Hurricane Isaac bears down on New Orleans, Louisiana

Storm 

Isaac bears down on New Orleans

The US city of New Orleans braces for the arrival of Hurricane Isaac, after sea water breaches a levee in an area to the south of the city.
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    Hurricane Isaac bears down on New Orleans, Louisiana

    The BBC's Alistair Leithead reporting from New Orleans says there is a lot of debris flying about on the streets

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    Thousands of people have fled the US city of New Orleans as Hurricane Isaac makes its slow approach.
    The hurricane will hit the Louisiana city exactly seven years after it was devastated by Hurricane Katrina, but it is a much less powerful storm.
    The city has closed its new floodgates in a bid to protect it from the effects of high waters brought by sustained winds of up to 80mph (130km/h).
    Sea water has already breached a levee in a town to the south of the city.
    Caitlin Campbell, a spokeswoman for Plaquemines Parish - where Isaac first touched down - said water was running over an 18-mile (29-km) stretch of the levee and some homes were flooded.
    After hitting Plaquemines Parish, the Category One hurricane headed back out to sea, before making a second landfall further west at Port Fourchon at about 02:00 (07:00 GMT) local time.

    At the scene

    The wind has started to build up and the rain is lashing down in the French Quarter of New Orleans as the narrow, high-sided streets amplify the wind speed. Debris is starting to be tossed around on Canal Street, as roadworks are being pulled apart by the high winds and trees are shaken almost from their roots.
    Some areas have lost power already. The streets have been cleared of all but the foolhardy - and the journalists with TV satellite trucks parked in the lee of buildings.
    The timing of the storm has brought so much attention to this city devastated by Hurricane Katrina when it struck seven years ago.
    I sat through the storm then in a hotel room and watched as 4x4s were pushed along roads with the force of the wind, wrought-iron staircases ripped off buildings and windows were blown out.
    The wind speeds so far are just a third of those during Katrina but it's the volume of water falling and the storm surge being driven onshore which threaten homes - and those who have decided to sit out the storm.
    Many people have chosen to stay - boarding up their doors and windows and settling in for a long night, hoping Hurricane Isaac will be kinder to their city.
    At 06:00 local time, it was 50 miles south of New Orleans and moving inland at about 6 mph, according to the US National Hurricane Center (NHC).
    Isaac killed at least 24 people as it passed over Haiti and the Dominican Republic earlier this week.
    It has also caused significant flooding and damage across the Caribbean and forced a day's delay to the start of the Republican party's congress in Tampa, Florida.
    'I feel safe' Tens of thousands of people have been told to leave their homes in low-lying areas of Louisiana and Mississippi, though a mass evacuation has not been ordered. Storm warnings are also in place in parts of Florida, Texas and Alabama.
    Officials say Isaac is likely to weaken before it reaches New Orleans.
    "We don't expect a Katrina-like event, but remember there are things about a Category One storm that can kill you," said New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu.
    Of particular concern are storm surges, with peaks of up to 12ft (3.7m) forecast in parts of Mississippi and southeastern Louisiana. Rainfalls of up to 1ft 8in are forecast across wide areas, along with a high chance of isolated tornadoes along the coast.
    The bowl-shaped city of New Orleans is particularly vulnerable to storms, with the centre of the city the furthest below sea-level.
    But Mr Landrieu said that the 26ft-high levee gate which now protects the areas of the city that were badly flooded in 2005 had been closed since Tuesday morning.
    Many residents of New Orleans have chosen to secure their homes but stay put, saying they were not too concerned by Isaac.
    "I feel safe," said Pamela Young from her home in the Lower Ninth Ward, a neighbourhood devastated by Katrina.
    Map
    "Everybody's talking 'going, going', but the thing is, when you go, there's no telling what will happen. The storm isn't going to just hit here."
    "If the wind isn't too rough, I can stay right here. If the water comes up, I can go upstairs."
    Nazareth Joseph, who works at a hotel in French Quarter and was in the city during Katrina, said he had a busy week ahead so would stay where he was.
    "We made it through Katrina; we can definitely make it through this. It's going to take a lot more to run me. I know how to survive," he told the Associated Press news agency.

    Storm resources

    Latest weather updates from National Hurricane Center
    Red Cross searchable website for disaster shelters
    List of area curfews from local broadcaster WWFL
    Emergency alerts from the City of New Orleans
    Evacuation map from the New Orleans Times-Picayune
    New Orleans power outage map
    By Tuesday night, more than 58,000 homes in New Orleans were reported to have lost power. Outages have also been reported across Louisiana and Mississippi, affecting more than 200,000 homes and business.
    President Barack Obama has declared an emergency in Louisiana and Mississippi, allowing federal funds to be released to local authorities.
    Speaking from the White House, he warned residents along the Gulf Coast to heed warnings, including those to evacuate, saying: "Now is not the time to dismiss official warnings. You need to take this seriously."
    Shortly before Isaac reached hurricane status on Tuesday, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal said the emergency declaration fell short of the federal help he had asked for.
    Map of New Orleans levees 
     

    COPY : http://www.bbc.co.uk/

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