Category Five Hurricane hit Cuba last
year--no deaths
The Dominion
by Dru Oja Jay
September 03, 2005
In the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, the Bush
Administration and state and federal officials have come under heavy criticism
for their handling of the situation.
"This is a national emergency. This is a national disgrace," New Orleans
Emergency Operations head Terry Ebbert told the press. "[The Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA)] has been here three days, yet there is no command and
control. We can send massive amounts of aid to tsunami victims, but we can't
bail out New Orleans."
In an uncharacteristically tense interview with Louisiana Senator Mary
Landrieu, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper said, "when [people] hear politicians
thanking one another, it cuts them the wrong way right now, because there was a
body on the streets of this town yesterday being eaten by rats because this
woman has been laying in the street for 48 hours..."
New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin struck a similar tone in a passionate radio
interview. [click to listen]
"I don't want to see anybody do anymore goddamn press conferences. Put a
moratorium on press conferences. Don't do another press conference until the
resources are in this city." "Don't tell me 40,000 people are coming here.
They're not here. It's too doggone late."
Responses to the disaster seem to be split between those who are on the
ground and those who are experiencing the situation from afar. A CNN report
called it "the big disconnect". Political commentary web site Wonkette joked
that CNN anchor Anderson Cooper had "gone native", shedding the often-mocked
feigned grief of the newscaster in favour of an angry demand for
accountability.
Newscasters aside, the victims are largely those who could not afford to
leave the city, a group that is decidedly black and poor.
"When something happens like this, most aren't able to pack up and drive 300
miles and buy gas and check into a hotel with no credit card," Robert Bullard,
founder and director of the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark
Atlanta University told BET news.
"This is a race and class issue."
"Nearly every rescued person, temporary resident of the Superdome, looter,
or loiterer on the high ground of the freeway I saw on TV was
African-American," Slate editor-at-large Jack Schafer wrote.
"When disaster strikes, Americans—especially journalists—like to
pretend that no matter who gets hit, no matter what race, color, creed, or
socioeconomic level they hail from, we're all in it together."
"But we aren't one united race, we aren't one united class, and Katrina
didn't hit all folks equally," Schafer concluded.
A few days before Hurricane Katrina hit, census data revealed that 37
million Americans were living in poverty, up from 31.6 million in 2000 a total
rate of 12.7 per cent. African Americans have a poverty rate of 24.4 per cent.
According to census figures, 67 per cent of New Orleans' population is black,
and evidence suggests that a much higher proportion of those left behind are
African Americans.
As the storm hit, the dominant account in the media was that the tens of
thousands who remained in the city "chose" to stay behind. While many chose to
ride out the storm, many thousands of others were unable to leave the city.
Evacuation: History Repeated
"If the government asks people to evacuate, the government has some
responsibility to provide an option for those people who can't evacuate and are
at the whim of Mother Nature," said Joe Cook of the New Orleans ACLU.
Cook told a reporter that one year ago, when Hurricane Ivan forced the
evacuation of New Orleans in September of 2004.
The same report, entitled "Ivan exposes flaws in N.O.'s disaster plans," noted
that "Those who had the money to flee Hurricane Ivan ran into hours-long
traffic jams."
"Those too poor to leave the city had to find their own shelter - a policy
that was eventually reversed, but only a few hours before the deadly storm
struck land."
Another local news report noted that "approximately 80,000 residents... had
no way to get out of the city" during Hurricane Ivan.
According to one eyewitness account, "Three days ago, police and national
guard troops told citizens to head toward the Crescent City Connection Bridge
to await transportation out of the area."
"The citizens trekked over to the Convention Center and waited for the buses
which they were told would take them to Houston or Alabama or somewhere else,
out of this area."
"It's been 3 days, and the buses have yet to appear."
New Orleans resident Jordan Flaherty wrote that buses stopping in at refugee
camps continue to be haphazard and unorganized. "When a bus would come through,
it would stop at a random spot, state police would open a gap in one of the
barricades, and people would rush for the bus, with no information given about
where the bus was going," wrote Flaherty.
