Ecumenical Team Evacuates Hundreds From New Orleans Airport
INTERNATIONAL ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN CHARITIES (IOCC)
110 West Road, Suite 360, Baltimore, Md. 21204 — Tel: (410) 243-9820 — Fax: (410) 243-9824
Web: www.iocc.org - E-mail: news@iocc.org
For immediate release
September 6, 2005
ECUMENICAL TEAM EVACUATES HUNDREDS FROM NEW ORLEANS AIRPORT
BATON ROUGE, LA. (IOCC) - An ecumenical response team made up of
personnel from International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC),
Catholic Charities and Catholic Relief Services (CRS) negotiated their
way from Baton Rouge, La. to the Louis Armstrong New Orleans
International Airport during the early hours of Sunday morning to
evacuate 340 people in need of urgent medical care.
Along the way, the group described the heroic efforts of countless
people - from the bus drivers who made the journey to medical personnel
at the airport - and the frayed nerves of people doing their best to
cope and survive.
The airport’s baggage claim area, serving as a triage facility where
hundreds of people were receiving attention from medical personnel, was
crowded with stretchers on carousels, the wheelchair bound, and people
with broken limbs and other ailments.
Medical staff at the airport expressed relief at the sight of buses
which took those in need of medical attention to the Louisiana State
University Field Hospital in Baton Rouge, La. Physicians at the airport
recounted the 36 hour period prior to their arrival when attempts made
by other buses to access the facility had been turned away.
Traveling in a convoy of ten school buses provided through the Disaster
Recovery Center and accompanied by students from local universities, the
team made its way to the airport through complete darkness and
uncertainty during a journey that was at times made tense by the lack of
clear communication on the ground – especially at the checkpoints.
“As we approached New Orleans there was a stench in the air,” described
Leonidas “Lee” Kapetanakis, an IOCC Emergency Response team member from
Houston, Texas. “It was an eerie scene as we negotiated our way through
four checkpoints, escorted by military personnel and police officers.”
The operation began as an effort to evacuate a group of 300 Vietnamese
who reportedly were stranded at the airport. Based on the information
they had, the team met with officials at the Disaster Recovery Center in
Baton Rouge to organize their transportation.
When the group arrived at the airport, they found that only 15
Vietnamese remained, but that there was an immense need to relocate more
than 2,500 people with medical needs.
As the team returned to Baton Rouge with 340 of the sick and injured,
the uncertainty of the journey and concern for the fate of those left
behind turned to hope when they passed as many as one hundred buses
headed toward the airport. By the next day the impasse had been broken
and nearly all of the medical patients had been transported from the
make-shift facilities at the baggage terminal to the field hospital.
The group’s efforts were spearheaded by Catholic Charities Archdiocese
of New Orleans chief executive officer Jim Kelly, who himself was
displaced from his home by Hurricane Katrina’s onslaught. Kelly was
supported by former CRS executive and IOCC consultant Frank Carlin, Rev.
Fr. Peter-Michael Preble of the Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese of
America, head of disaster response for CRS Pat Johns, IOCC disaster
response team member Leonidas Kapetanakis and Rev. Fr. Pham a Roman
Catholic priest and medical doctor.
In addition to the evacuation, the interfaith effort is warehousing and
distributing relief arriving to Baton Rouge. Hygiene items, oral
electrolyte solutions for children and adults, diapers, water, food,
blankets and hygiene kits have been provided by the collective efforts
of the group.
“This is an incredibly inspirational ecumenical effort here in Baton
Rouge,” said Frank Carlin, a former CRS executive with 37 years of
domestic disaster and international relief and development experience
who is working with the IOCC Emergency Response Team and Catholic
Charities. “In addition to the convoy, we are providing ongoing aid to
those who have been displaced from New Orleans and the Gulf Coast and
filling gaps in services.”
Contributions to IOCC’s Hurricane Disaster Response Fund may be sent to
IOCC, “Hurricane Relief,” P.O. Box 630225, Baltimore, MD 21263-0225.
Donations may also be made online at www.iocc.org or by calling
toll-free 1-877-803-IOCC (4622).
Founded in 1992, IOCC is the official humanitarian aid agency of the
Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas
(SCOBA). Catholic Charities in the United States started in New Orleans
and has been helping clothe, feed, educate and care for the needy for
decades. CRS, founded in 1943 by the Catholic Bishops of the United
States, is the official international relief and development agency of
the US Catholic community.
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