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Evacuation showdown looms in New Orleans

Evacuation showdown looms in New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS – The prospect of Hurricane Katrina survivors being dragged from their homes loomed larger yesterday while lawmakers in Washington locked horns over probing the federal response to the disaster.

With officials saying anywhere between 10 000 to 15 000 people remained in New Orleans, police and soldiers faced some difficult choices in enforcing a mandatory order to empty the city. Mayor Ray Nagin authorised the use of force on Tuesday but, with a number of residents still awaiting voluntary evacuation, rescue teams have so far postponed physical confrontations with those determined to stay.Eventually, however, only the diehards will be left.”Once all the volunteer evacuations have taken place, then we’ll concentrate our efforts and our forces to mandatorily evacuate individuals,” New Orleans police chief Eddie Compass said, promising that his officers would use “the minimal amount of force necessary.”Federal troops have joined in the house-to-house search for survivors, but senior military officers made it clear they would stand back if it came to manhandling people out of their homes.”When this turns into a law enforcement issue, which we perceive forced evacuation is, regular troops would not be used,” said Major General Joseph Inge, deputy commander of the US Northern Command.As of Wednesday, there were 18 000 active-duty soldiers and 45 000 National Guard troops in the area of the US Gulf coast devastated by Hurricane Katrina on August 29.The decision to authorise forced evictions was clearly taken reluctantly, with officials anxious to avoid traumatic scenes involving people who have already suffered extreme deprivations since Katrina hit.In giving the order, Nagin cited the growing threat of disease posed by the putrid waters surrounding the wooden homes of many of the holdouts.Health authorities said five people evacuated from the Katrina disaster zone had died as a result of contact with contaminated water.The five had been killed by vibrio vulnificus, “a bacteria that can enter somebody through a cut, a scratch or a wound,” said Tom Skinner, a spokesman for the government Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).Other medical officials said the deaths should not be seen as presaging an epidemic, as the bacteria preys mostly on the very old or those already suffering from a chronic illness.The floodwaters in low-lying New Orleans have receded as US Army engineers have brought more of the city’s damaged pumps back in operation.The drainage process is expected to take close to three months and Nagin warned the country to brace for some “awful” revelations as the dropping water levels reveal more of Katrina’s human cost.The mayor said as many as 10 000 people may have died in the city and a Louisiana health official revealed on Wednesday that some 25 000 body bags had been brought into the area.- Nampa-AFPMayor Ray Nagin authorised the use of force on Tuesday but, with a number of residents still awaiting voluntary evacuation, rescue teams have so far postponed physical confrontations with those determined to stay.Eventually, however, only the diehards will be left.”Once all the volunteer evacuations have taken place, then we’ll concentrate our efforts and our forces to mandatorily evacuate individuals,” New Orleans police chief Eddie Compass said, promising that his officers would use “the minimal amount of force necessary.”Federal troops have joined in the house-to-house search for survivors, but senior military officers made it clear they would stand back if it came to manhandling people out of their homes.”When this turns into a law enforcement issue, which we perceive forced evacuation is, regular troops would not be used,” said Major General Joseph Inge, deputy commander of the US Northern Command.As of Wednesday, there were 18 000 active-duty soldiers and 45 000 National Guard troops in the area of the US Gulf coast devastated by Hurricane Katrina on August 29.The decision to authorise forced evictions was clearly taken reluctantly, with officials anxious to avoid traumatic scenes involving people who have already suffered extreme deprivations since Katrina hit.In giving the order, Nagin cited the growing threat of disease posed by the putrid waters surrounding the wooden homes of many of the holdouts.Health authorities said five people evacuated from the Katrina disaster zone had died as a result of contact with contaminated water.The five had been killed by vibrio vulnificus, “a bacteria that can enter somebody through a cut, a scratch or a wound,” said Tom Skinner, a spokesman for the government Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).Other medical officials said the deaths should not be seen as presaging an epidemic, as the bacteria preys mostly on the very old or those already suffering from a chronic illness.The floodwaters in low-lying New Orleans have receded as US Army engineers have brought more of the city’s damaged pumps back in operation.The drainage process is expected to take close to three months and Nagin warned the country to brace for some “awful” revelations as the dropping water levels reveal more of Katrina’s human cost.The mayor said as many as 10 000 people may have died in the city and a Louisiana health official revealed on Wednesday that some 25 000 body bags had been brought into the area.- Nampa-AFP

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