Archive for the 'General' Category

Bush to Probe Storm Response

Wednesday, September 7th, 2005

Stung by criticism of the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, President Bush yesterday promised to investigate his own administration’s emergency management, then readied a request for tens of billions of dollars for relief and cleanup.
washingtonpost.com

The headline for this story on prisonplanet.comreads, “Bush to Investigate Himself.”

Five dead ‘were army workers”

Tuesday, September 6th, 2005

From yesterday’s New York Times:“In a city riven by violence for a week, there was yet another shootout yesterday. Contractors for the Army Corps of Engineers came under fire as they crossed a bridge to work on a levee, and police escorts shot back, killing three assailants outright and a fourth in a later gunfight, the police said, adding that a fifth suspect had been wounded and captured. There was no explanation for it, only the numbing facts.”

and today’s ‘numbing facts,’ since, clearly, yesterday’s were wrong, and featured ‘armed thugs’ instead of trigger-happy NOLA cops::

At least five people shot dead by police as they walked across a New Orleans bridge yesterday were contractors working for the US Defence department, according to a report by The Associated Press.

A spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers said the victims were contractors on their way to repair a canal, the new agency said, quoting a defence Department spokesman.

The contractors crossing the bridge to launch barges into Lake Pontchartrain, in an operation to fix the 17th Street Canal, according to the spokesman.

The shootings took place on the Danziger Bridge, across a canal connecting Lake Pontchartrain to the Mississippi River.

Early on Sunday, Deputy Police Chief W.J. Riley of New Orleans said police shot at eight people, killing five or six.

No other details were immediately available.
theaustraliannews.com

One city’s tragedy may be another’s boon

Tuesday, September 6th, 2005

HOUSTON No one would accuse this city of being timid in the scramble to profit from the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

Oil services companies based here are already racing to carry out repairs to damaged offshore platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, and the promise of plenty of work to do sent shares in two large companies, Halliburton and Baker Hughes, soaring to record levels last week. The Port of Houston is preparing for an increase in traffic as shippers divert cargo away from the damaged ports of New Orleans and Pascagoula, Mississippi.

With brio that might make an ambulance-chaser proud, one company, National Realty Investments is offering special financing deals “for hurricane survivors only,” with no down payments and discounted closing costs.

“It feels like the only things left in south Louisiana are snakes and alligators,” said John Olson, co-manager of Houston Energy Partners, a hedge fund that operates out of a skyscraper in the city center. “Houston is positioned for a boom.”

Perhaps no city in the United States is in a better spot to turn Katrina’s tragedy into opportunity. Long known for its commercial fervor, Houston, the largest city in the South with a metropolitan population of more than four million, has one of the busiest ports in the United States and remains unrivaled as a center for the energy industry.

Halliburton moved its headquarters to Houston from Dallas in 2003, joining dozens of companies based here that provide services for oil and natural gas producers.

Halliburton differs from many oil services companies in that it also does significant business with the federal government. Halliburton has a contract with the U.S. Navy, similar to its contracts in Iraq, that has already kept it busy after Hurricane Katrina. The company’s Kellogg, Brown & Root unit was doing repairs and cleanup at three naval facilities in Mississippi last week.

Executives at other Houston companies said they were wasting little time in carrying out repairs in the Gulf of Mexico, where at least 20 offshore rigs and platforms are believed to be damaged or destroyed. Tetra Technologies, which repairs old platforms in the Gulf of Mexico or decommissions them, had employees in a helicopter the day after the storm passed to survey the damage.

“I always hate to talk about positives in a situation like this, but this is certainly a growth business over the next 6 to 12 months,” said Geoffrey Hertel, the chief executive of Tetra. By Friday, Tetra had been able to send an 800-ton derrick barge it owns, the Arapaho, to the gulf to be used for platform repairs, Hertel said.

…The displacement of companies to Houston from New Orleans is an abrupt acceleration of a trend that has been going on for decades. Many large companies, particularly those in the energy business, have made that move over the years, leaving New Orleans more dependent on tourism and other service industries.