"I was told that if you boarded a bus bound for Arkansas, even people with
family and a place to stay in Baton Rouge would not be allowed to get out of
the bus as it passed through Baton Rouge."
In an interview from the refugee-filled New Orleans Convention Centre, NBC
photojournalist Tony Zumbado said that Harry Connick Jr., a well known
musician, was the "only person of authority... to go in there and tell them
that things are going to be ok."
"I don't want to sound negative against anybody or any official," Zumbado
continued, but "[officials] left and they're there on their own -- there's no
police, there's no authority."
Zumbado described the scene: "Dead people around the walls of the convention
center, laying in the middle of the street in their dying chairs. ... They were
just covered up ... Babies, two babies dehydrated and died. I'm telling you, I
couldn't take it."
Was Flooding Preventable?
In June 2004, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported: "For the first time
in 37 years, federal budget cuts have all but stopped major work on the New
Orleans area's east bank hurricane levees, a complex network of concrete walls,
metal gates and giant earthen berms that won't be finished for at least another
decade."
The Chicago Tribune followed up on September 1, 2005: "Despite continuous
warnings that a catastrophic hurricane could hit New Orleans, the Bush
administration and Congress in recent years have repeatedly denied full funding
for hurricane preparation and flood control."
The Tribune report attributed funding cuts "in part" to the cost of the war
on Iraq, and cited documents from the Army Corps of Engineers that showed that
seven contracts had been delayed.
"I'm not saying it wouldn't still be flooded, but I do feel that if it had
been totally funded, there would be less flooding than you have," former
Republican Mississippi congressman Michael Parker told the Tribune. Parker
headed the Army Corps of Engineers until March 2002, when "he was ousted after
publicly criticizing a Bush administration proposal to cut the corps'
budget."
On the day the hurricane hit, the Times-Picayune declared: "No one can say
they didn't see it coming."
In an exclusive interview broadcast on ABC's Good Morning America, George
Bush said "I don't think anyone anticipated the breach of the levees."
The interviewer, Diane Sawyer, did not pursue the line of questioning any
further.
"This is what happens when there is a natural disaster of this scope," First
Lady Laura Bush said while touring a refugee camp.
Many critics and journalists disagree.
At least one commentator compared the US relief effort to that of Cuba,
which was hit by a Category 5 Hurricane Ivan last year. Despite seas that
"surged 600 metres inland," 1.3 million people were successfully evacuated,
amphibious tanks were used to retrieve people in flooded areas, and no deaths
were reported.
Iraq Comparisons
The situation in New Orleans has been repeatedly compared to that in
Iraq.
Admitting that he would "probably get in a whole bunch of trouble," Mayor
Nagin made one of many comparisons. "Did the Iraqi people request that we go in
there? Did they ask us to go in there? What is more important?"
"We authorized $8 billion to go to Iraq lickety-quick. After 9/11, we gave
the president unprecedented powers lickety-quick to take care of New York and
other places... You mean to tell me that a place where you probably have
thousands of people that have died and thousands more that are dying every day,
that we can't figure out a way to authorize the resources that we need? Come
on, man."
"It's downtown Baghdad," tourist Denise Bollinger told the Associated Press,
referring to looting. "It's insane."
When looters trashed government buildings, libraries, museums and stores
following the US bombing of Baghdad in April of 2003, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld told the press that "Freedom's untidy, and free people are free
to make mistakes and commit crimes and do bad things."
Following the appearance of gangs of looters in New Orleans, Louisiana
Governor Kathleen Blanco declared a shoot-to-kill policy for anyone found
looting. "These troops are battle-tested. They have M-16s and are locked and
loaded. These troops know how to shoot and kill and they are more than willing
to do so if necessary and I expect they will," Blanco added. Many of the
National Guard soldiers being deployed are returning from tours in Iraq.
Some critics have said that officials are more concerned with protecting
private property than saving lives.
The looting has unleashed invective from some commentators, who have
referred to looters as "vermin" and "animalistic" and declared that they need
to be "blown apart". 1,500 police were diverted from rescue operations and
reassigned to "anti-looting duty".
A wave of popular outrage forced apologies from news services when captions
on wire photos of white people taking items from a convenience store were
labelled "finding", while similar photos of African Americans were marked as
depicting "looters".
