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| Drivers and passengers wait outside their
cars as traffic snarls on the interstate highway leaving downtown New
Orleans August 28, 2005. Authorities in New Orleans ordered hundreds of
thousands of residents to flee on Sunday as Hurricane Katrina strengthened
into a rare top-ranked storm and barreled towards the vulnerable U.S. Gulf
Coast city. (Photo: Xinhua/REUTERS) | WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 (Xinhuanet) -- Hurricane Katrina,
one of the strongest storms ever to threaten the United States, is bearing down
on the Gulf Coast region and has prompted tens of thousands of people to be
evacuated.
An immediate whole-city evacuation in New Orlean,
Louisiana, wasordered Sunday night as the hurricane bears down with wind revving
up to around 290 km per hour and threats of a massive storm surge.
Acknowledging the fact that some people, many of
them tourists, will be unable to flee the city before the eye of the storm
strikes land sometime Monday, local authorities have set up 10 places as their
last resort.
Describing the situation as an "once-in-a-lifetime
event," New Orlean Mayor Ray Nagin said a direct hit by Katrina's storm surge
will likely topple the dams that protect the city from the surrounding water of
Lake Pontchartrain, the Mississippi River andmarshes.
The bowl-shaped city, which sits below sea level with
485,000 inhabitants, must pump water out even during normal times. The hurricane
is now threatening electricity that runs the pumps.
US President George W. Bush urged people living in
the path of Katrina to take the storm extremely seriously and follow orders to
evacuate to higher ground.
A day after declaring an emergency for Louisiana,
Bush declared an emergency Sunday for the state of Mississippi and pledged
federal support.
Rain started falling on extreme southeastern
Louisiana as the storm moved across the Gulf of Mexico toward land.
Highways in Mississippi and Louisiana have been
jammed as people headed away from Katrina's expected landfall.
All lanes were limited to northbound traffic on
Interstate highways 55 and 59 in the two states.
On the economic side, report said Katrina is also a
"unmitigatedbad news for consumers," because it had shut down offshore
production of at least one million barrels of oil daily and threatened refinery
and import operations around New Orleans.
If Katrina maintains its current strength, reports
said it will be the fourth Category five hurricane on record to strike the
United States.
The hurricane has already claimed nine lives in the
country after making landfall last week on Florida. Enditem |