A surge of business activity in Houston might lift the fortunes of a city that is still struggling to recover from the collapse of Enron and two decades of job cuts in the energy industry.

Rising oil and natural gas prices in the last two years have strengthened the finances of Houston’s largest energy companies, but have done little to improve job prospects in the city, where the unemployment rate was 5.5 percent in July, compared with 5 percent nationally. During the last oil boom, in the 1970s, 150,000 jobs were created in the business of oilfield equipment, according to Barton Smith, director of the Institute for Regional Forecasting at the University of Houston.

But since the 1980s, about 130,000 of those jobs have been lost as oil and natural gas exploration moved away, largely to West Africa, the Middle East and Asia, and companies were able to produce oilfield equipment more cheaply abroad.

One company that has exchanged New Orleans for Houston is Whitney Holding, the parent company of Whitney National Bank, founded in 1883 and the oldest operating bank in New Orleans. Another New Orleans oil exploration company, Energy Partners, said in a statement last week that it was also making Houston its temporary headquarters. Other companies are following suit, according to real estate brokers.
“It’s exploding,” said Steve Duplantis, senior managing director at CB Richard Ellis. “When I talk to owners of office buildings, they say people are not even negotiating. As tragic as it is for New Orleans, it is a boon for Houston.”
iht.com

Nice

San Antonio Times Editorial
Nothing could compare to the differences between the hip-hop celebrities at the MTV Video Music Awards recently and the masses of people wading through the chaos of New Orleans in the days that followed.

On one side, you had some of the best-coiffed, best-dressed and richest-fed beautiful people on the planet. On the other, you see people who haven’t looked in a mirror in days — and could care less because they may not have eaten in the same time.

…The disaster in New Orleans is bringing out all the normal complaints that the government could have done this or it should have done that. Why weren’t we better prepared for this storm? Why didn’t we build stronger levees? Why aren’t we doing more to help evacuees?

The short answer is that we could have done each of the things suggested. But contrary to the beliefs of some utopians and those who think that somehow this storm was part of a Halliburton conspiracy, we can’t take risk out of life. And we don’t have unlimited cash to prevent every potential disaster.

You want a stronger levee? Fine. Unfortunately, to pay for that, we will have to forgo rebuilding public schools. That’s not acceptable? Then I guess we could postpone that sports arena you needed to attract a major league team. Not good either? Well, I guess we need to “increase revenues,” which means raising taxes, which will slow down the economic growth that the city needs to create jobs.

So you make compromises.

BUSH MOM: EVERYONE WANTS TO MOVE TO TEXAS
“Almost everyone I’ve talked to says we’re going to move to Houston,” Barbara Bush told NPR.

“What I’m hearing is they all want to stay in Texas. Everyone is so overwhelmed by the hospitality.

“And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway, so this –this is working very well for them.”

O yes. Very well indeed.

Murder and rape – fact or fiction?

Tuesday, September 6th, 2005

…”There is nothing to correct wild reports that armed gangs have taken over the convention centre,” wrote Associated Press writer, Allen Breed.

“You can report them but you at least have to say they are unsubstantiated and not pass them off as fact,” said one Baltimore-based journalist.

“But nobody is doing that.”

Either way these rumours have had an effect.

Reports of the complete degradation and violent criminals running rampant in the Superdome suggested a crisis that both hastened the relief effort and demonised those who were stranded.

By the end of last week the media in Baton Rouge reported that evacuees from New Orleans were carjacking and that guns and knives were being seized in local shelters where riots were erupting.

The local mayor responded accordingly.

“We do not want to inherit the looting and all the other foolishness that went on in New Orleans,” Kip Holden was told the Baton Rouge Advocate.

“We do not want to inherit that breed that seeks to prey on other people.”

The trouble, wrote Howard Witt of the Chicago Tribune is that “scarcely any of it was true – the police confiscated a single knife from a refugee in one Baton Rouge shelter”.

