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New Orleans holdouts wavering
City readies 25,000 body bags 06:42 AM EDT on Friday, September 9, 2005
NEW ORLEANS — More stragglers seemed willing to flee the filthy water
and stench of death Thursday as increasingly insistent rescuers made
what may be their last peaceful pass through swamped New Orleans before
using force.
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"Some are finally saying, 'I've had enough," said U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement spokesman Michael Keegan. "They're getting
dehydrated. They are running out of food. There are human remains in
different houses. The smells mess with your psyche."
Across a flooded city where as many as 10,000 holdouts were believed to
be stubbornly staying put, police made it clear in orders barked from
front porches and through closed doors that they would return – next
time, getting tough.
Police said they were 80 percent done with their scan of the city for
voluntary evacuees, after which they planned to begin carrying out Mayor
Ray Nagin's order to forcibly remove remaining residents from a city
filled with disease-carrying water, broken gas lines and rotting corpses.
"The ones who wanted to leave, I would say most of them are out," said
Detective Sgt. James Imbrogglio. "There may be a few left, so we're
going to go check one of our last areas that's underwater today and then
hopefully that will be it."
The job of carrying out the mayor's order was left largely to the 1,000
or so remaining members of New Orleans' beleaguered police force.
"We are not going to be rough," said Police Chief Eddie Compass. "We are
going to be sensitive. We are going to use the minimum amount of force."
The near-conclusion of the voluntary evacuation came as receding
floodwaters revealed still more rotting corpses. Nagin has said the
death toll in New Orleans alone could reach 10,000, and state officials
were ordering 25,000 body bags.
Volunteer rescuer Gregg Silverman, part of a 14-boat contingent from
Columbus, Ohio, said he expected to find many more survivors in his
excursion through the city's flooded streets. Instead, he found mostly
bodies.
"They had me climb up on a roof, and I did bring an ax up to where a guy
had tried to stick a pipe up through a vent," 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."
As for other bodies his group encountered: "Obviously we are not
recovering them. We are just tying them up to banisters, leaving them on
the roof."
At St. Rita's nursing home in the town of Chalmette, authorities
struggled to identify as many as 30 residents who may have perished.
Dr. Bryan Patucci, coroner of St. Bernard Parish, said the nursing home
staff apparently believed it was more dangerous to move the residents
than keep them at the building. He said it may be impossible to identify
all the victims until authorities compile a final list of missing
persons.
The Army Corps of Engineers said the city was still about 60 percent
flooded – down from as much as 80 percent last week – but was slowly
being drained by 37 of the 174 pumps in the Orleans, St. Bernard and
Plaquemines parishes, and 17 portable pumps. They can pump out 11,000
cubic feet per second, roughly equal to 432 Olympic-size swimming pools
per hour.
Engineers said the mammoth undertaking could take months, and could be
complicated by corpses getting clogged in the pumps.
"It's got a huge focus of our attention right now," said John Rickey of
the Corps. "Those remains are people's loved ones."
In Washington, President Bush declared Sept. 16 as a national day of
remembrance for the dead, and he encouraged those displaced by the storm
to sign up for $2,000 debit cards to help rebuild their lives. Congress
also rushed to approve an additional $51.8 billion in emergency aid for
the victims.
Bush dispatched Vice President Dick Cheney to the region Thursday amid
persistent criticism of the sluggish pace of the federal response.
Stopping along a street of splintered homes in Gulfport, Miss., Cheney
said much progress is being made in a relief effort he termed "very
impressive."
As he spoke, a passer-by hurled an expletive at the vice president.
"First time I've heard it," Cheney joked with reporters when asked if he
was hearing a lot of such sentiments.
Later in New Orleans, Cheney visited a repaired levee and surveyed the
damage as he rode through the streets in an armored Humvee.
At Louis Armstrong Airport, now a bustling military encampment, New
Orleans' City Council met for the first time since Katrina, with members
defending how they handled the disaster and defiantly vowing to rebuild.
"New Orleans has been built back from many disasters," said Councilwoman
Cynthia Hedge Morrell. "New Orleans was here before there was a United
States of America."
Some 400,000 homes in the city are without power, with no immediate
prospect of getting it back. Where water has been restored, it is not
drinkable. The city is still dangerous – not primarily, as it was last
week, from armed criminals, but from the sewage-laden floodwaters, which
are believed to contain E. coli and other dangerous germs.
Fires were also a continuing problem. At least 11 blazes burned across
the city Thursday, including a rash of fires that raged across the
campus of historically black Dillard University, destroying three large
buildings.
Across town at the Audubon Zoo, curator Dan Maloney said some of the
1,400 animals were lost, but keepers have been too busy caring for
survivors to take a count. The dead included two sea otters that were
moved to different tanks before Katrina and died from stress.
Some of the most vulnerable creatures – including several macaws, eagles
and a pair of African lions – were being transferred to other zoos.
Said chief gardener Tran Asproditis: "It's just sad that this has
happened and it is going to take us a long time to recover and reopen
for the kids. And that's what we want to do, is just open so the kids
can come back."
–––
Associated Press writers Cain Burdeau, Melinda DeSlatte, Brett Martel,
Erin McClam and Doug Simpson contributed to this report.
AP-WS-09-08-05 2004EDT
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