Racism
and the evacuation of residents during Hurricane Harvey
I have never forgotten the coverage of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005.
I recall being riveted to broadcasts from Amy Goodman of Democacy Now! and hearing the searing accounts of racism and sheer inhumanity towards others.
I now realise from one discussion with a friend that many people are too
young or simply don’t remember the events for various reasons.
When
I saw videos of people being rescued it did not escape my attention
that black faces were conspicuous by their absence except for those
doing the rescuing. Lots of stories of elderly white people, even
dogs and horses – but no black people.
Today
I found two videos that demonstrate that the more things change the
more they stay the same.
PROOF Black People Are Being ABANDONED In Houston
“They opened the levees on black neighbourhoods”
Woman tells the truth about what happening to black people in Houston
“Who do I ring to get rescued?”
“Ring Jesus”
There
is not nearly the same coverage from Democracy Now! this time round
but they did do this story about how the Red Cross and aid agencies
are just leaving people largely to fend for themselves
The Red Cross Won't Save Houston. Texas Residents Are Launching Community Relief Efforts Instead
What
I remember clearly from Hurricane Katrina is the story of how the DN
team found a black corpse and their attempts to get someone to take
it away. The rang the police who said “ring FEMA” (these may not
be the exact agencies. They rang FEMA who said “ring the
police”...and so on.
And
the other story was how prisoners were left to drown in their cells
by the authorities who evacuated themselves.
This
is from Human Rights Watch
New Orleans: Prisoners Abandoned to Floodwaters
Officers
Deserted a Jail Building, Leaving Inmates Locked in Cells
21
September, 2005
As
Hurricane Katrina began pounding New Orleans, the sheriff's
department abandoned hundreds of inmates imprisoned in the city’s
jail, Human Rights Watch said today.
Inmates
in Templeman III, one of several buildings in the Orleans Parish
Prison compound, reported that as of Monday, August 29, there were no
correctional officers in the building, which held more than 600
inmates. These inmates, including some who were locked in
ground-floor cells, were not evacuated until Thursday, September 1,
four days after flood waters in the jail had reached chest-level.
“Of
all the nightmares during Hurricane Katrina, this must be one of the
worst,” said Corinne Carey, researcher from Human Rights Watch.
“Prisoners were abandoned in their cells without food or water for
days as floodwaters rose toward the ceiling.”
Human
Rights Watch called on the U.S. Department of Justice to conduct an
investigation into the conduct of the Orleans Sheriff's Department,
which runs the jail, and to establish the fate of the prisoners who
had been locked in the jail. The Louisiana Department of Public
Safety and Corrections, which oversaw the evacuation, and the Orleans
Sheriff’s Department should account for the 517 inmates who are
missing from the list of people evacuated from the jail.
Carey
spent five days in Louisiana, conducting dozens of interviews with
inmates evacuated from Orleans Parish Prison, correctional officers,
state officials, lawyers and their investigators who had interviewed
more than 1,000 inmates evacuated from the prison.
The
sheriff of Orleans Parish, Marlin N. Gusman, did not call for help in
evacuating the prison until midnight on Monday, August 29, a state
Department of Corrections and Public Safety spokeswoman told Human
Rights Watch. Other parish prisons, she said, had called for help on
the previous Saturday and Sunday. The evacuation of Orleans Parish
Prison was not completed until Friday, September 2.
According
to officers who worked at two of the jail buildings, Templeman 1 and
2, they began to evacuate prisoners from those buildings on Tuesday,
August 30, when the floodwaters reached chest level inside. These
prisoners were taken by boat to the Broad Street overpass bridge, and
ultimately transported to correctional facilities outside New
Orleans.
But
at Templeman III, which housed about 600 inmates, there was no prison
staff to help the prisoners. Inmates interviewed by Human Rights
Watch varied about when they last remember seeing guards at the
facility, but they all insisted that there were no correctional
officers in the facility on Monday, August 29. A spokeswoman for the
Orleans parish sheriff’s department told Human Rights Watch she did
not know whether the officers at Templeman III had left the building
before the evacuation.
According
to inmates interviewed by Human Rights Watch, they had no food or
water from the inmates' last meal over the weekend of August 27-28
until they were evacuated on Thursday, September 1. By Monday, August
29, the generators had died, leaving them without lights and sealed
in without air circulation. The toilets backed up, creating an
unbearable stench.
“They
left us to die there,” Dan Bright, an Orleans Parish Prison inmate
told Human Rights Watch at Rapides Parish Prison, where he was sent
after the evacuation.
As
the water began rising on the first floor, prisoners became anxious
and then desperate. Some of the inmates were able to force open their
cell doors, helped by inmates held in the common area. All of them,
however, remained trapped in the locked facility.
“The
water started rising, it was getting to here,” said Earrand Kelly,
an inmate from Templeman III, as he pointed at his neck. “We was
calling down to the guys in the cells under us, talking to them every
couple of minutes. They were crying, they were scared. The one that I
was cool with, he was saying ‘I'm scared. I feel like I'm about to
drown.' He was crying.”
Some
inmates from Templeman III have said they saw bodies floating in the
floodwaters as they were evacuated from the prison. A number of
inmates told Human Rights Watch that they were not able to get
everyone out from their cells.