“There were no riots in Baton Rouge. There were no armed hordes.”

Similarly when the first convoy of national guardsmen went into New Orleans approached the convention centre they were ordered to “lock and load”.

But when they arrived they were confronted not by armed mobs but a nurse wearing a T-shirt that read “I love New Orleans”.

“She ran down a broken escalator, then held her hands in the air when she saw the guns,” wrote the LA Times.

“We have sick kids up here!” she shouted.

“We have dehydrated kids! One kid with sickle cell!”
guardian.co.uk

“We have been abandoned by our own country”

Monday, September 5th, 2005

Interview on Meet the Press with Aaron Broussard, President of Jefferson Parrish

see it and weep

Insurgents Seize Key Town in Iraq

Monday, September 5th, 2005

BAGHDAD, Sept. 5 — Abu Musab Zarqawi’s foreign-led Al Qaeda in Iraq took open control of a key western town at the Syrian border, deploying its guerrilla fighters in the streets and flying Zarqawi’s black banner from rooftops, witnesses, residents and others in the city and surrounding villages said.

A sign newly posted at the entrance of Qaim declared, “Welcome to the Islamic Kingdom of Qaim.” A statement posted in mosques described Qaim as an “Islamic kingdom liberated from the occupation.”

Zarqawi’s fighters were killing officials and civilians seen as government-allied or anti-Islamic, witnesses, residents and others said. On Sunday, the bullet-riddled body of a woman lay in a street of Qaim. A sign left on her corpse declared, “A prostitute who was punished.”
washingtonpost.com

So, “massive US offensive” near the Syrian border they told us about results in “Zarqawi” taking over? Hmm.

New Orleans Begins a Search for Its Dead; Violence Persists

Monday, September 5th, 2005

Troops patrolled the streets, rescuers hunted for stragglers and New Orleans looked like a wrecked ghost town yesterday as the evacuation of the city neared completion and the authorities turned to the grim task of collecting bodies in a ghastly landscape awash in numberless corpses.

In a city riven by violence for a week, there was yet another shootout yesterday. Contractors for the Army Corps of Engineers came under fire as they crossed a bridge to work on a levee, and police escorts shot back, killing three assailants outright and a fourth in a later gunfight, the police said, adding that a fifth suspect had been wounded and captured. There was no explanation for it, only the numbing facts.
nytimes.com

“The numbing facts”??? “a city riven by violence”??? “yet another shootout”??? I haven’t heard about any others! This is the Times’ violent hyperbole in full effect used to obscure the fact that NOPD shot 5 people dead with “no explantion”, which is indeed nothing new in New Orleans.

“Highly Strung” Cops
Local officials warned that law enforcement officers and their armed deputies were “highly strung” and anyone thinking of entering to loot might not make it out alive. Warren Riley, the deputy police chief, said that officers shot eight people, killing five or six of them, after the gunmen fired on a group of contractors working for the Army Corps of Engineers.

…After five days of hesitation, the national guard and troops were staging what amounted to an invasion of the abandoned city with 4,000 soldiers searching house-to-house for survivors and another 7,200 airborne combat troops and marines on the way.

Another NY Times Article
“They’ve already lost their cars,” he said. “All they have left is their house. They don’t want those animals stealing from them. Write that, animals. Anybody that would take advantage of this is hardly better than animals. Not the people who are taking food and water and clothing. Those stealing TV’s and shooting at police. What can you do with a TV? There’s no electricity.”
I heard a journalist say that people took tv’s with the idea of selling them so they could get out.

Times-Picayune: An Open Letter to the President

Monday, September 5th, 2005

Dear Mr. President:

We heard you loud and clear Friday when you visited our devastated city and the Gulf Coast and said, “What is not working, we’re going to make it right.”

Please forgive us if we wait to see proof of your promise before believing you. But we have good reason for our skepticism.

Bienville built New Orleans where he built it for one main reason: It’s accessible. The city between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain was easy to reach in 1718.

