Posted on December 13, 2005

Katrina Death Stats Contradict Racial Complaints

NewsMax, Dec. 12, 2005

The popular perception that African-Americans living in New Orleans were disproportionately victimized by the government’s botched Hurricane Katrina rescue effort turns out not to be true — at least according to preliminary death statistics released by the state of Louisiana.

On Wednesday, Congress heard dramatic testimony from black Katrina survivors, who complained that racism drove the federal rescue efforts and resulted in an unnecessarily high number of African-American deaths.

“People were allowed to die,” storm survivor Leah Hodges testified, telling a House panel that black residents of New Orleans had been victims of “genocide and ethnic cleansing.”

But preliminary figures compiled by the morgue in St. Gabriel, Louisiana, which is the primary facility handling the bodies of Katrina deceased, show that a majority of the dead in New Orleans and surrounding parishes were actually not black.

Of the 883 bodies processed so far by medical examiners at St. Gabriel, 562 have been identified by race. Slightly less than half that number — 48 percent — are African-American.

Forty-one percent are white, 8 percent unknown and 2 percent Hispanic.

The remarkable numbers, which undermine claims that Katrina rescue efforts were somehow infused by racism, have been completely ignored by the national media, with only the Lousiana-based news web site, The Bayou Buzz, devoting any coverage at all to the story.

The surprisingly low death rate for black Katrina victims comes despite the fact that New Orleans itself was more than two-thirds black [67 percent] when the storm hit. White residents made up less than a third [28 percent] of the city’s population, according to U.S. Census bureau numbers.

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