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Grim Task of Recovering Dead Continues in New Orleans
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=EEE261:3919ACA

City's chief of emergency operations says first recovery efforts have
found fewer bodies than 10,000 expected





Police check apartment in flooded New OrleansWith most of New Orleans
now emptied of its inhabitants, relief workers began focusing on the
grim task of recovering the bodies of the dead. There is hope that
initial estimates of the death toll may not prove to be accurate.

City officials said troops, National Guard, and police began a
house-by-house search Friday to find the remains of those killed by
Hurricane Katrina.

Initial estimates from officials were that as many as 10,000 people
may have died in New Orleans from the storm and flooding. But Colonel
Terry Ebbert, the city's chief of emergency operations, says first
recovery efforts have found fewer bodies than expected and give rise
to hope that the death toll may not go that high. "There's some
encouragement in what we've found in the initial sweeps that some of
the catastrophic death that some people predicted may not in fact have
occurred," he said.

Colonel Ebbert said the search would be conducted with dignity, and no
media would be allowed to cover the recovery effort. The Federal
Emergency Management Agency has already asked that there be no news
photographs of bodies and it has barred reporters from accompanying
rescue boats searching for storm victims.

Officials say most people have now been evacuated from New Orleans,
and those who remain amid the filthy, now-toxic flood waters will be
removed by force if needed.

Aid and assistance has been coming in from around the country and
around the world to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina. NATO
nations Friday approved the use of alliance ships and aircraft to rush
European aid to U.S. regions hit by Hurricane Katrina.

President Bush noted that money came even from impoverished countries
like Sri Lanka, which was itself devastated by last year's tsunami,
and thanked contributing nations. "In all, more than a hundred
countries have stepped forward with offers of assistance and
additional pledges of support are coming in every day. To every nation
and every province and every local community across the globe that is
standing with the American people and those who hurt along the Gulf
coast, our entire nation thanks you for your support," he said.

However, the U.S. government response to the disaster, led by the
Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, has been criticized as
tardy. The top management of FEMA, including director Michael Brown,
has also come under fire for their relative lack of experience in
disaster management.

On Friday, Mr. Brown was recalled to Washington from Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, but he retains his post as head of FEMA. Vice-Admiral Thad
Allen, chief of staff of the U.S. Coast Guard, was tapped to replace
him as the direct day-to-day manager of Katrina relief operations.

In making the announcement, Director of Homeland Security Michael
Chertoff expressed his satisfaction with Mr. Brown's work, and said
Mr. Brown is needed back in Washington to oversee all of FEMA during
the height of hurricane season. "I think Katrina will go down as the
largest natural disaster in American history. Mike Brown has done
everything he possibly could to coordinate the federal response to
this unprecedented challenge. I appreciate his work, as does everyone
here," he said.

Congress has already appropriated more than $62 billion in disaster
aid. President Bush has not ruled out asking for more funds as the
price tag for Katrina goes higher.