How much easier it is to access in 2005 now that there are interstates and bridges, airports and helipads, cruise ships, barges, buses and diesel-powered trucks.

Despite the city’s multiple points of entry, our nation’s bureaucrats spent days after last week’s hurricane wringing their hands, lamenting the fact that they could neither rescue the city’s stranded victims nor bring them food, water and medical supplies.

Meanwhile there were journalists, including some who work for The Times-Picayune, going in and out of the city via the Crescent City Connection. On Thursday morning, that crew saw a caravan of 13 Wal-Mart tractor trailers headed into town to bring food, water and supplies to a dying city.

Television reporters were doing live reports from downtown New Orleans streets. Harry Connick Jr. brought in some aid Thursday, and his efforts were the focus of a “Today” show story Friday morning.

Yet, the people trained to protect our nation, the people whose job it is to quickly bring in aid were absent. Those who should have been deploying troops were singing a sad song about how our city was impossible to reach.

We’re angry, Mr. President, and we’ll be angry long after our beloved city and surrounding parishes have been pumped dry. Our people deserved rescuing. Many who could have been were not. That’s to the government’s shame.

Mayor Ray Nagin did the right thing Sunday when he allowed those with no other alternative to seek shelter from the storm inside the Louisiana Superdome. We still don’t know what the death toll is, but one thing is certain: Had the Superdome not been opened, the city’s death toll would have been higher. The toll may even have been exponentially higher.

It was clear to us by late morning Monday that many people inside the Superdome would not be returning home. It should have been clear to our government, Mr. President. So why weren’t they evacuated out of the city immediately? We learned seven years ago, when Hurricane Georges threatened, that the Dome isn’t suitable as a long-term shelter. So what did state and national officials think would happen to tens of thousands of people trapped inside with no air conditioning, overflowing toilets and dwindling amounts of food, water and other essentials?

State Rep. Karen Carter was right Friday when she said the city didn’t have but two urgent needs: “Buses! And gas!” Every official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency should be fired, Director Michael Brown especially.

In a nationally televised interview Thursday night, he said his agency hadn’t known until that day that thousands of storm victims were stranded at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center. He gave another nationally televised interview the next morning and said, “We’ve provided food to the people at the Convention Center so that they’ve gotten at least one, if not two meals, every single day.”

Lies don’t get more bald-faced than that, Mr. President.

Yet, when you met with Mr. Brown Friday morning, you told him, “You’re doing a heck of a job.”

That’s unbelievable.

There were thousands of people at the Convention Center because the riverfront is high ground. The fact that so many people had reached there on foot is proof that rescue vehicles could have gotten there, too.

We, who are from New Orleans, are no less American than those who live on the Great Plains or along the Atlantic Seaboard. We’re no less important than those from the Pacific Northwest or Appalachia. Our people deserved to be rescued.

No expense should have been spared. No excuses should have been voiced. Especially not one as preposterous as the claim that New Orleans couldn’t be reached.

Mr. President, we sincerely hope you fulfill your promise to make our beloved communities work right once again.

When you do, we will be the first to applaud.
nola.com

Why did help take so long to arrive?
After the authorities in Baton Rouge had prepared a field hospital for victims of the storm, Fema sent its first batch of supplies, all of which were designed for use against chemical attack, including drugs such as Cipro, which is designed for use against anthrax. “We called them up and asked them: ‘Why did you send that, and they said that’s what it says in the book’,” said a Baton Rouge official.

…Federal officials have defended their response. Michael Chertoff, head of the homeland security department, which has responsibility for Fema, said: “We are extremely pleased with the response of every element of the federal government, all of our federal partners, to this terrible tragedy.

