Terror Dome Stories from Australians & Brits

Ralph 123

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Rape threat to our women<br />By CHRIS TINKLER and DARYL PASSMORE<br />04sep05<br /><br />AUSTRALIAN survivors of Hurricane Katrina told last night of their dramatic escape from New Orleans and the unfolding civil disaster in city.<br /><br />The group, joyful at fleeing the nightmare of the Louisiana city, lauded one of its members as a hero. <br />Bud Hopes, of Brisbane, was praised for saving dozens of tourists as the supposed safe haven of the city's Superdome became a hellhole. <br /><br />"I would have to say that Bud is solely responsible for our evacuation," Vanessa Cullington, 22, of Sydney, told the Sunday Herald Sun by mobile phone from a bus carrying 10 Australians to safety in Dallas, Texas. <br /><br />"I dread to think what would have happened if we hadn't got out. It's so great to be free." <br /><br />News of the group's escape came as reports said as many as 10,000 people might have been killed by the hurricane and its aftermath, and President George Bush ordered more troops and an increased aid effort for the stricken Gulf of Mexico states. <br /><br />As the Australians left the Superdome, food and water were almost non-existent and the stiflingly hot arena was filled with 25,000 people and the stench of human waste. Gangs stalked the tourists and women were threatened with rape. <br /><br />"Bud took control. He was calm and kept it together the whole time," Ms Cullington said. <br /><br />Mr Hopes, 32, said: "That was the worst place in the universe. Ninety-eight per cent of the people around the world are good. In that place, 98 per cent of the people were bad. <br /><br />"Everyone brought their drugs, they brought guns, they brought knives. Soldiers were shot. <br /><br />"It was like a refugee camp within a prison. <br /><br />"It was full on. It was the worst thing I have seen in my life. I have never been so frightened." <br /><br />Realising that foreigners were a target, Mr Hopes and the other Aussies gathered tourists from Europe, South America and elsewhere into one part of the building. <br /><br />"There were 65 of us, so we were able to look after each other -- especially the girls who were being grabbed and threatened." Mr Hopes said. <br /><br />He said they had organised escorts for the women when they had gone for food or to the toilet, and rosters to keep guard while others slept. <br /><br />"We sat through the night just watching each other, not knowing if we would be alive in the morning." <br /><br />John McNeil, 20, of Brisbane, said the worst point had come after two days when soldiers had told them the power in the dome was failing and there was only 10 minutes worth of gas left. <br /><br />"I looked at Bud and said, 'That will be the end of us'," Mr McNeil said. <br /><br />"The gangs . . . knew where we were. If the lights had gone out we would have been in deep trouble. We prayed for a miracle and the lights stayed on." <br /><br />Mr Hopes said the Australians owed their lives to a National Guard Staff Sgt Garland Ogden, who had broken the rules to get the tourists out of the dome, with 60 people being evacuated to a medical centre. <br /><br />"We did some shifts at the hospital to help nurse the sick to say thank you. It was a real Aussie thing," he said. <br /><br />As the bus carrying the Australians crossed the Texan border, spirits were high. <br /><br />"We've had hotdogs and chips and everyone is laughing," Mr Hopes said. <br /><br />Later, the bus arrived at Dallas Convention Centre, where the Australians were processed. <br /><br />Family and friends gathered at the Brisbane home of Mr McNeil's parents, Peter and Mary, where they were joined by Mr Hopes's sister, Debbie Browne. <br /><br />Mrs McNeil broke down when she saw images of her son leaving New Orleans. <br /><br />"There have been times during this past week when we didn't know if we would see him again," she said. <br /><br />Mr McNeil said he could see a change in his son. <br /><br />"They've been traumatised," he said. "I think they've witnessed several atrocities." <br /><br />The other Australians on the bus were Emma Hardwick, of Sydney; Simon Wood, of Wyalkatchem, WA; Michael Ryan, of Lithgow, NSW; Yasmin Bright, of Newcastle; Michelle and Lisa van Grinsven, of Sydney; and Elise Sims, Tea Tree Gully, Adelaide. <br /><br />Meanwhile, three Australian couples were safe in Los Angeles, awaiting flights home after being rescued from New Orleans by a Channel 7 news crew. <br /><br />Tim and Joanne Miller, of Rockhampton, Garry and Cynthia Jones, of Brisbane, and Jack and Gloria Slinger, of Perth, crammed into a four-wheel-drive vehicle with reporter Mike Amor and two colleagues for the early morning dash. <br /><br />The crew had arranged to pick up two couples from the building where they were holed up and found the Slingers on the streets. <br /><br />"They were very wary about about coming out of the building. It was a pretty frightening scene -- bodies, shootings, looters," Amor said. <br /><br />A phone call in the middle of the night gave hope to relatives of Brisbane's Fiona Seidel and her sister-in-law, Katie Maclean. <br /><br />Mrs Maclean's husband, Andrew, was contacted by a New Orleans police officer who said he had seen the pair get on a bus.<br /><br /><br /> http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/printpage/0,5481,16483597,00.html
 

