|
|
 |
 |
Crews Plug Levee Break a Week
after Storm in New Orleans
Pakistan
Times
Foreign Desk
NEW ORLEANS (US): A week
after Hurricane Ka trina
swept through, engineers plugged the levee break that had swamped much of
the city and floodwaters began to recede, but along with the good news came
the mayor's direst prediction yet: as many as 10,000 dead.
Crews had put up metal sheets and dropped 3,000-pound sandbags from
helicopters onto the 17th Street canal leading to Lake Pontchartrain to plug
the 200-foot-wide gap, and water was being pumped from the canal back into
the lake.
State officials and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers say once the canal
level is drawn down two feet, Pumping Station No. 6 can begin pumping water
out of the bowl-shaped city.
Some parts of the city already showed slipping floodwaters as the repair
neared completion, with the low-lying Ninth Ward dropping more than a foot.
In downtown New Orleans, some streets were merely wet rather than swamped.
"We're starting to make the kind of progress that I kind of expected
earlier," New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said even before the plug of the
break, which opened up a day after the hurricane and flooded 80 percent of
the city.
The news came as many of the 460,000 residents of suburban Jefferson Parish
waited in a line of cars that stretched for miles to briefly see their
flooded homes, and to scoop up soaked wedding pictures and other cherished
mementoes.
Perspective
"A lot of these people built these houses anticipating some flood water but
nobody imagined this," sobbed Diane Dempsey, a 59-year-old retired Army
lieutenant colonel who could get no closer than the water line a mile from
her Metairie home. "I'm going to pay someone to get me back there, anything
I have to do."
"I won't be getting inside today unless I get some scuba gear," added Jack
Rabito, a 61-year-old bar owner who waited for a ride to visit his one-story
home that had water lapping to the gutters.
Katharine Dastugue was overjoyed to find that floodwaters had gone across
her lawn but stopped just inches from her doorstep. As she stood waiting for
a boat to take her in, she made a list of things she hoped to salvage before
being forced to leave again Wednesday.
"If I can just get my kids' baby photos," she said. "You can't replace
those."
In New Orleans, Nagin upticked his estimate of the probable death toll in
his city from merely thousands, telling NBC's "Today" show, "It wouldn't be
unreasonable to have 10,000."
As law enforcement officers and even bands of civilians — including actor
Sean Penn — launched door-to-door searches of the city for survivors, they
were running up against a familiar obstacle: People who had been trapped
more than a week in damaged homes yet refused to leave.
"We have advised people that this city has been destroyed," said Deputy
Police Superintendent W.J. Riley. "There is nothing here for them and no
reason for them to stay — no food, no jobs, nothing."
Riley, who estimated fewer than 10,000 people were left in the city, said
some simply did not want to leave their homes — while others were hanging
back to engage in criminal activities, such as looting.
Nagin said the city had the authority to force residents to evacuate but
didn't say if it was taking that step. He did, however, detail one
heavy-handed tactic: Water will no longer be handed out to people who refuse
to leave.
With almost a third of New Orleans' police force missing in action, a
caravan of law enforcement vehicles, emblazoned with emblems from across the
nation and blue lights flashing, poured into the city to help establish
order on the city's anarchic streets.
Between 400 to 500 officers on New Orleans' 1600-member force were
unaccounted for. Some lost their homes. Some were looking for families.
"Some simply left because they said they could not deal with the
catastrophe," Riley said. Officers were being cycled off duty and given
five-day vacations in Las Vegas and Atlanta, where they also would receive
counseling.
At a news conference in Baton Rouge, police Superintendent Eddie Compass
denied that officers deserted in droves, acknowledging some officers
abandoned their jobs but saying he didn't know how many.
Suicide
Two police officers killed themselves. Another was shot in the head. Compass
said 150 had to be rescued from eight feet of water and others had gotten
infections from walking through the murky soup of chemicals and pollutants
in flooded areas.
"No police department in the history of the world was asked to do what we
were asked," Compass said with a mix of anger and pride.
The leader of troops patrolling New Orleans declared the city largely free
of the lawlessness that plagued it in the days following the hurricane. And
he angrily lashed out at a reporter who suggested search-and-rescue
operations were being stymied by random gunfire and lawlessness.
"Go on the streets of New Orleans — it's secure," said Army Lt. Gen. Russel
Honore. "Have you been to New Orleans? Did anybody accost you?"
Hopeful signs of recovery were accompanied by President Bush's second visit
to Louisiana, which exposed a continued rift between state and federal
officials over the slowness of a relief effort. The first significant convoy
of food, water and medicine didn't arrive in New Orleans until four full
days after the hurricane, and the mayor and others said some survivors died
awaiting relief.
Louisiana's largest newspaper, The Times-Picayune, called for the firing of
every official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency in an open letter
to President Bush that it published.
At a stop in Baton Rouge, Bush said all levels of the government were doing
their best, and he pledged: "So long as any life is in danger, we've got
work to do."
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco has refused to sign over National Guard
control to the federal government and has turned to a Clinton administration
official, former Federal Emergency Management Agency chief James Lee Witt,
to help run relief efforts.
Blanco, a Democrat, was not informed of the timing of Bush's visit, nor was
she immediately invited to meet him or travel with him. In fact, Blanco's
office didn't know when Bush was coming until told by reporters.
Late Monday, Blanco denied there was tension with Bush.
"We'd like to stop the voices out there trying to create a divide. There is
no divide," she said. "Every leader in this nation wants to see this problem
solved."
In Texas, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt declared a
public health emergency for that state, saying it would speed up federal
assistance to help almost 240,000 storm evacuees — the most of any state.
While the New Orleans' refugees were mostly poor and black, Jefferson Parish
brought the storm's destruction to a much wider economic cross-section.
The sprawling parish stretches from Grand Isle on the Gulf of Mexico to Lake
Pontchartrain in the north, and includes some of the metropolitan area's
most exclusive neighborhoods.
In the enclave of Old Metairie, the rows of palatial, six-bedroom homes
sustained little structural damage but had some of the worst flooding. Water
rippled up the knobs at front doors and completely covered Mercedes-Benzes
and BMWs in garages.
Many residents were happy that the storm spared their homes, but angry that
the failure of the levee system left them swamped. Some were considering a
lawsuit against the federal government for having a levee that could survive
no more than a Category 3 hurricane.
"That's what's so devastating, that goddamned levee breaking," said Bobby
Patrick, who is now staying in Houston. "My home didn't lose a shingle but
it's got six feet of water in it."
Of Looters
Since the storm, rumors had swirled that looters had crossed over the parish
line and begun breaking into evacuated homes in Jefferson. Many were
relieved to return home Monday to find their belongings untouched.
Across the neighborhood, residents took what items they could fit in a boat.
One woman loaded up her boat with her collection of cashmere sweaters, her
cat and the 1957 Leica camera that belonged to her grandfather. A man packed
his pickup truck with his silverware, his wife's clothes and a cherished
animal figurine.
Unlike the poor in New Orleans, these refugees had other places to go. And
few here planned to stay through what could be a long recovery. With police
checkpoints on every major street corner, even looting was not a major
concern.
Said personal trainer Rod McClave: "I'm more concerned about them damaging
my stuff just for the hell of it."●
|
 |
 |
ADVERTISEMENTS
 |
|
|
Place Your Ads Here, Email:
Marketing@PakistanTimes.net |