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WEST HAWAII TODAY | THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015
US orders up to 450
more troops to Iraq
WASHINGTON
—
President Barack Obama
ordered the deployment of
up to 450 more American
troops to Iraq onWednesday
in an effort to reverse major
battlefield losses to the
Islamic State, an escalation
but not a significant shift
in the struggling U.S. strat-
egy to defeat the extremist
group.
The U.S. forces will open
a fifth training site in the
country, this one dedicated
specifically to helping the
Iraqi Army integrate Sunni
tribes into the fight, an ele-
ment seen as a crucial to
driving the Islamic State out
of the Sunni-majority areas
of western Iraq.
The immediate objective
is to win back the key city of
Ramadi, which was seized
by extremists last month.
The U.S. is insistent that
Americans will not have
a combat role. But in the
deployment of American
forces and the equipping of
Iraqi troops, the U.S. must
make sure “that we can be
nimble because clearly this
is a very nimble enemy,”
Deputy National Security
Adviser Benjamin Rhodes
told reporters.
The plan is not a change
in the U.S. strategy, the
administration says, but
addresses a need to get
Sunnis more involved in the
fight. Some local citizens in
Sunni-majority areas fear an
invasion and reprisals from
Iran-backed Shiite militia
even more than domination
by the Islamic State, under-
scoring a need for any mil-
itary campaign there to be
led by local fighters.
Congress, states
must find answer if
high court kills health
subsidies
WASHINGTON
—
Congress and the states will
need to find an answer if
the Supreme Court strikes
down the federal subsidies
that are a foundation of
President Barack Obama’s
health care law, his health
secretary told lawmakers
Wednesday.
Sylvia Burwell also said
the president would reject
any
proposals
restor-
ing those subsidies that
Republican lawmakers have
already produced because
all would roll back crucial
elements of the overhaul
law, in effect repealing it.
Burwell’s comments to
the House Ways and Means
Committee marked a con-
tinuation of Obama admin-
istration efforts to pressure
Republicans should the
justices void subsidies that
help millions afford health
insurance. A decision is
expected this month.
The GOP runs Congress,
and 26 of the 34 states likely
to be hardest hit by such
a decision have Republican
governors.
Pope creates tribunal
for cases of bishops
who fail to protect
children from
pedophile priests
VATICAN CITY — Pope
Francis took the biggest
step yet to crack down on
bishops who cover up for
priests who rape and molest
children, creating a new
tribunal inside the Vatican
to hear cases of bishops
accused of failing to protect
their flock.
The initiative, announced
Wednesday, has significant
legal and theological impli-
cations, since bishops have
long been considered mas-
ters of their dioceses and
largely unaccountable when
they bungle their job, with
the Vatican stepping in only
in cases of gross negligence.
That reluctance to inter-
vene has prompted years
of criticism from abuse vic-
tims, advocacy groups and
others that the Vatican had
failed to punish or forcibly
remove bishops who moved
predator priests from parish
to parish, where they could
rape again, rather than
report them to police or
remove them from ministry.
By wire sources
in brief
Murder charge dropped against woman who induced abortion
ALBANY, Ga. — A Georgia
prosecutor dropped a murder
charge Wednesday but is pur-
suing a drug possession count
against a 23-year-old woman
accused of ending her pregnan-
cy without a prescription, using
pills she bought online.
Dougherty County District
Attorney Greg Edwards dis-
missed a malice murder charge
against 23-year-old Kenlissia
Jones, who spent about three
days in jail after seeking help at
a hospital.
But he said Jones still faces
a misdemeanor charge of pos-
sessing a dangerous drug, which
Georgia law defines as any drug
requiring a prescription.
The dismissal of the mur-
der charge police had used to
arrest Jones was praised by
Lynn Paltrow, an attorney and
executive director of National
Advocates for Pregnant Women
in New York.
But she said the case still illus-
trates a creeping trend of prose-
cuting women who exercise their
right to abortions.
Abortion-rights advocates and
opponents of abortion alike were
stunned by the proposed murder
charge.
Georgia has prohibited the
prosecution of women for feti-
cide or for performing illegal
abortions in cases involving their
own pregnancies. Edwards said
the arresting officers acted with-
in their authority and used “their
best understanding of the law,”
but that their understanding was
incorrect.
Edwards noted that police had
charged Jones without consulting
with his prosecuting attorneys.
Even abortion opponents fig-
ured the murder charge wouldn’t
stick.
Jones was arrested after seek-
ing help at a hospital Saturday.
A social worker told police that
Jones had taken four Cytotec
pills she ordered online after
breaking up with her boyfriend.
The pills induced labor and she
delivered the fetus, which did not
survive, in a car on the way to the
hospital, according to an Albany
police report.
While the Supreme Court
has declared American women
have legal rights to abortion,
states have laws that place lim-
its on where abortions can be
performed, who can perform
them and at what stages of preg-
nancy abortions are allowed.
Traditionally, those laws have
targeted doctors and other abor-
tion providers, but not women
seeking to end their pregnancies.
Abortion rights advocates
worry that this could be changing.
A phone number for Jones
was not accepting incoming
calls Thursday and there was no
answer at the address for her list-
ed on the police report.
BY KATHLEEN FOODY
AND RUSS BYNUM
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS