Archive for the 'General' Category

New Orleans tragedy: The 17th street levee was bombed

Friday, September 9th, 2005

Report from the Houston Astrodome

10:23: Joel just got removed. Almost arrested. Fox News is down on the floor. I’m in dome, hiding in seats. They’re allowing some media on the floor, not others.

10:31 Just met members of the Polish press, they are being stopped from entering floor. Says this is like the former USSR.

10:57 Raw transcript of comments by NOLA evacuee : “The 17th street levee was bombed by the Army Corps of Engineers to save the more valuable real estate in the city… to keep the French Quarter protected, the ninth ward was sacrificed… people are afraid to speak out… everyone who was near there heard the bombings… they bombed seven times. That’s why they didn’t fix the levees… 20 feet of water. Gators. People dying in water. They let the parishes go, not the city center. Tourist trap was saved over human life. A six year old girl was raped in here.. 9 year old boy killed. A man in the shower beaten. No hot food. No help for elderly.”
bellaciao.org

So they killed people in order to save deserted white neighborhoods.

Four Killed in Partisan Violence in Jamaica

Friday, September 9th, 2005

KINGSTON, Jamaica, Sept 8 (Reuters) – Four people were shot and killed in partisan violence in the Mountain View community east of Jamaica’s capital, where fires and gunfights raged, police said on Thursday.

The violence began on Tuesday during a nationwide protest against rising prices, which was organized by the opposition Jamaica Labour Party and led to a virtual shutdown of commerce on the island.

A 71-year-old man was shot dead by a group of men during a dispute over an impromptu roadblock and police were trying to quell an ongoing dispute as his friends sought revenge.

Three other men were shot and killed during the disturbances in the Mountain View neighborhood that links the capital of Kingston with Norman Manley International Airport.

Police said four houses were set afire and burned to the ground and bombs were thrown into other homes.

Supporters of the ruling People’s National Party and the opposition party assigned themselves to sections of the community and have prevented each other from entering the other’s neighborhoods.

Scores of frightened residents fled the area and traffic to and from the airport was diverted onto lengthy detours.

The killings pushed Jamaica’s murder tally to 1,157, the highest ever recorded for the year to date. The nation of 2.7 million people had 1,469 murders last year and police said the annual toll could top 1,500 for the first time in Jamaica’s history.
nytimes.com

I have never heard the US Republicans referred to as the ‘ruling party’. Of course unruly and inscrutable ‘natives’ like the ones portrayed in this article need some sort of ruling party, right? This article is also a good example of bias by ommission. They begin by speaking of politically motivated killings and and up talking about the murder rate. It’s hard to get it from this article, but yesterday in Jamaica there was a general strike that shut the country down. For the Times, the big story was ‘partisan violence.’

Advance Men in Charge

Friday, September 9th, 2005

The Federal Emergency Management Agency announced this week that it didn’t want the news media taking photographs of the dead in New Orleans. A FEMA spokeswoman talked unconvincingly about the dignity of the dead. But the bizarre demand, a creepy echo of the ban on news media coverage of the coffins returning from Iraq, is simply the latest spasm of a gutted federal agency.

It’s not really all that surprising that the officials who run FEMA are stressing that all-important emergency response function: the public relations campaign. As it turns out, that’s all they really have experience at doing.
nytimes.com

Genes Show Signs Brain Still Evolving

Friday, September 9th, 2005

WASHINGTON (AP) – The human brain may still be evolving. So suggests new research that tracked changes in two genes thought to help regulate brain growth, changes that appeared well after the rise of modern humans 200,000 years ago.

That the defining feature of humans – our large brains – continued to evolve as recently as 5,800 years ago, and may be doing so today, promises to surprise the average person, if not biologists.

“We, including scientists, have considered ourselves as sort of the pinnacle of evolution,” noted lead researcher Bruce Lahn, a University of Chicago geneticist whose studies appear in Friday’s edition of the journal Science.

“There’s a sense we as humans have kind of peaked,” agreed Greg Wray, director of Duke University’s Center for Evolutionary Genomics. “A different way to look at is it’s almost impossible for evolution not to happen.”
apnews.myway.com

This is good news: now we need a mutation, quick.

Frustrated: Fire crews to hand out fliers for FEMA

Friday, September 9th, 2005

ATLANTA – Not long after some 1,000 firefighters sat down for eight hours of training, the whispering began: “What are we doing here?”

As New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin pleaded on national television for firefighters – his own are exhausted after working around the clock for a week – a battalion of highly trained men and women sat idle Sunday in a muggy Sheraton Hotel conference room in Atlanta.

Many of the firefighters, assembled from Utah and throughout the United States by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, thought they were going to be deployed as emergency workers.

