Katrina: Political Row Grows

The political storm blown up by Hurricane Katrina was today growing as police officers in New Orleans prepared to make the first forcible removals of residents refusing to leave.
The political storm blown up by Hurricane Katrina was today growing as police officers in New Orleans prepared to make the first forcible removals of residents refusing to leave.

Arguments about the conduct of the relief effort and preparations for the long-expected disaster focused on the Federal Emergency Management Agency, where several senior officials were accused of being political placemen and director Michael Brown was charged with having overstated his experience.

In Brussels, a Nato meeting agreed to send at least two ships, with a capacity of 6,000 cubic metres, to help reconstruction.

However, Louisiana governor Kathleen Blanco wrote to the US president, George Bush, to protest that requests to the federal government for radio equipment and generators had still not been met after a week of waiting.

A final sweep of New Orleans for voluntary refugees was under way last night, but some locals were already being taken away by force. National Guard officers led at least three people away in plastic handcuffs.

Others were already giving up their attempts to hold out as water supplies ran out and floodwaters, clogged with sewage and toxic waste, failed to recede.

"Some are finally saying 'I've had enough'," Michael Keegan, a US immigration and customs enforcement spokesman said. "They are getting dehydrated. They are running out of food. There are human remains in different houses. The smells mess with your psyche."

The White House announced that Mr Bush would visit the affected areas for a third time at the weekend. The vice president, Dick Cheney, last night became the first top-level government official to tour New Orleans, but his rush through the Gulf coast states earned as much criticism as praise.

One New Orleans resident swore loudly at him as he toured the city. In the Mississippi city of Gulfport, a passer-by described the tour as a "waste of time and taxpayer money".

Even the former secretary of state Colin Powell criticised the government's response.

"There was more than enough warning over time about the dangers to New Orleans," Mr Powell told ABC news. "Not enough was done. I don't think advantage was taken of the time that was available to us, and I just don't know why." But he denied racism was to blame for the governmental foot-dragging.

In Washington, Congress approved a $52bn (£28bn) budget for additional emergency aid on top of $10.5bn already provided, and officials admitted the total bill was likely to exceed $100bn.

However, senior Democrats questioned whether the sum should be directed via Fema.

"After what we all have witnessed the past week or so, is there anyone in America who feels we should continue to rely exclusively on Fema to head the federal government's response to this tragedy?" the Senate minority leader, Harry Reid, asked.

Democrat leaders in congress also threatened to boycott the selection process for a committee that Republican leaders plan to establish to investigate the government's response to the disaster.

The Washington Post reported that five of the top eight officials in Fema had no previous experience in disaster management - but they had extensive backgrounds within Republican politics when they were appointed to their posts by the Bush administration.

Time magazine claimed the official biography of Mr Brown - which stated that he had worked as an "assistant city manager with emergency services oversight" in the Edmond, Oklahoma - exaggerated his record.

Officials said he had been an assistant to the city manager, not assistant city manager. "The assistant is more like an intern," Time was told.

In New Orleans, there was still no clear picture of how many had died. Emergency crews have ordered 25,000 body bags, and officials say more than 10,000 people could be dead. However, the official death toll across the Gulf states is still only just over 300.

But hundreds more corpses are expected to be discovered as the floodwaters recede and rescuers begin the grim task of searching through flooded buildings for people who were unable to escape the rising waters.

Gregg Silverman, a volunteer rescuer, said he had expected to find many more survivors in the city's flooded streets. Instead, he found mostly bodies.

"They had me climb up on a roof, and I did bring an axe up to where a guy had tried to stick a pipe up through a vent," Mr Silverman said.

"Unfortunately, he had probably just recently perished. His dog was still there, barking. The dog wouldn't come. We had to leave the dog just up there in the attic."

Talking about the other bodies he and fellow rescue workers had found, he said: "Obviously, we are not recovering them. We are just tying them up to banisters, leaving them on the roof."

Army engineers pumping water from the city said they feared floating bodies could become caught in the pumps, which are currently removing 311 cubic metres of water a second.

"It's got a huge focus of our attention right now," said John Rickey, of the army corps of engineers. "Those remains are people's loved ones."


By Guardian Unlimited © Copyright Guardian Newspapers 2008
Published: 9/9/2005
 
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