The death of a city (well, part of it, anyway), perhaps? Time will tell.New Orleans residents ordered to evacuate
The Mayor of New Orleans in the US state of Louisiana has ordered residents to evacuate his city of half a million people ahead of the arrival of Hurricane Katrina.
The massive storm with winds of over 250 kilometres an hour is expected to come ashore near New Orleans sometime in the next 24 hours.
If it maintains its current intensity it will be one of the two or three strongest storms ever to hit the US mainland.
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin explained the gravity of the situation.
"Ladies and gentlemen I wish I had better news for you, but we are facing a storm that most of us have feared," he said.
"I do not want to create panic but I do want the citizens to understand that this is very serious and it's of the highest nature and that's why we're taking this unprecedented move."
The National Hurricane Centre upgraded Katrina to a category five storm, the top grading on the Saffir-Simpson scale, as television footage showed highways out of New Orleans jammed with cars and vehicles fleeing the city.
"Katrina (is) now a potentially catastrophic category five hurricane headed for the northern Gulf Coast," the centre warned in a bulletin.
It said the hurricane warning was in effect for the north central Gulf Coast from Morgan City, Louisiana, east to the Alabama and Florida borders, including the city of New Orleans and Lake Pontchartrain.
The massive storm, packing winds near 257 kilometres per hour, could hit those areas within the next 24 hours, the centre said.
"That's now a catastrophic hurricane," Chris Cisco, an expert with the National Hurricane Centre, told AFP.
President George W Bush has issued a state of emergency in Louisiana, clearing the way for federal aid to those affected.
Louisiana Governor Kathleen Babineaux Blanco ordered mandatory evacuations of low-lying areas.
The authorities in New Orleans, which lies below sea level, warned residents to take their warnings seriously and to seek shelter immediately.
About 1.3 million people live in the greater New Orleans area.
Katrina has already been blamed for seven deaths after it slammed ashore late Thursday in southern Florida, flooding entire neighbourhoods, uprooting trees and leaving more than a million people without electricity.
Ed Rappaport from the US National Hurricane Centre describes the sort of damage Katrina will cause if it retains its current intensity.
"The winds themselves are going to be strong enough that they exceed any building codes," he said.
"And in this case we're going to see significant damage, if not the complete destruction, of most structures that are very close to the centre, near that core area. Even fortified structures will have extensive damage.
"In terms of loss of life, we're also greatly concerned about the storm surge."
-AFP
Source: http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200508/s1447891.htm