Millions who fled Rita told to halt return (AP) Updated: 2005-09-25 11:09
Hurricane Rita pummeled US east Texas and the Louisiana coast Saturday,
battering communities with floods and intense winds. But residents were relieved
the once-dreaded storm proved far less fierce and deadly than Katrina.
After the storm passed, authorities pleaded with the roughly 3 million
evacuees not to hurry home too soon, fearing more chaos.
"Be patient, stay put," said Texas Gov. Rick Perry. "If you are in a safe
place with food, water, bedding, you are better remaining there for the time
being."
A truck lies on its side on I-10 highway in
Orange, Texas in the aftermath of Hurricane Rita September 24, 2005.
[Reuters] | In any other hurricane season, Rita
might have seemed devastating. It knocked out power for more than 1 million
customers, sparked fires across the hurricane zone and swamped Louisiana
shoreline towns with a 15-foot storm surge that required daring boat and
helicopter rescues of hundreds of people.
But the new storm came in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, with its 1,000-plus
death toll, cataclysmic flooding of New Orleans and staggering destruction in
Mississippi. By contrast, Rita spared Houston, New Orleans and other major
cities a direct hit. By Saturday evening, the only reported death was in
Mississippi, where one person was killed by a tornado that spun off the remains
of the hurricane.
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