Ralph 123

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Re: Terror Dome Stories from Australians & Brits

'We feared for our lives in the hell of the Superdome' <br />by ROBIN YAPP, Daily Mail <br /><br />Britons returning from the horrors of New Orleans have told how they feared for their lives as violent gangs ran out of control. <br /><br />Tourists and backpackers arriving back in the UK said the city's Superdome, initially sought out as a safe haven from Hurricane Katrina, had quickly turned into a place of fear. <br /><br />They witnessed scenes of murder and looting, women were threatened with rape and racial tensions grew daily. <br /><br />Survivors praised the US military for protecting them but condemned British Embassy officials as 'useless' for failing to help or provide information to relatives. <br /><br />A handful of Britons who sheltered in the Superdome arrived back at Gatwick on flights from Dallas. <br /><br />Amid emotional scenes as they were reunited with their families, three girls wept as they recalled their experiences. <br /><br />Jane Wheeldon, 20, a student from Carmarthen, South Wales, said: "We were the prime target. Guys would come up and stroke your back and your tummy and your bum to find any money you had on you. Everyone was staring and it was so intimidating. <br /><br />"They said, 'white people are not welcome here'. Then the looting started and the gangs were smashing up the drinks and cigarette machines." <br /><br />'Complete squalor' <br /><br /><br />Miss Wheeldon spent four days in 'complete squalor' with friends Sarah Yorston, 21, from Bath, and Zoe Smith, 21, from Hull, before being evacuated to a medical centre and then a hotel. <br /><br />They had no running water or electricity, sewage overflowed from the toilets and they had to survive on packet Army rations. <br /><br />Miss Yorston said: "It was disgusting. It was scary. It was chaos. It's just desperate people doing desperate things." <br /><br />Miss Smith said: "By Wednesday we were getting abused and shouted at because they thought we were getting special treatment. More and more people were getting stabbed and being brought in injured. I have to say the US army and US air force were fantastic.' <br /><br />She said when some Britons managed to ring the British Embassy in Washington they were told to ring the New Orleans office - even though it was submerged by the floods. <br /><br />Estate agent Adam Friend, 21, of Exeter, sent his parents a text message saying: "Mum, I'm in the Superdome and it's hell. There are dead people all around me and I have seen people kill each other." <br /><br />Mr Friend slammed Embassy officials as 'useless', saying they had failed to gain access to the Superdome even though the press had managed. <br /><br />Musician Mark Graydon, 26, proposed to his American girlfriend Gretchen Heiserman, 23, when they first sought refuge in the Superdome - but they endured a 'living hell' for four days. <br /><br />Mark's father John, 56, from Stanfordle-Hope in Essex, said: "The gangs looked on Gretchen as a typical American middle-class girl and they didn't like that at all. Mark had to really protect her because she was threatened with rape and violence." <br /><br />Geography student Charlotte Scott, 19, from Reading, was stranded at the Superdome with her sister Rebecca, 20, for four days. <br /><br />Arriving at Gatwick, she said: "It felt like one long day because you are trapped inside and didn't see the daylight. It seemed like the twilight zone." <br /><br />Britons still missing <br /><br /><br />Last night fears were intensifying for Britons still missing. Vernon Carroll, 47, who lives in New Orleans, told relatives that he and his American wife Kim, 46, were leaving for Texas on August 27 after hurricane warnings - but has not been heard from since. <br /><br />His mother Jill Amend, 70, of Richmond, South West London, said: "I think he might be dead or floating in a river somewhere. I just don't know and I'm desperate." <br /><br />Fashion student Penny Rounce, 21, emailed her family before Katrina struck. Her family, from Southampton, have not heard from her since. <br /><br />Last night, MPs called for an inquiry as the Tories said the Foreign Office had failed to learn the lessons of the Asian tsunami and the Bali bombings, after which British tourists complained that they were left to fend for themselves. <br /><br />Liam Fox, the party's foreign affairs spokesman, said: "It's a question of whether they have learned any lessons at all." <br /><br />Labour MP Andrew Mackinlay, a member of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee at the Commons, said: "There is a need for root and branch reform of the management style and deployment of resources within the Foreign Office." <br /><br />The Foreign Office insisted it now had dozens of consular staff and counsellors to hand in cities around the disaster area but said they had been asked not to enter New Orleans by US officials. <br /><br />A spokesman said: "We've got lots of people in Dallas, Houston and Baton Rouge. We will be given access to New Orleans tomorrow. Anyone who needs help getting home, we can put them up and get them home."
 
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