Pre-existing racial and class-based tension appeared to flare up with the
looting, a dynamic left implicit in most reports. "To be honest with you,
people are oppressed all their lives, man, it's an opportunity to get back at
society," one young New Orleans native told the Associated Press.
Another man, reportedly seen carrying ten pairs of jeans in his arms, yelled
"that's everybody's store" when questioned by a reporter.
Few media reports, however, have highlighted the oppressive poverty that
predated the Hurricane. New Orleans resident Jordan Flaherty describes the
city:
The city has a 40% illiteracy rate, and over 50% of
black ninth graders will not graduate in four years. Louisiana spends on
average $4,724 per child's education and ranks 48th in the country for lowest
teacher salaries. The equivalent of more than two classrooms of young people
drop out of Louisiana schools every day and about 50,000 students are absent
from school on any given day. Far too many young black men from New Orleans end
up enslaved in Angola Prison, a former slave plantation where inmates still do
manual farm labor, and over 90% of inmates eventually die in the prison. It is
a city where industry has left, and most remaining jobs are are low-paying,
transient, insecure jobs in the service economy.
Racism: On What Scale?
Contemporary racism can usually only be imputed from facts like those cited
above, due to the sensitivity of most public figures to the political cost of
making overtly racist statements. However, this was not always the case.
New York Times columnist David Brooks recently wrote that the great
Mississippi flood of 1927 "ripped the veil off the genteel, feudal relations
between whites and blacks, and revealed the festering iniquities."
"Blacks were rounded up into work camps and held by armed guards. They were
prevented from leaving as the waters rose. A steamer, the Capitol, played 'Bye
Bye Blackbird' as it sailed away. The racist violence that followed the floods
helped persuade many blacks to move north."
While there were no reports of "Bye Bye Blackbird" playing on the stereos in
SUVs of wealthy New Orleans residents who fled the city, racial politics
continue to permeate the social fabric of the southern United States.
For example, New Orleans -- home to "some of the most polluted areas in the
country" -- is facing a "worst case" scenario, according to Hugh Kaufman, a
senior analyst with the Environmental Protection Agency. "There's not enough
money in the gross national product of the US to dispose of the amount of
hazardous material in the area," Kaufman told reporters.
"Even when there's no natural disaster, Blacks have lived the closest" to
polluted sites, Robert Bullard told BET News. "These issues have been
exacerbated by the hurricane. So now you have a combination of things coming
together, flooding and the mix of pollutants. A hurricane releases all that
stuff."
"Then when you talk about a group of people who lack health insurance and
homeowner's insurance, when something like this happens, you know just who is
going to be the most vulnerable," Bullard added, calling the sites a product of
"environmental racism".
"Let's see who gets the levees put back in first. It's downtown, the French
Quarter. It's sure not going to be the neighborhoods," said Bullard.
While the exact impact of racism is difficult to determine, the status of
funding to flood-prevention efforts and wetland restoration suggest, for many
commentators, that the predominantly black and disproporionately poor New
Orleans is the victim of a broader systemic racism. Though it is rarely
discussed, few argue that the poor and oppressed have the political capital
necessary to compete for the federal funding and social programs that often go
to wealthier cities and neighbourhoods.
A Political Problem?
As news of the grave situation in New Orleans spreads and the scene becomes
the international disgrace of a superpower in addition its status as an ongoing
humanitarian tragedy, a political battle is being fought over the meaning of
the event. While criticisms of the lack of response at all levels of government
increase, counter-accusations of "politicization" are flying.
"This is a time when the whole country needs to come together to help those
in the region, and that's where our focus is," White House Press Secretary
Scott McClellan said at a press conference. "This is not a time to get into any
finger-pointing or politics or anything of that nature."
Mayor Nagin took the opposite approach. Asked what people could do to help
those stuck in New Orleans, Nagin responded: "Organize people to write letters
and make calls to their congressmen, to the president, to the governor. Flood
their doggone offices with requests to do something."
"This is ridiculous," the Mayor added.
» San Francisco Bayview: 'This is criminal': Malik Rahim reports from
New Orleans
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