................ OVERSEAS PRIVATE INVESTMENT CORPORATION Noncredit account: Administrative expenses....................................... 41,851 47,500 47,500 47,500 +5,649 ................ ................ Insurance fees and other offsetting collections............... -258,000 -236,000 -237,000 -237,000 +21,000 -1,000 ................ Subsidy appropriation............................................. 20,073 29,000 20,000 21,000 +927 -8,000 +1,000 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Overseas Private Investment Corporation.............. -196,076 -159,500 -169,500 -168,500 +27,576 -9,000 +1,000 FUNDS APPROPRIATED TO THE PRESIDENT Trade and development agency...................................... 50,391 50,400 50,400 50,400 +9 ................ ................ ============================================================================================================================= Total, title II Export and investment assistance............ -90,845 -108,100 -118,100 -117,100 -26,255 -9,000 +1,000 ============================================================================================================================= TITLE III--BILATERAL ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE FUNDS APPROPRIATED TO THE PRESIDENT United States Agency for International Development Global Health Programs (Child survival)........................... 1,718,150 1,564,279 1,980,150 6,531,425 +4,813,275 +4,967,146 +4,551,275 HIV/AIDS...................................................... ................ ................ ................ (5,050,000) (+5,050,000) (+5,050,000) (+5,050,000) Global fund contribution...................................... (247,500) ................ (250,000) (550,000) (+302,500) (+550,000) (+300,000) (Transfer out)................................................ (-5,940) ................ (-6,000) ................ (+5,940) ................ (+6,000) Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 161,000 ................ ................ ................ -161,000 ................ ................ Development assistance............................................ 1,508,760 1,041,248 1,733,760 1,455,000 -53,760 +413,752 -278,760 (Transfer out)................................................ (-20,790) (-21,000) (-21,000) (-21,000) (-210) ................ ................ International disaster assistance................................. 361,350 297,300 322,350 322,350 -39,000 +25,050 ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 165,000 ................ ................ ................ -165,000 ................ ................ Transition Initiatives............................................ 39,600 37,200 40,000 50,000 +10,400 +12,800 +10,000 Development Credit Authority: (By transfer)................................................. (20,790) (21,000) (21,000) (21,000) (+210) ................ ................ Administrative expenses....................................... 7,920 7,400 7,400 8,920 +1,000 +1,520 +1,520 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Development assistance............................ 3,961,780 2,947,427 4,083,660 8,367,695 +4,405,915 +5,420,268 +4,284,035 Payment to the Foreign Service Retirement and Disability Fund..... 38,700 36,400 ................ ................ -38,700 -36,400 ................ Operating expenses of the U.S. Agency for International Develop- 626,832 609,000 625,700 645,700 +18,868 +36,700 +20,000 ment............................................................. (By transfer)................................................. (5,940) (6,000) (6,000) (6,000) (+60) ................ ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 8,700 ................ ................ ................ -8,700 ................ ................ Capital Investment Fund........................................... 69,300 126,000 87,300 90,508 +21,208 -35,492 +3,208 Operating expenses of the U.S. Agency for International 35,640 38,000 38,000 38,000 +2,360 ................ ................ Development Office of Inspector General.......................... Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 3,500 ................ ................ ................ -3,500 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, USAID................................................ 4,744,452 3,756,827 4,834,660 9,141,903 +4,397,451 +5,385,076 +4,307,243 Emergency appropriations................................ 338,200 ................ ................ ................ -338,200 ................ ................ Other Bilateral Economic Assistance Economic support fund: Israel........................................................ 120,000 ................ ................ ................ -120,000 ................ ................ Egypt......................................................... 455,000 415,000 415,000 ................ -455,000 -415,000 -415,000 Other......................................................... 1,880,010 2,904,567 2,253,206 3,015,000 +1,134,990 +110,433 +761,794 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).............. 2,624,300 ................ ................ ................ -2,624,300 ................ ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28) (By transfer) (110,000) ................ ................ ................ (-110,000) ................ ................ Department of Defense.................................... ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Economic support fund....................... 5,079,310 3,319,567 2,668,206 3,015,000 -2,064,310 -304,567 +346,794 International Fund for Ireland.................................... 13,365 ................ 15,000 ................ -13,365 ................ -15,000 Assistance for Eastern Europe and the Baltic States............... 273,900 289,322 297,332 294,568 +20,668 +5,246 -2,764 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 214,000 ................ ................ ................ -214,000 ................ ................ Assistance for the Independent States of the former Soviet Union.. 452,000 351,585 397,585 401,885 -50,115 +50,300 +4,300 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Other Bilateral Economic Assistance.................. 6,032,575 3,960,474 3,378,123 3,711,453 -2,321,122 -249,021 +333,330 Emergency appropriations................................ 2,838,300 ................ ................ ................ -2,838,300 ................ ................ INDEPENDENT AGENCIES Inter-American Foundation Appropriation..................................................... 19,305 19,000 19,000 22,000 +2,695 +3,000 +3,000 African Development Foundation Appropriation..................................................... 22,770 30,000 30,000 30,000 +7,230 ................ ................ Peace Corps Appropriation..................................................... 319,640 333,500 333,500 323,500 +3,860 -10,000 -10,000 Millenium Challenge Corporation Appropriation..................................................... 1,752,300 3,000,000 1,800,000 1,200,000 -552,300 -1,800,000 -600,000 Department of State Global HIV/AIDS initiative........................................ 3,246,520 4,150,000 4,450,000 ................ -3,246,520 -4,150,000 -4,450,000 Global fund contribution...................................... (377,500) ................ (300,000) ................ (-377,500) ................ (-300,000) Democracy Fund.................................................... 94,050 ................ ................ 177,000 +82,950 +177,000 +177,000 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 260,000 ................ ................ ................ -260,000 ................ ................ International narcotics control and law enforcement............... 472,616 634,600 568,475 558,449 +85,833 -76,151 -10,026 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 252,000 ................ ................ ................ -252,000 ................ ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28) (Rescission)..... -13,000 ................ ................ ................ +13,000 ................ ................ Andean programs................................................... 721,500 442,812 312,460 415,050 -306,450 -27,762 +102,590 Migration and refugee assistance.................................. 833,033 773,500 829,900 889,000 +55,967 +115,500 +59,100 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 130,500 ................ ................ ................ -130,500 ................ ................ United States Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance Fund..... 55,000 55,000 45,000 45,000 -10,000 -10,000 ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 55,000 ................ ................ ................ -55,000 ................ ................ Nonproliferation, anti-terrorism, demining and related programs... 405,999 464,000 467,000 499,000 +93,001 +35,000 +32,000 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 57,500 ................ ................ ................ -57,500 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Department of State............................. 6,570,718 6,519,912 6,672,835 2,583,499 -3,987,219 -3,936,413 -4,089,336 Emergency appropriations................................ 755,000 ................ ................ ................ -755,000 ................ ................ Department of the Treasury International Affairs Technical Assistance........................ 19,800 24,800 18,000 22,800 +3,000 -2,000 +4,800 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 2,750 ................ ................ ................ -2,750 ................ ................ Debt restructuring................................................ 64,350 207,300 200,300 200,300 +135,950 -7,000 ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Department of the Treasury........................ 86,900 232,100 218,300 223,100 +136,200 -9,000 +4,800 ============================================================================================================================= Total, title III, Bilateral economic assistance............. 19,548,660 17,851,813 17,286,418 17,235,455 -2,313,205 -616,358 -50,963 Appropriations.......................................... (15,627,410) (17,851,813) (17,286,418) (17,235,455) (+1,608,045) (-616,358) (-50,963) Emergency appropriations................................ (3,921,250) ................ ................ ................ (-3,921,250) ................ ................ (By transfer)............................................... (26,730) (27,000) (27,000) (27,000) (+270) ................ ................ (Transfer out).............................................. (-26,730) (-21,000) (-27,000) (-21,000) (+5,730) ................ (+6,000) TITLE IV--MILITARY ASSISTANCE FUNDS APPROPRIATED TO THE PRESIDENT International Military Education and Training..................... 85,877 89,500 85,076 85,877 ................ -3,623 +801 Foreign Military Financing Program: Grants: Israel.................................................... 2,340,000 2,400,000 2,400,000 2,400,000 +60,000 ................ ................ Egypt..................................................... 1,300,000 1,300,000 1,300,000 1,300,000 ................ ................ ................ Other..................................................... 910,800 836,000 809,236 879,000 -31,800 +43,000 +69,764 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Grants........................................ 4,550,800 4,536,000 4,509,236 4,579,000 +28,200 +43,000 +69,764 (Limitation on administrative expenses)....................... (41,600) (41,900) (41,900) (41,900) (+300) ................ ................ (by transfer)............................................. ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 265,000 ................ ................ ................ -265,000 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Foreign Military Financing......................... 4,815,800 4,536,000 4,509,236 4,579,000 -236,800 +43,000 +69,764 Peacekeeping operations........................................... 223,250 221,200 293,200 273,200 +49,950 +52,000 -20,000 Emergency appropriations (Public Law 110-28).................. 230,000 ................ ................ ................ -230,000 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subtotal, Peacekeeping operations........................... 453,250 221,200 293,200 273,200 -180,050 +52,000 -20,000 ============================================================================================================================= Total, title IV, Military assistance........................ 5,354,927 4,846,700 4,887,512 4,938,077 -416,850 +91,377 +50,565 Appropriations.......................................... (4,859,927) (4,846,700) (4,887,512) (4,938,077) (+78,150) (+91,377) (+50,565) Emergency appropriations................................ (495,000) ................ ................ ................ (-495,000) ................ ................ (Limitation on administrative expenses)..................... (41,600) (41,900) (41,900) (41,900) (+300) ................ ................ ============================================================================================================================= TITLE V--MULTILATERAL ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE FUNDS APPROPRIATED TO THE PRESIDENT International Financial Institutions World Bank Group Contribution to the International Bank for Reconstruction and 79,200 106,763 106,763 106,763 +27,563 ................ ................ Development: Global Environment Facility......................... Contribution to the International Development Association......... 940,500 1,060,000 950,000 1,000,000 +59,500 -60,000 +50,000 Contribution to Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency.......... ................ 1,082 ................ ................ ................ -1,082 ................ (Limitation on callable capital subscriptions)................ (8,127) (7,300) (7,300) (7,300) (-827) ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, World Bank Group..................................... 1,019,700 1,167,845 1,056,763 1,106,763 +87,063 -61,082 +50,000 Contribution to the Inter-American Development Bank: Contribution 1,725 29,232 25,000 25,000 +23,275 -4,232 ................ to the Enterprise for the Americas Multilateral Investment Fund.. Inter-American Investment Corporation............................. ................ 7,264 ................ ................ ................ -7,264 ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, Inter-American Development Bank...................... 1,725 36,496 25,000 25,000 +23,275 -11,496 ................ Contribution to the Asian Development Fund........................ 99,000 133,906 115,306 90,000 -9,000 -43,906 -25,306 Contribution to the African Development Bank: Paid-in capital............................................... 3,602 2,037 2,037 2,037 -1,565 ................ ................ (Limitation on callable capital subscriptions)................ (88,334) (31,919) (31,919) (31,919) (-56,415) ................ ................ Contribution to the African Development Fund.................. 134,343 140,584 135,684 105,000 -29,343 -35,584 -30,684 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, African Development Bank............................. 137,945 142,621 137,721 107,037 -30,908 -35,584 -30,684 Contribution to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development: Paid-in capital............................................... ................ 10 ................ 10 +10 ................ +10 (Limitation on callable capital subscriptions)................ (2,250) ................ ................ ................ (-2,250) ................ ................ Contribution to the International Fund for Agricultural 14,850 18,072 18,072 18,072 +3,222 ................ ................ Development...................................................... ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, International Financial Institutions................. 1,273,220 1,498,950 1,352,862 1,346,882 +73,662 -152,068 -5,980 International Organizations and Programs Appropriation..................................................... 326,163 289,400 333,400 313,925 -12,238 +24,525 -19,475 ============================================================================================================================= Total, title V, Multilateral economic assistance............ 1,599,383 1,788,350 1,686,262 1,660,807 +61,424 -127,543 -25,455 (Limitation on callable capital subscript).................. (98,711) (39,219) (39,219) (39,219) (-59,492) ................ ................ ============================================================================================================================= TITLE VI--GENERAL PROVISIONS Sec. 694 material support......................................... ................ ................ ................ 1,000 +1,000 +1,000 +1,000 Sec. 699 Global Fund additional amount............................ ................ ................ ................ 40,000 +40,000 +40,000 +40,000 Sec. 699 Economic Support fund (rescission)....................... ................ ................ ................ -40,000 -40,000 -40,000 -40,000 Expenditure transfer (Sec. 540)................................... ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ ................ Sec. 6084 Security in Asia........................................ 9,900 ................ ................ ................ -9,900 ................ ................ Rescission........................................................ -231,350 ................ ................ ................ +231,350 ................ ................ ATB pay raise (Sec. 111 of H.J. Res. 20).......................... -1,746 ................ ................ ................ +1,746 ................ ................ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Total, title VI, General Provisions......................... -223,196 ................ ................ 1,000 +224,196 +1,000 +1,000 Appropriations.......................................... (8,154) ................ ................ (41,000) (+32,846) (+41,000) (+41,000) Rescissions............................................. (-231,350) ................ ................ (-40,000) (+191,350) (-40,000) (-40,000) ============================================================================================================================= Grand total................................................. 37,127,661 35,102,620 34,401,900 34,401,900 -2,725,761 -700,720 ................ Appropriations.......................................... (31,672,603) (35,102,620) (34,401,900) (34,441,900) (+2,769,297) (-660,720) (+40,000) Emergency appropriations................................ (5,686,408) ................ ................ ................ (-5,686,408) ................ ................ Rescissions............................................. (-231,350) ................ ................ (-40,000) (+191,350) (-40,000) (-40,000) (By transfer)............................................... (26,730) (27,000) (27,000) (37,000) (+10,270) (+10,000) (+10,000) (Transfer out).............................................. (-30,679) (-21,000) (-33,000) (189,000) (+219,679) (+210,000) (+222,000) (Limitation on administrative expenses)..................... (41,600) (41,900) (41,900) (41,900) (+300) ................ ................ (Limitation on callable capital subscript).................. (98,711) (39,219) (39,219) (39,219) (-59,492) ................ ................ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------