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From the Bayou to Baghdad: Mission Not Accomplished

By Amy Goodman, King Features Syndicate. Posted September 5, 2007.


Bush flew from the bayou to Baghdad as a People's Hurricane tribunal in New Orleans put every level of government on trial. What was the verdict?
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During the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, several dozen public-housing residents and activists marched to the headquarters of the Housing Authority of New Orleans. The marchers occupied the offices for hours.

As the military and police surrounded the building, Sharon Sears Jasper, a displaced resident of the St. Bernard housing project, spoke: "We are not going to stop. We refuse to let you tear our homes down and destroy our lives. The government, the president of the United States, you all have failed us. Our people have been displaced too long. Our people are dying of stress, depression and broken families. We demand that you open all public housing. Bring our families home now."

In contrast, the day before, I had asked Mayor Ray Nagin if he made any demands of President Bush as they dined together the previous night. Bush had just spoken at a school named for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose issues of race and poverty are starkly laid bare in New Orleans. Unlike those who had lost their homes, the mayor replied, "It wasn't a time for demands."

Tracie Washington is the president of The Louisiana Justice Institute and a lifelong resident of New Orleans. She says only a quarter of the more than 5,000 affordable housing units in New Orleans are filled. "There is a feeling by our government that public housing of old needs to be dismantled, buildings shut. We have litigation going right now to change that, but it's horribly slow, and it's tragic."

She describes the plan by which public housing will be converted to "mixed-income" developments: "Some of these developments that are closed down took in no water. But the decision was made to take advantage of an opportunity. Hurricane Katrina came. 'Look what we can do. We can keep these people away from here, bring in the bulldozers, tear down this housing.'"

It is not just renters. Private housing is being demolished as well. Washington described how the city instituted a stunning policy to allow the legal demolition of homes. Whereas once homeowners would have at least 120 days and several layers of appeals to prevent their homes from being demolished, Nagin instituted an "Imminent Health Threat Demolition" ordinance. He now gives residents only 30 days to stop demolition.

To the tens of thousands of New Orleanians scattered across the country, the city's scant notice -- a sticker attached to the property plus mentions on a city website and in The Times-Picayune newspaper -- is clearly insufficient. According to The Times-Picayune, in addition to homes being destroyed, liens are placed on properties for the cost of the demolition, setting the stage for the displaced owners to lose their property to the city.

That is why groups like Common Ground Collective, The Louisiana Justice Institute and People's Hurricane Relief Fund and Oversight Coalition are taking action, on the streets and in the courts.

According to Common Ground's founder, Malik Rahim, of the more than 12,000 people previously in the lower 9th Ward, only about 400 live there now. Where once there was a dense, vibrant African-American neighborhood, I walked with Rahim through tall marsh grass, vacant lots and destroyed churches and schools. A few isolated, damaged brick homes remain.

Curtis Muhammad, a longtime resident of New Orleans and a member of People's Organizing Committee, believes the economic interests driving the failing reconstruction must be investigated. "People see [Donald] Trump down here trying to buy real estate, the big tycoons. The gated communities are growing faster and faster. Look at public housing. They could have knocked that out in a week if they wanted to, cleaned it up. That's a lot of people that they could have just brought home. You can't explain that."

Two years after Katrina, as Bush flew from the bayou to Baghdad, a People's Hurricane tribunal -- putting every level of government on trial -- was wrapping up in New Orleans. A group was selling T-shirts there that reads: "Don't believe the hype. Gulf Coast recovery is not 'slow' -- it is a privatization scheme that takes away our homes, schools, hospitals and human rights." Mission accomplished?

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See more stories tagged with: bush, katrina, new orleans, hurricane

Amy Goodman is the host of the nationally syndicated radio news program, Democracy Now!

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there are huge corporations which prowl the world looking for construction opportunities
Posted by: Suzon on Sep 6, 2007 7:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They would not ignore the potential to make big bucks out of disaster and tragedy. They consider it is their business responsiblity to put profit above people.

These corporations are international, supported in Britain by whichever political party is "in power" because judges and ministers are supposed to do as they are told in a monarchy.

In the US, the corporations are enabled by politicians in both parties, where the vast majority of candidates will pocket the money without any pangs of conscience.

The idea of incorporation is indefensible nonsense. No group of people is entitled to award themselves a fake "body" to hide behind. ( By the way, was Enron a boy or a girl?)

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Investigate Nagin's Finances, then SUE! SUE! SUE!
Posted by: mgloraine on Sep 6, 2007 8:43 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Mayor will be getting substantial kick-backs and other gratuities in exchange for the real estate deals he's arranging, so of course he's less inclined to make demands since he's not feeling any personal hardship at present, and the future looks very profitable.

The companies and individuals who line up to take ownership of the stolen property will, of course, be the Mayor's cronies and others willing to cut him in for a piece of the action. A careful investigator could probably establish the evidence trail to link the bribes to the recipient, making a case for impeachment or other legal action, although probably not before a lot more bull-dozing has been done.

In the mean time, the locals need to get some effective lawyers to gain access to injunctions and other legal tools needed to fight City Hall, including judges who don't work for the Mayor or BushCo (that might be hard to find!). A nation-wide TV audience might be useful in keeping local authorities honest (or at least less actively corrupt), but there needs to be some new developments every few days to keep focus. New demonstrations, new suits filed, etc. Block bull-dozers with picket lines, and so on.

Someone's got to bring real consequences to bear against the crooks and swindlers who continue to run roughshod over our democracy, pillaging as they go. If it looks like all the "powers that be" (federal, state and local authorities) are intent on pursuing the ethnic cleansing of New Orleans, maybe it's time to bring our Civil Disobedience out of mothballs...start a "People's Bull-dozing Project" to remove structures and individuals offensive to the displaced citizens of New Orleans, perhaps...

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