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Evacuations Finally Appear to Increase
USA Yahoo Information news ^ | By ROBERT TANNER, AP National Writer

Posted on 09/03/2005 12:12:53 PM PDT by anonymoussierra

NEW ORLEANS - Planes, trains and buses delivered refugees to safety on Saturday as the evacuation of this ruined city finally appeared to pick up steam.

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Buses had evacuated most people from the frightening confines of the Superdome by early morning. At the equally squalid convention center, thousands of people began pushing and dragging their belongings up the street to more than a dozen air-conditioned buses, the mood more numb than jubilant.

More than 50,000 people had been trapped for days at the two filthy, sweltering buildings, suffering from a lack of food, water or medical attention. Help came too late for a number of them — dead bodies were a common sight, in wheelchairs, wrapped in blankets or just abandoned.

Thousands of people were at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, where fewer than 200 remained in a medical triage unit where officials said 3,000 to 5,000 people had been treated since the beginning of the storm.

"The hallways are filled, the floors are filled. There are thousands of people there," said Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., who was at the airport. "A lot more than eight to 10 people are dying a day. It's a distribution problem. The doctors are doing a great job, the nurses are doing a great job."

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Since the cavalry arrived in New Orleans on Friday, more than 25,000 residents have been evacuated, Mike Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said at a briefing Saturday morning in Baton Rouge.

Both the number of people left in the city and the death toll remained unknown, because people continued showing up at evacuation sites and dead bodies were still being counted, Brown said.

"There are people in apartments and hotels that you didn't know were there," Army Brig. Gen. Mark Graham said at the briefing.

At the convention center, Yolanda Sanders stood at a barricade clutching her cocker spaniel, Toto. She had been waiting to be evacuated for five days.

"I had faith that they'd come. I feel good that I know I can get to my family," she said. Sanders didn't know yet where they were taking her, but "anyplace is better than here. People are dying over there."

Refugees filed past corpses to get to the buses and left garbage bags and suitcases full of belongings at the side of the road because there was no room. National Guardsmen confiscated knives and letter openers from people before they got on the buses.

Helicopters were removing the sickest people from the center, and two of the city's most troubled hospitals were evacuated Friday after desperate doctors spent days making tough choices about which patients got dwindling supplies of food, water and medicines.

"We're just trying to ease their pain, give them a little bit of dignity and get them out of here," said Lt. Col. Connie McNabb.

At the south end of the convention center, hundreds of people stumbled toward helicopters, dehydrated and nearly passing out from exhaustion. Many had to be carried by National Guard troops and police on stretchers. And some were being pushed up the street on office chairs and on dollies.

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A Saks Fifth Avenue store billowed smoke Saturday, as did rows of warehouses on the east bank of the Mississippi River, where corrugated roofs buckled and tiny explosions erupted. Gunfire — almost two dozen shots — broke out in the French Quarter overnight.

As the warehouse district burned, Ron Seitzer, 61, washed his dirty laundry in the even dirtier waters of the Mississippi River and said he didn't know how much longer he could stay without water or power, surrounded by looters.

"I've never even had a nightmare or a beautiful dream about this," he said as he watched the warehouses burn. "People are just not themselves."

In what looked like a scene from a Third World country Friday, some outside the convention center threw their arms heavenward and others hollered profanities as camouflage-green vehicles and supply trucks finally rolled through axle-deep floodwaters into what remained of New Orleans.

National Guard Lt. Col. Jerry Crooks said troops had served more than 70,000 meals outside the convention center and had 130,000 more on hand. Watching the caravan, Leschia Radford sang the praises of a higher power.

"Lord, I thank you for getting us out of here!" Radford shrieked.

But on Saturday, hope was overtaken by frustration as people continued to wait. A dead man lay on sidewalk under a blanket with a stream of blood running down the pavement toward the gutter. People said he died violently.

"We're hurting out here, man. We got to get help. All we want is someone to feel our pain, that's all," said Tasheka Johnson, 24.

About a dozen people who headed down the street to look for food and water said they were turned back by a soldier who pulled a gun.

"We had to get something to eat. What are they doing pulling a gun?" said Richard Johnson, 28.

The soldiers' arrival-in-force came amid angry complaints from local officials that the federal government had bungled the relief effort and let people die in the streets for lack of food, water or medicine as the city was overtaken by looting, rape and arson.

"The people of our city are holding on by a thread," Mayor Ray Nagin warned in a statement to CNN. "Time has run out. Can we survive another night? And who can we depend on? Only God knows."

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The president took a land and air tour of hard-hit areas of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama on Friday, and admitted of the relief effort: "The results are not enough." Congress passed a $10.5 billion disaster aid package, and Bush quickly signed the measure.

Gov. Kathleen Blanco said the military presence helped calm a jittery city.

"We are seeing a show of force. It's putting confidence back in our hearts and in the minds of our people," Blanco said. "We're going to make it through."

Guard members carrying rifles also arrived at the Louisiana Superdome, where bedraggled people — many of them trapped there since the weekend — stretched around the perimeter of the building. Lt. Gen. Steven Blum, commander of the National Guard, said 7,000 Guard members would be in the city by Saturday.

