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Passing the Buck as Corpses Rot

By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!. Posted September 12, 2005.


A tour of the streets of New Orleans reveals a body that has lain unclaimed for two weeks while every agency denies responsibility for removing it.

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[Editor's Note: Democracy Now! is broadcasting from Baton Rouge, Louisiana today. This is a partial transcript of a tour of New Orleans by Malik Rahim, a veteran of the Black Panther Party in New Orleans.]

Malik Rahim: You could basically smell it from right here. You know, and the police, they pass by. They look at it and they ain't going to do nothing, you know, to pick it up.

Amy Goodman: Malik then walked us down the driveway next to the health center and lifted up a sheet of corrugated metal with an X revealing the dead body underneath.

MR: Now, his body been here for almost two weeks. Two weeks tomorrow. All right. That this man's body been laying here. And there's no reason for it. Look where we at? I mean, it's not flooded. There's no reason for them to be, left that body right here like this. You mean, just totally disrespect. You know? I mean two weeks. Every day, we ask them about coming and picking it up. They refuse to come and pick it up. You can see, it's literally decomposing right here. Right out in the sun. Every day we sit up and we ask them about it. Because I mean, this is -- close as you can get to tropical climate in America. And they won't do anything about it.

AG: Malik, do you know who this person is?

MR: No. But regardless of who it is, I wouldn't care if it's Saddam Hussein or Bin Laden. Nobody deserves to be left here, and the kids pass by here and they are seeing it. The elderly, this is what is frightening a lot of people into leaving. We don't know if he's a victim of vigilantes or what. That's all we know is that his body had been allowed to remain out here for over two weeks.

AG: We are standing right outside the health clinic. It's doors are chained. The building is not seriously damaged. Have you reached people there? What authorities have you talked to to pick up this body?

MR: We have talked to everyone from the army to the New Orleans Police, to the State Troopers, to - I mean, we have talked to everybody who we can. I even talked to Oliver Thomas, who is the councilman at large, yesterday, about this body. He said he was surprised to see that this body is still there. But it's been two weeks. Two weeks that this man has been just laying here.

AG: As Malik Raheem was speaking, as if on cue, every level of authority he mentioned drove by. There's a dead body right here. Is -- who are you with?

Soldier: We're with 5015.

AG: Which is?

Soldier: The cav.

AG: Army?

Soldier: Regular army.

AG: There's a dead body right here. Can you guys pick it up?

Soldier: You don't think we can pick it up, but we can call the local authorities to come pick it up.

AG: This gentleman who lives in the neighborhood said that they have been trying to get -- here, let me ask these guys, too. Excuse me. Excuse me. Hi. There's a dead body right here. Can Louisiana State Troopers, can you pick it up?

Louisiana State Trooper: You need to talk to the public information officer, Ma'am.

AG: It's been here two weeks. We have filmed it last week, and gentleman over here said he has been trying to get it picked up for two weeks. Louisiana State Troopers, the Police, the Army, no one has responded. We're looking right over at it right there.

Trooper: You need to talk to the public information officer and contact him at the troop.

AG: Your name is?

Trooper: You need to talk to the public information officer.

AG: Do you know about the body?

Trooper: You need to talk to our public information officer.

AG: Sir, do you know about the body over there.

Trooper: Ma'am, you talk with the public information officer.

[The full transcript is available on Democracy Now!'s website.]

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

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Let's get the photos posted, too
Posted by: ScottP on Sep 12, 2005 4:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Excellent piece, it's good to be hearing from the non-approved press. I think a flow of photos of the rotting corpses would be an important addition to the discussion. Of course the administration claims it would be disrespectful to the survivors. Hogwash! That's a pretty trivial dis compared to being killed! Besides, the survivors couldn't recognize the corpses, anyhow.

Remember, this is the same administration that claimed that they weren't using napalm in Iraq, and then we discover that they've changed the name and MK-77 incendiary bombs are no longer called napalm because that created bad press (thanks to the soldiers for leaking us that info). Having seen the photos of dozens of dead children from Fallujah we now know that napalm and/or phosphor was used against civilians, and the death by fire must have been as painful as it is designed to be.

So the administration likes to shock Iraqi civilians with napalm, and likes to shock the poor with levee breaches that stay open for days while they pretend to try to fix them. I say we shock them with some photos and the resultant outcry. I'd recommend including as many background landmarks as possible in the photos, not just closeups. Thanks!

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How to dispose of a mouldering corpse
Posted by: stoney13 on Sep 13, 2005 8:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes you just gotta say "This is bullshit! We ain't gonna take this no more!!!"

How about we take this body in a refrigerated truck to Washington D.C., and roll it out on the White House lawn!!! I bet dollars to dead dogs it won't stay there for no two fucking weeks!!!!

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» RE: How to dispose of a mouldering corpse Posted by: progressivegrannie
Abandoned body of human being, victim of Katrina.
Posted by: PeterPeter on Sep 13, 2005 6:26 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Create a Tomb of the Unknown Citizen.
Get some sealable 5-gal. cans with lids, and a shovel, and scoop it up. Just grit your teeth and do it. Then take a shower....if possible. At least wash your hands and the shovel. Find a place of honor and put them there...and label it Tomb of the Unknown Citizen, or Resident.

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Tomb of the Unknown Citizen
Posted by: morticia on Sep 17, 2005 11:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Beautiful idea. Then eventually, build a big elaborate mausoleum right there on the spot, with the story of the flood carved in stone, and let people make pilgrimages there and NEVER FORGET.

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It's not an 'it.'
Posted by: waynels on Sep 19, 2005 3:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In re your headline: it's not an 'it." It was a 'him,' a human being.

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