Inmates
broke jail windows to let air in. They also set fire to blankets and
shirts and hung them out of the windows to let people know they were
still in the facility. Apparently at least a dozen inmates jumped out
of the windows.
”We
started to see people in T3 hangin' shirts on fire out the windows,”
Brooke Moss, an Orleans Parish Prison officer told Human Rights
Watch. “They were wavin' em. Then we saw them jumping out of the
windows . . . Later on, we saw a sign, I think somebody wrote `help'
on it.”
As
of yesterday, signs reading “Help Us,” and “One Man Down,”
could still be seen hanging from a window in the third floor of
Templeman III.
Several
corrections officers told Human Rights Watch there was no evacuation
plan for the prison, even though the facility had been evacuated
during floods in the 1990s.
“It
was complete chaos,” said a corrections officer with more than 30
years of service at Orleans Parish Prison. When asked what he thought
happened to the inmates in Templeman III, he shook his head and said:
“Ain't no tellin’ what happened to those people.”
“At
best, the inmates were left to fend for themselves,” said Carey.
“At worst, some may have died.”
Human
Rights Watch was not able to speak directly with Orleans Parish
Sheriff Marlin N. Gussman or the ranking official in charge of
Templeman III. A spokeswoman for the sheriff’s department told
Human Rights Watch that search-and-rescue teams had gone to the
prison and she insisted that “nobody drowned, nobody was left
behind.”
Human
Rights Watch compared an official list of all inmates held at Orleans
Parish Prison immediately prior to the hurricane with the most recent
list of the evacuated inmates compiled by the state Department of
Corrections and Public Safety (which was entitled, “All Offenders
Evacuated”). However, the list did not include 517 inmates from the
jail, including 130 from Templeman III.
Many
of the men held at jail had been arrested for offenses like criminal
trespass, public drunkenness or disorderly conduct. Many had not even
been brought before a judge and charged, much less been convicted.
****
Here are two other stories.
The Democracy Now! archives on Hurricane Katrina can be found HERE
****
Here are two other stories.
The Democracy Now! archives on Hurricane Katrina can be found HERE
African American Residents Tell Story of Survival, Blast Racially-Skewed Government Response
Democracy Now! producers get reports from African-American survivors of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. We hear from a woman at the convention center and a record store owner from the city’s Algiers neighborhood. [includes rush transcript]
One
week after Hurricane Katrina smashed into the Gulf Coast, nearly the
entire population of New Orleans has been evacuated. The streets are
deserted and littered with fallen trees and twisted metal. Nearly 80
percent of the city remains submerged in water and the number of dead
is unknown.
Most
of the nearly 500,000 residents of New Orleans have been driven into
what the New York Times calls a "modern-day Diaspora of biblical
proportions."
But
before the evacuation, tens of thousands of mostly poor
African-American residents endured days of appalling conditions as
they waited to be rescued. Survivors told horror stories from inside
the SuperDome and the convention center. Others had stayed at home to
avoid the mayhem.
Democracy
Now! producers John Hamilton and Sharif Abdel Kouddous traveled to
the convention center on Sunday afternoon. The site was completely
evacuated–well almost. Three people remained at the site from the
tens of thousands that had passed though over the previous week. They
sat alone among the rows of empty chairs strewn outside. One of them
told her story.
We speak with three residents of New Orleans who were forced to flee–David Gladstone, Beverly Wright and Curtis Muhammad–about who gets saved and who doesn’t and even the question: will New Orleans be rebuilt? [includes rush transcript]
Well
there are is still no official toll of the numbers left dead by the
devastation of Hurricane Katrina. But as the Army Corps of Engineers
began pumping the water out of the city earlier this week, officials
estimated that the death the toll could be as many as 10,000 making
it one of the worst natural disasters in the history of the country.
More than 500,000 evacuees from Hurricane Katrina are being relocated
to other states all across the country. It is a historic exodus and
it is unclear what will happen to them and what support they will
receive to try and rebuild their lives. An Associated Press analysis
of Census data shows that the people living in the path of the
hurricane’s worst devastation were twice as likely as most
Americans to be lower income and without a car. The dead and the
displaced are largely the ones who had no where to go, and no means
to get there. They were the ones who waited for days at the New
Orleans Convention Center and at other places throughout the city,
without adequate food, medicine, housing and security. And they were
mostly black and largely poor.
New
Orleans is a city that is almost 70 percent black with nearly 23
percent of its residents living in poverty. Many African Americans
are asking if this calamity would have been allowed to happen if the
demographics of the city were different. And they are asking if the
response would have been quicker if New Orleans had been a
predominately white, wealthy city. On his way to Louisiana a few days
ago, Reverend Jesse Jackson said that racial discrimination and
indifference to black suffering was at the root of the disaster
response. He went on to say, "In this same city of New Orleans
where slave ships landed, where the legacy of 246 years of slavery
and 100 years of Jim Crow discrimination, that legacy is unbroken
today."
The
Reverend Al Sharpton spoke in Houston on Saturday and noted the
difference between the government’s rapid response to the hurricane
in Florida last year that hit mostly white upper-middle class areas
and to Hurricane Katrina that hit the mostly black New Orleans and
Mississippi.
****
****
Looking back after 10 years
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