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One month after the quake, UN officials in Haiti find picture becoming clearer
One month after Haiti was torn apart by an earthquake, the scale of the disaster is still becoming apparent, the United Nations aid chief said today as he stressed that finding adequate shelter and sanitation remain the greatest challenges of the relief effort.
Girls less likely than boys to be freed from DR Congo’s ranks of child soldiers - UN
Despite efforts to end the use of child soldiers in the war-torn east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), youngsters are still being recruited within the ranks of both the rebels and the national army, with girls at particular risk of becoming sex slaves and less likely to be released, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said.
Single Mother Is Spared U.S. Court-Martial

Specialist Alexis Hutchinson’s plan for care of her son, Kamani, while she was to be deployed to Afghanistan fell through. However, she has avoided a court martial by the U.S. military.
Originally uploaded by Pan-African News Wire File Photos
February 12, 2010
Single Mother Is Spared Court-Martial
By JAMES DAO
New York Times
Specialist Alexis Hutchinson, a 21-year-old Army cook and single parent, was days from deploying to Afghanistan last fall when her mother backed out of an agreement to take care of her 10-month-old son for the duration of her one-year tour.
Specialist Hutchinsonâs mother, Angelique Hughes, had a child of her own at home and was also caring for a sick sister while running a day care center from her home in Oakland, Calif. Feeling overwhelmed, Ms. Hughes took the boy back to Savannah, Ga., where Specialist Hutchinson was based, and begged her to find someone else.
That is when Specialist Hutchinson did what might seem natural to a parent but to the Army was a serious offense: she stayed home with her child and missed her flight to Afghanistan. She was arrested and later charged with offenses that could have led to a court-martial and jail time.
On Thursday, Specialist Hutchinson received an other-than-honorable discharge, ending an impasse that had surprised many legal experts and spurred lively debate in military circles.
In a news release, the Third Infantry Division at Fort Stewart, Ga., said Specialist Hutchinsonâs rank had been reduced to private and that she would lose some Army and veteransâ benefits.
The statement asserted that evidence from other soldiers and Specialist Hutchinson herself indicated that she âdidnât intend to deploy to Afghanistan with her unit and deliberately sought ways out of the deployment.â
Rai Sue Sussman, Specialist Hutchinsonâs lawyer in San Francisco, said the soldier was prepared to deploy and that they would have rebutted those accusations at trial. âThis resolution will give Alexis closure and the ability to move on immediately, without a lengthy trial and possible jail term,â Ms. Sussman said.
Legal experts said it would have been extraordinary if Specialist Hutchinson had been court-martialed over child care issues, saying they could not recall a similar case. However, hundreds and perhaps thousands of soldiers have been administratively discharged for such problems in recent years.
Some legal experts speculated that Specialist Hutchinsonâs commanders threatened court-martial to send a message to other single-parent soldiers in the brigade. Last year, more than 10,000 single parents on active military duty deployed overseas.
âIt could be that they have a ton of single parents and deploy regularly and canât afford to have disruptions like this,â said Michelle M. Lindo McCluer, a former Air Force lawyer who is now director of the National Institute of Military Justice, a nonprofit group in Washington.
In its statement, the Third Infantry Division noted that there were many other single parents or dual-military families in Specialist Hutchinsonâs unit who deployed to Afghanistan. âThey have experienced similar challenges but have been able to overcome them so they could deploy with their units,â the statement said.
Specialist Hutchinsonâs case unfolded about the same time as the divisionâs commander was embroiled in another controversy. In December, the commander, Maj. Gen. Anthony A. Cucolo III, who oversees forces in northern Iraq, issued orders threatening to punish soldiers, married or single, who become pregnant. (Punishment was also threatened for sexual partners.) The general, who has sent home about eight soldiers from Iraq because of pregnancy, later backed off the threat of court-martialing such soldiers.
Raised in Oakland, Specialist Hutchinson was a member of the Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps in high school and then enlisted in the Army upon graduation. She wanted, she said in a written response to questions, âto get away from home and try something new.â Her son, Kamani, was born in January 2009.
Specialist Hutchinson declined to say anything about the boyâs father, other than that he had never been involved with Kamani. Ms. Hughes said she believed he was a former soldier.
Single parents are required to file family care plans months before deployment. In her plan, Specialist Hutchinson listed her mother as a long-term caregiver and in October she used a two-week leave to take her son to Oakland.
But it took only a few sleepless nights of caring for the infant for Ms. Hughes, 42, to decide she was in over her head. âI was working a full day and then staying up all night with Kamani,â she said.
Ms. Hughes said that she called Specialist Hutchinsonâs company commander to explain the problem and that he said the specialist could delay deployment for 30 days to find alternative care. But apparently the delay was never granted because Specialist Hutchinson was arrested in November when she returned to her post, Hunter Army Airfield, a day after missing her flight to Afghanistan. In January, she was charged with absence without leave, dereliction of duty, insubordinate conduct and missing movement.
Kevin Larson, a spokesman for Fort Stewart, said Specialist Hutchinson had been given a previous extension to work out her family care plan, though he could not say when. Mr. Larson also said that a ânotable national veterans organization,â which he declined to name, had offered to care for Kamani during Specialist Hutchinsonâs deployment, but that she refused the help.
The legal wrangling over Specialist Hutchinsonâs case stirred much discussion on blogs, with sympathizers wondering why the Army would prosecute a parent struggling with child care problems and critics questioning the soldierâs motives.
Ms. Hughes has heard some of that criticism firsthand. âPeople have said to me: âShe signed this contract. Sheâs supposed to go. Thatâs her first priority,â â Ms. Hughes said. âMy response is: âI donât think so. This is her child. This is her family. This is her priority. The military is a job.â â
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Some Haitian schools in worst quake-hit areas to reopen by April, UN says
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