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More photos of the story

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| Announcing itself with shrieking, 145-mph
winds, Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast just outside New
Orleans on Monday, submerging entire neighborhoods up to their roofs,
swamping Mississippi's beachfront casinos and blowing out windows in
hospitals, hotels and high-rises. (Photo: Xinhua/AFP)
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BEIJING, Aug. 30 (Xinhuanet)-- Hurricane Katrina on
Monday slammed the Gulf Coast and the US government has declared major
disasters in these areas.
Officials reported at least 55 deaths, with 50 alone in
Harrison County, Miss., which includes Gulfport and Biloxi, according to the
reports of New York Times.
Emergency workers feared that they would find more dead
among people believed to be trapped underwater and in collapsed buildings.
The winds at that point were 233 km/h.
New Orleans, a bowl-shaped city that sits below sea level
and has long feared catastrophic damage from a massive hurricane, took a
powerful blow from Katrina.
But it may have been spared the worst when the storm
turned at the last moment, sending its powerful wall of water toward
Mississippi.
Some 200 people were stranded on rooftops in one
neighborhood and several "bodies are floating in the water," New Orleans mayor
Ray Nagin -- who ordered a mandatory evacuation of the city Sunday -- was quoted
as saying by WWLTV.
An untold number of people were feared dead in flooded
neighborhoods, many of which could not be reached by rescuers because of high
water.
"Some of them, it was their last night on Earth," Terry
Ebbert, chief of homeland security for New Orleans, said of people who ignored
orders to evacuate the city of 480,000 over the weekend. "That's a hard way to
learn a lesson."
In Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi, the governors
declared search and rescue their top priority, but said that high waters and
strong winds were keeping them from that task, particularly in the hardest-hit
areas.
"We pray that the loss of life is very limited, but we
fear that is not the case," Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco said.
At least two oil rigs were adrift in the Gulf of
Mexico, where Katrina raged through key offshore oil and gas fields as one of
the strongest hurricanes on record.
Oil prices had rocketed over a new high of 70 dollars a
barrel, but prices later dropped to 67.20 dollars in New York after the US
government said it could release strategic crude reserves.
Katrina, which hit the coast as a Category 4 storm on the
five-stage Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale, could become the most expensive storm
in US history, costing insurers up to $26 billion, risk analysts said.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan told media that US
President George W. Bush approved the major disaster declarations aboard Air
Force One en route to Arizona, paving the way for the use of federal money to
help respond to the hurricane. Enditem
(Agencies)
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