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More photos of the story

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Fresh floods, fires and looting
rode in the destructive wake of Hurricane Katrina, deepening a
humanitarian crisis that left hundreds feared dead and sections of New
Orleans submerged to the rooftops. (Photo: Xinhua/REUTERS)
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BEIJING, Aug. 31 (Xinhuanet)-- Hundreds might have
been killed, tens of thousands were homeless and flood submerged most of New
Orleans on Tuesday after monstrous Hurricane Katrina rampaged
across the US Gulf Coast.
As US President George W. Bush declared major disaster
areas in Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama, low-lying New Orleans faced
catastrophic destruction, with floodwaters pouring into the city through levees
breached by the storm.
There were instances of looting in several areas of New
Orleans and the authorities imposed martial law in at least two parishes in a
bid to maintain law and order.
"Our city is in a state of devastation," Mayor Ray Nagin
was quoted as saying by WWL-TV. "With some sections of our city, the water
is as deep as 20 feet (seven metres). It's almost like a nightmare that I hope
we wake up from."
Kathleen Blanco, the Governor of Louisiana, said last
night that thousands of people had been rescued from the rooftops of New
Orleans, and state officials were planning to move to safety the estimated
55,000 people still trapped in the Superdome and other shelters.
"The dimensions are unfathomable," Blanco said. She
advised residents to hold a day of prayer on Wednesday to "calm our spirits" and
give thanks for survival.
"The devastation is greater than our worst fears," she
said. "It is just totally overwhelming."
In the Mississippi coastal city of Biloxi, hundreds may
have died after being trapped in their homes when a 30-foot (9 metre) storm
surge came ashore, a city spokesman said. Cadaver dogs were being brought in to
help find the dead.
"It's going to be in the hundreds," spokesman Vincent
Creel was quoted as saying by Reuters. Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour had
said there were reports of up to 80 dead in the Biloxi area, but US Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said the state's unofficial estimates were
"probably way too low."
Rescuers struggled through high water and mountains of
debris to reach areas crushed by Katrina when it struck the Gulf Coast on
Monday. The storm inflicted catastrophic damage as it slammed into Louisiana
with 140 mph (224 kph) winds, then raged into Mississippi, Alabama and
Tennessee.
More than 1.3 million people in these areas were without
power. The authorities said that it could be two months before electricity is
restored to everyone who had been hit.
"The federal, state and local governments are working
side by side to do all we can to help people get back on their feet," Bush said
at a naval base in San Diego, California. "And we have got a lot of work to
do."
Estimates by insurers put the property and casualty costs
of Katrina at anything up to $26 billion, which would make it more expensive
than the previous record storm, Hurricane Andrew, which caused $21 billion in
insured losses in 1992. Enditem
(Agencies)
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