More racist gov’t atrocities exposed
By
LeiLani Dowell
Published Sep 15, 2005 11:19 PM
The ravages of capitalism continue to be
exposed in the aftermath of Katrina, as even more stories highlighting the
official hostility and neglect toward the poor and people of color of the
region—before, during and after the hurricane—are brought to
worldwide attention.
Two paramedics from California trapped in New Orleans
by the storm after attending a conference there wrote a gripping account of
their experiences that appeared first in Socialist Worker, circulated widely on
the Internet, and eventually was picked up by other media.
Lorrie Beth
Slonsky and Larry Bradshaw reported how, for several days, they and a large
group of people, mostly African Americans, tried to survive and find a way out
of the city. They watched food spoil in a locked Walgreen’s store as
police, who could have opened it up to distribute food and water to the
increasingly desperate population, instead drove away “looters.”
After being denied entrance to the Superdome and the Convention Center,
the group decided to camp near the police command headquarters. But a police
commander came across the street and told them to “walk to the
Pontchartrain Expressway and cross the greater New Orleans Bridge where the
police had buses lined up to take us out of the City. The crowd cheered and
began to move. We called everyone back and explained to the commander that there
had been lots of misinformation and wrong information and was he sure that there
were buses waiting for us. The commander turned to the crowd and stated
emphatically, ‘I swear to you that the buses are
there.’”
The group began attracting others, including the
elderly, people with small children and the disabled, as they marched the two to
three miles to the freeway and up the steep incline to the bridge.
But
then “armed Gretna sheriffs formed a line across the foot of the bridge.
Before we were close enough to speak, they began firing their weapons over our
heads.” The group had to retreat, back to the flooded city.
In
finally reporting on this story, the Sept. 10 New York Times said, in racist
terms, that police agencies in the suburbs to the south of New Orleans were
“so fearful” of evacuees that they “sealed a crucial bridge
over the Mississippi River and turned back hundreds of desperate
evacuees.”
A Love Canal-type landfill
In addition, the
consequences of the neglect of the poor and people of color in the region before
the hurricane continue to come to light. An article in the Sept. 12 issue of the
magazine Solid Waste and Recycling tells of a “Love Canal-type landfill
submerged in New Orleans.”
The area, called the Agriculture Street
Landfill, is an example of environmental racism: “The ASL is situated on a
95-acre site in New Orleans Parish, Louisiana. ... Houses and buildings ... were
constructed in later years directly atop parts of the landfill. Residents report
unusual cancers and health problems and have lobbied for years to be relocated
away from the old contaminated site, which contains not only municipal garbage,
but buried industrial wastes. ... The site was routinely sprayed with DDT in the
1940s and 50s and, in 1962, 300,000 cubic yards of excess fill were removed from
ASL because of ongoing subsurface fires.” The article says a few years ago
the site was fenced in and covered with clean soil.
Now concern is raised
about the potential of leaching to neighboring areas—because this area is
“situated right in the middle of a huge area of three-foot flooding. ...
It’s not outlandish to consider the possibility that toxic waste from the
landfill may mix with floodwaters and spread far beyond the old landfill
site.”
In contrast to the four days it took the government to
organize food drops for the survivors in New Orleans, the Sept. 11 Hattiesburg
American newspaper reports that the White House prioritized restoring power to a
fuel pipeline in Mississippi, northeast of New Orleans and far from the Gulf
Coast, in the immediate hours after Katrina struck.
According to the
paper, “[The] order—to restart two power substations in Collins that
serve Colonial Pipeline Co.—delayed efforts by at least 24 hours to
restore power to two rural hospitals and a number of water systems in the Pine
Belt.”
The manager of Southern Pines Electric Power Association
reportedly received no less than two calls from Vice President Dick
Cheney’s office stressing the importance of restoring power to the
pipeline immediately.
Armed camp protects the rich
Meanwhile,
the occupation of the Gulf region by troops, police—and now
mercenaries—continues. The Guardian of Sept. 12 reports, “New
Orleans has turned into an armed camp, patrolled by thousands of local, state
and federal law enforcement officers, as well as 70,000 national guard troops
and active-duty soldiers now based in the region.”
In addition,
mercenaries from private companies, including Blackwater and ISI, have been
employed in the hundreds by the wealthy elite of New Orleans to guard their
property.
The Guardian interviewed Yovi, an Israeli mercenary who is
working in the region for ISI, who said, “God watches out for the rich
people, I guess.”
If the events before, during and in the aftermath
of the hurricane prove anything, it’s that capitalism watches out for the
rich people, to the absolute suffering and devastation of the poor and
oppressed.
And while these elite are having their homes guarded, they are
busy creating their own plans for the reconstruction of the area with full
support of the government—plans that do not include the poor and
oppressed. The Sept. 8 Wall Street Journal tells, the disaster that has
overwhelmed New Orleans, the city’s monied, mostly white elite is hanging
on and maneuvering to play a role in the recovery when the floodwaters of
Katrina are gone.”
The article describes a meeting, to be held the
next day, of business leaders to “map out a future for the city.”
James Reiss, a descendant of an old-line Uptown family, told the Journal,
“Those who want to see this city rebuilt want to see it done in a
completely different way: demographically, geographically and politically.
I’m not just speaking for myself here. The way we’ve been living is
not going to happen again, or we’re out.”
Dovetailing with
this is an editorial in the Washington Post by Joel Garreau called “A Sad
Truth: Cities Aren’t Forever.”
Garreau says, “What the
city of New Orleans is really up against ... is the set of economic, historic,
social, technological and geological forces that have shaped fixed settlements
for 8,000 years. Its necessity is no longer obvious to many stakeholders with
the money to rebuild it. ... If the impetus does not come from them, where will
it come from?”
But the impetus for reconstruction—and how it
should be done—is coming from the poor and oppressed communities in the
Gulf as well, who continue to fight back.
In a radio segment entitled
“New Orleans Population Has the Right of Return,” Glen Ford,
co-publisher of the Black Commentator, said, “The rights of [the people of
New Orleans] cannot be privatized, or churched-out, or Salvation-Armyed out. All
help is appreciated but we must also focus on rights—the right to not be
permanently displaced by depraved government policies or the corporate greed
that will certainly try to swallow New Orleans whole.”
Activists
around the world have pledged their solidarity to people of the Gulf region and
their demands for justice.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
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