Instead, they have learned they are going to be community-relations officers for FEMA, shuffled throughout the Gulf Coast region to disseminate fliers and a phone number: 1-800-621-FEMA.

On Monday, some firefighters stuck in the staging area at the Sheraton peeled off their FEMA-issued shirts and stuffed them in backpacks, saying they refuse to represent the federal agency.

Federal officials are unapologetic.

“I would go back and ask the firefighter to revisit his commitment to FEMA, to firefighting and to the citizens of this country,” said FEMA spokeswoman Mary Hudak.

The firefighters – or at least the fire chiefs who assigned them to come to Atlanta – knew what the assignment would be, Hudak said.

“The initial call to action very specifically says we’re looking for two-person fire teams to do community relations,” she said. “So if there is a breakdown [in communication], it was likely in their own departments.”

One fire chief from Texas agreed that the call was clear to work as community-relations officers. But he wonders why the 1,400 firefighters FEMA attracted to Atlanta aren’t being put to better use. He also questioned why the U.S. Department of Homeland Security – of which FEMA is a part – has not responded better to the disaster.

The firefighters, several of whom are from Utah, were told to bring backpacks, sleeping bags, first-aid kits and Meals Ready to Eat. They were told to prepare for “austere conditions.” Many of them
came with awkward fire gear and expected to wade in floodwaters, sift through rubble and save lives.

“They’ve got people here who are search-and-rescue certified, paramedics, haz-mat certified,” said a Texas firefighter. “We’re sitting in here having a sexual-harassment class while there are still [victims] in Louisiana who haven’t been contacted yet.”

The firefighter, who has encouraged his superiors back home not to send any more volunteers for now, declined to give his name because FEMA has warned them not to talk to reporters.
mosnews.com

Oil spillages threaten Gulf of Mexico

Friday, September 9th, 2005

Oil storage tanks ruptured by Hurricane Katrina may have dumped as much as 3.7m gallons of crude oil into the lower Mississippi river and surrounding wetlands.

Officials estimate the spillage at roughly a third of the volume of the huge spill when the tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground off Alaska in 1989. Last night experts said they could not yet assess the short-term effects of the spills but were hopeful there would be few long-term effects. Some of the oil is expected to find its way into the Gulf of Mexico.

But officials at the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality remain cautious because it is difficult to gain access to the area, which can be reached only by water. It is also unclear how much oil has been lost.
financialtimes.com

Democrats’ anti-Bush petition also seeks political contributions

Friday, September 9th, 2005

WASHINGTON — A new Democratic effort to whip up indignation about the Bush administration’s handling of Hurricane Katrina also tried to raise money for Democratic candidates.

Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat and the head of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, issued an appeal Thursday urging people to sign an online petition to fire the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency over his handling of the Katrina response.

After an inquiry from the Associated Press, the DSCC quickly pulled down the page and said they would donate to charity any money raised by the anti-FEMA petition.

When recipients clicked on a link to the petition, the top center of the screen _ above the call to “Fire the FEMA director” _ had asked for a donation to the DSCC.
nynewsday.com

Clarke: Europe must trade civil liberties for security

Friday, September 9th, 2005

British Home Secretary Charles Clarke has warned that European citizens will have to accept that civil liberties may have to be bartered away in exchange for protection from terrorists and organised criminals.
theregister.co.uk

Hunger strikers pledge to die in Guantánamo

Friday, September 9th, 2005

More than 200 detainees in Guantánamo Bay are in their fifth week of a hunger strike, the Guardian has been told.
Statements from prisoners in the camp which were declassified by the US government on Wednesday reveal that the men are starving themselves in protest at the conditions in the camp and at their alleged maltreatment – including desecration of the Qur’an – by American guards.

The statements, written on August 11, have just been given to the British human rights lawyer Clive Stafford Smith. They show that prisoners are determined to starve them selves to death. In one, Binyam Mohammed, a former London schoolboy, said: “I do not plan to stop until I either die or we are respected.
guardian.co.uk

New Orleans starts to remove dead

Thursday, September 8th, 2005

Some 25,000 body bags have been sent to the New Orleans area, as authorities begin to recover the dead in the city.

The official death toll stands at 83 in the city, including 30 elderly people found in a flooded nursing home. But thousands are feared to have died.

Bodies remain in the stagnant flood waters as health fears grow for up to 10,000 people still in the city.

Three people are also known to have died from contaminated flood water, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

They are believed to have contracted infections after coming into contact with cholera-related bacteria.

New Orleans’ mayor has ordered the forced evacuation of the city, which used to have a population of 450,000.

A temporary morgue in a town about 70 miles (113km) away is preparing to handle 5,000 corpses.

A state health official told the Associated Press he did not know how many bodies to expect.
bbc.co.uk