February 11, 2009 7:11 PM
- Text
Gunfire Halts Superdome Exodus
(CBS/AP)
The evacuation of the Superdome was suspended Thursday after shots were fired at a military helicopter, an ambulance official overseeing the operation said. No immediate injuries were reported.
"We have suspended operations until they gain control of the Superdome," said Richard Zeuschlag, head of Acadian Ambulance, which was handling the evacuation of sick and injured people from the Superdome.
He said that military would not fly out of the Superdome either because of the gunfire and that the National Guard told him that it was sending 100 military police officers to gain control.
"That's not enough," Zeuschlag. "We need a thousand."
He also said that during the night, when a medical evacuation helicopter tried to land at a hospital in the outlying town of Kenner, the pilot reported that 100 people were on the landing pad, and some of them had guns.
"He was frightened and would not land," Zeuschlag.
"The reports that we have heard out there is that there are basically gangs out there with weapons who are shooting at helicopters, who are shooting at people," Gloria Roemer of the Harris County, Texas, Office of Emergency Management told CBS Radio News.
New Orleans authorities decided to wait until daylight before resuming helicopter flights.
"That's going to put our operations behind about 5 or 6 hours," Roemer said. "It's a tragedy in every sense of the word."
Zeuschlag said medics were calling him and crying for help because they were so scared of people with guns at the Superdome.
Lt. Col. Pete Schneider of the Louisiana National Guard said the military — which was handling the evacuation of the able-bodied from the Superdome — had suspended operations, too, because fires set outside the arena were preventing buses from getting close enough to pick up people.
He said tens thousands of people started rushing out of other buildings when they saw buses pulling up and hoped to get on. But the immediate focus was on evacuating people from the Superdome, and the other refugees were left to mill around.
Meanwhile, the first caravan of buses with Superdome refugees arrived early Thursday at the Astrodome in Houston, where they'll be sheltered temporarily - possibly for a long time - as authorities and relief officials try to figure out how to help them, and hundreds of thousands of displaced persons from Hurricane Katrina.
As the buses rolled in, some Houston residents were in the parking lot holding signs welcoming their neighbors from Louisiana.
"We are here to let them know - just to welcome the refugees," said one Texan. "We are here to support them, we love them and welcome them to Houston and let them know that this is their home even though they are not home and that they are more than welcome to stay here with us."
The air-conditioned Texas stadium - abandoned by the Astros five years ago as an outmoded facility - looked pretty good to some of the New Orleans hurricane victims as they got off the bus.
"The storm wasn't nothing," said one. "It was worst the days after, the water rise - we didn't have no kind of water, until the day after the hurricane."
"The Astrodome," said a Red Cross worker on hand to greet the refugees, "is a better place than they have been in until today, I can tell you that much."
The slow exodus from the smelly and sweltering Superdome began Wednesday as bedraggled refugees boarded giant trucks and then buses for a trip to more comfortable surroundings in the Houston Astrodome.
"We have suspended operations until they gain control of the Superdome," said Richard Zeuschlag, head of Acadian Ambulance, which was handling the evacuation of sick and injured people from the Superdome.
He said that military would not fly out of the Superdome either because of the gunfire and that the National Guard told him that it was sending 100 military police officers to gain control.
"That's not enough," Zeuschlag. "We need a thousand."
He also said that during the night, when a medical evacuation helicopter tried to land at a hospital in the outlying town of Kenner, the pilot reported that 100 people were on the landing pad, and some of them had guns.
"He was frightened and would not land," Zeuschlag.
"The reports that we have heard out there is that there are basically gangs out there with weapons who are shooting at helicopters, who are shooting at people," Gloria Roemer of the Harris County, Texas, Office of Emergency Management told CBS Radio News.
New Orleans authorities decided to wait until daylight before resuming helicopter flights.
"That's going to put our operations behind about 5 or 6 hours," Roemer said. "It's a tragedy in every sense of the word."
Zeuschlag said medics were calling him and crying for help because they were so scared of people with guns at the Superdome.
Lt. Col. Pete Schneider of the Louisiana National Guard said the military — which was handling the evacuation of the able-bodied from the Superdome — had suspended operations, too, because fires set outside the arena were preventing buses from getting close enough to pick up people.
He said tens thousands of people started rushing out of other buildings when they saw buses pulling up and hoped to get on. But the immediate focus was on evacuating people from the Superdome, and the other refugees were left to mill around.
Meanwhile, the first caravan of buses with Superdome refugees arrived early Thursday at the Astrodome in Houston, where they'll be sheltered temporarily - possibly for a long time - as authorities and relief officials try to figure out how to help them, and hundreds of thousands of displaced persons from Hurricane Katrina.
As the buses rolled in, some Houston residents were in the parking lot holding signs welcoming their neighbors from Louisiana.
"We are here to let them know - just to welcome the refugees," said one Texan. "We are here to support them, we love them and welcome them to Houston and let them know that this is their home even though they are not home and that they are more than welcome to stay here with us."
The air-conditioned Texas stadium - abandoned by the Astros five years ago as an outmoded facility - looked pretty good to some of the New Orleans hurricane victims as they got off the bus.
"The storm wasn't nothing," said one. "It was worst the days after, the water rise - we didn't have no kind of water, until the day after the hurricane."
"The Astrodome," said a Red Cross worker on hand to greet the refugees, "is a better place than they have been in until today, I can tell you that much."
The slow exodus from the smelly and sweltering Superdome began Wednesday as bedraggled refugees boarded giant trucks and then buses for a trip to more comfortable surroundings in the Houston Astrodome.
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