“For those who wonder why it is that it is difficult to get these supplies and these medical teams into place, the answer is they are battling an ongoing dynamic problem with the water.”
liar

N.O. resident: Our government is killing the people of New Orleans
“There are supplies sitting in Baton Rouge for the folks in New Orleans, but the National Guard has the city surrounded and is not letting anyone in or out. They are turning away people with supplies, claiming it is too dangerous. If we have planes that can drop bombs on people in Iraq, certianly we can air drop supplies into the city. Our goverment is KILLING the people of New Orleans. This is the message I am now sending to all major media sources, national and worldwide, as well as posting to email lists, blogs, etc. The story is getting out that the people there are not getting supplies, but the truth of WHY is not. Please help spread the word, we must get this story out. Please so not let any more of my friends die.

…Also heard that part of the reason our house flooded is they dynamited part of the levee after the first section broke – they did this to prevent Uptown (the rich part of town) from being flooded. Apparently they used too much dynamite, thus flooding part of the Bywater. So now I know who is responsible for flooding my house – not Katrina, but our government.”

CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE AND KATRINA?
What do you do when the words on the paper don’t match the action in the field? People are dying today in New Orleans because of the failure to provide immediate aid are dead in part because of the negligence of Michael Chertoff. That is a harsh judgment, but if you will take time to read the National Response Plan that was signed into effect in December of 2004 there is no other reasonable conclusion.

The current effort by the Bush Administration to blame the victims in Louisiana and Mississippi is bad enough, but they are in big trouble once Americans take the time to understand that they the Administration ignored it’s own plan for dealing with a threat like Katrina. Why did they fail to implement the plan until it was too late to save lives along the Gulf Coast?

Don’t take my word for it, read the plan yourself. You can download it at http://www.dhs.gov/interweb/assetlibrary/NRPbaseplan.pdf

The National Response Plan was accepted and implemented by Bush Administration in December 2004. According to the PREFACE, President Bush, “directed the development of a new National Response Plan (NRP) to align Federal coordination structures, capabilities, and resources into a unified, all discipline, and all-hazards approach to domestic incident management. . . .The end result is vastly improved coordination among Federal, State, local, and tribal organizations to help save lives and protect America’s communities by increasing the speed, effectiveness, and efficiency of incident management.”
“not one of my seed/will sit on the sidewalk and beg bread”

Rice says race had nothing to do with Katrina aid
“”I don’t believe for a minute anybody allowed people to suffer because they are African-Americans. I just don’t believe it for a minute.”

NOLA Police kill “five or six”

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

NEW ORLEANS – New Orleans turned much of its attention Sunday to gathering up and counting the dead across a ghastly landscape awash in perhaps thousands of corpses. “It is going to be about as ugly of a scene as I think you can imagine,” the nation’s homeland security chief warned.

As authorities struggled to keep order, police shot eight people, killing five or six, after gunmen opened fire on a group of contractors traveling across a bridge on their way to make repairs, authorities said.
news.yahoo.com

Uglier I’m sure. And oh by the way, the police killed a few more…

Al-Sadr vows revenge on Sunnis over stampede deaths

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

THE maverick Shi’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has raised sectarian tension in Iraq by vowing vengeance against Sunnis he blames for the stampede that killed almost 1,000 pilgrims last week in Baghdad.

While more moderate clerics have avoided blaming Sunni insurgents for provoking the tragedy, al-Sadr claimed in a message from his mosque in al-Kufa, near Najaf, that civil war was already underway.

The interior ministry has said 953 Shi’ite worshippers died last Wednesday, trampled underfoot and drowned in the Tigris river after they tumbled from the narrow al-Aima bridge on their way towards the shrine of Moussa al- Kadhim, an 8th-century imam. An earlier exchange of mortar fire had made the crowd nervous, but pandemonium broke out when rumours spread that there were Sunni suicide bombers in their midst.

In a statement to newspapers al-Sadr identified “Ba’athists and Saddamists” and “fanatic sectarians” as likely culprits. “The number of dead is sufficient for us to prove that this incident was organised,” he said. “You should ask about the dirty hands who spilt all this blood.”
informationclearinghouse.info

Report: 50 Killed As Health Clinic Bombed In Military Attack On Al Qaim