All the victims in the Superdome were supposed to have been evacuated by dawn Saturday, but shortly after midnight, the buses stopped rolling. Between 2,000 and 5,000 people still in the stadium could be there until Sunday, according to the Texas Air National Guard.

Within minutes of the soldiers' arrival at the convention center, they set up six food and water lines. The crowd was for the most part orderly and grateful.

Diane Sylvester, 49, was the first person through the line. "Something is better than nothing," she said of her two bottles of water and pork rib meal. "I feel great to see the military here. I know I'm saved."

With Houston's Astrodome already full with 15,000 storm refugees, that city opened two more centers to accommodate an additional 10,000. Dallas and San Antonio also had agreed to take refugees.

One group of Katrina's victims lurched from one tragedy to another: A bus carrying evacuees from the Superdome overturned on a Louisiana highway, killing at least one person and injuring many others.

At the broken levee along Lake Pontchartrain that swamped nearly 80 percent of New Orleans, helicopters dropped 3,000-pound sandbags into the breach and pilings were being pounded into place to seal off the waters. Engineers also were developing a plan to create new breaches in the levees so that a combination of gravity and pumping and would drain the water out of the city, a process that could take weeks.


TOPICS: US: Mississippi
KEYWORDS: usa
thank you
1 posted on 09/03/2005 12:12:54 PM PDT by anonymoussierra
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Comment #2 Removed by Moderator

To: anonymoussierra

I would rather spend 5 days in squalid conditions than be found dead in the attic of my home.


3 posted on 09/03/2005 12:22:31 PM PDT by RTINSC
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To: sergey1973; jb6; GarySpFc; Gucho; blackie; Peach; snugs; LUV W; Salvation; NYer

ping persons

thank you all


4 posted on 09/03/2005 12:24:33 PM PDT by anonymoussierra (Deus Meus, Credo in Te, Domine Iesu, Noverim Me,Iesu Dulcissime, Redemptor)
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To: anonymoussierra
More than 50,000 people had been trapped for days at the two filthy, sweltering buildings, suffering from a lack of food, water or medical attention.

That's cause they were supposed to be collection points for evacuation but the Gov and Major waited TOO long and the transportaion never happened
5 posted on 09/03/2005 12:43:27 PM PDT by uncbob
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To: RTINSC

True. Better yet would be prepared like some of the people seem to be that are waiting on their 2nd floor to be evac.

One of the newscasters had a desperate sounding report of "we have a call from a man and wife blocaded in their home". Turns out the pair were both doctors and they wanted to stay to help afterwards. After a few ventures out they realized with the thugs it was too dangerous to try to offer aid to anyone so they hunkered down in their townhouse. The newscaster was all worried for their survival. The woman said basically "we'll just wait until things calm down. We've got plenty of water and food (and they even still had their gas stove working!). The newscator was questioning them about the water. "We filled up the bathtub with water beforehand and have lots of jugs of water too". It almost seemed beyond the comprehension of the newscaster.


6 posted on 09/03/2005 12:57:13 PM PDT by geopyg ("It's not that liberals don't know much, it's just that what they know just ain't so." (~ R. Reagan))
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To: geopyg

An article I read on Monday just as the storm was about to hit had the mayor saying they had evaced %80 of the people (about 100,000 remained based on my math).

So 50,000 left from the superdome and astrodome. Lets say half again as many figured out a way on their own. that still leaves 25,000 not accounted for. Hopefully the major was off in his estimate, and that I'm off on mine.


7 posted on 09/03/2005 1:00:36 PM PDT by geopyg ("It's not that liberals don't know much, it's just that what they know just ain't so." (~ R. Reagan))
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To: anonymoussierra
We're hurting out here, man. We got to get help. All we want is someone to feel our pain, that's all," said Tasheka Johnson, 24.

Paging the Slick One.

8 posted on 09/03/2005 1:10:33 PM PDT by heartwood
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To: anonymoussierra
You mean the evil doers stopped shooting at the people using boats for rescue. Stopped shooting at the helicopter trying to deliver medicine to the hospital.

Stopped shooting at firefighters.

Stopped preventing help from arriving?

Well, how nice! FINALLY.

9 posted on 09/03/2005 1:19:52 PM PDT by OldFriend (MAJ. TAMMY DUCKWORTH ~ A NATIONAL TREASURE)
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To: uncbob
Only one highway in. 10 if I am not mistaken. The bridge over Lake Pontchatrain demolished.

Mother Nature and incompetence KILLED people.

Pray for the innocent and damn the evil ones.

10 posted on 09/03/2005 1:21:16 PM PDT by OldFriend (MAJ. TAMMY DUCKWORTH ~ A NATIONAL TREASURE)
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To: All

42,000 evacuated so far (per USACE)

1000's more still in New Orleans


11 posted on 09/03/2005 1:24:13 PM PDT by stlnative
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To: stlnative

And the big question still remains, "Why didn't they all leave when they were ordered to before Katrina hit?"

Bet they do next time!


12 posted on 09/03/2005 1:51:24 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: anonymoussierra
evacuation of this ruined city finally appeared to pick up steam


Bump
13 posted on 09/03/2005 2:00:11 PM PDT by Gucho
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