
Rotting corpses, rapes & gun-wielding gangs… how 30,000 Hurricane Katrina survivors fought for life in ‘human cauldron'
Hurricane Katrina had already killed almost 2000 people and thousands more were battling to survive among decomposing corpses, excrement and the overwhelming stench of misery and human suffering.
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Thousands fought their way into the Superdome believing it would be safe
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President Bush sent the National Guard in a bid to maintain order
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After the deadly storm swept away their homes, the sweltering Superdome was supposed to be an emergency refuge for desperate displaced people with nowhere else to go, for just a few hours.
Instead they were plunged into a terrifying hellscape where guns, knives and drugs were rife, fighting for survival for days.
Two people - including a child - were raped, blood stained the walls and used crack pipes littered the fetid floor.
Riots erupted as starving children screamed day and night, waiting for salvation that took days to come.
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At the time petrified 11-year-old Stacey Bodden told reporters: 'People started shooting last night."
Her uncle, David Rodriguez said he heard at least seven shots and saw a man running with a gun. 'Don't shoot,' he pleaded.
Amid the crime and constant threat of violence there were terrifying reports of stabbings, looting, murder and suicide.
One man leapt 50 feet to his death, saying he had nothing left to live for.
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'We're not even dealing with dead bodies. They're just pushing them on the side," said New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin.
More than 30,000 exhausted and traumatised people were crammed into the dank arena with no power or water for almost a week.
Brad Pitt suffers huge blow in messy $20.5m legal fight with Hurricane Katrina victims after star sued over shoddy homes
Out of sheer desperation, humiliated survivors were left with no choice but to use the hallways and bins as toilets.
'There is faeces on the walls,' said survivor Bryan Hebert. 'There is faeces all over the place.'
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'This is a nuthouse,' added April Thomas who fled to the arena with her 11 children but was too afraid to sleep.
'You have to fend people off constantly,' she said. 'You have to fight for your life. I wake up in the morning, and the first thing I say is: 'Where are my babies? Is everyone here?'"
Evacuee Iiesha Rousell said at the time: "They're housing us like animals."
High winds tore off the roof of the stadium, and as filthy water seeped in, temperatures soared, food rotted and all access to the outside world was cut.
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Crowds pressed against the metal barricades that stopped them leaving, crying out for help as they waited for buses to evacuate them to safety.
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Soldiers used luggage trolleys to move elderly and injured survivors
Credit: Ed Bush
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Stranded New Orleans residents gathered outside the Convention Centre
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Shelton Alexander managed to escape the Superdome and fled the city
Credit: National Geographic
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"People said they felt abandoned by humanity," said local reporter Thanh Truong. "The only way I can describe it is the smell of human suffering.'
Now an unflinching new National Geographic documentary, Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time, recalls the horror and chaos that unfolded as terrified residents struggled to survive not only the havoc wreaked by the brutal storm but then its tragic aftermath.
The gripping five part series exposes how a natural disaster two decades ago rapidly descended into a gut wrenching man-made national disgrace leaving an enduring legacy that shattered millions of lives.
Former marine Shelton Alexander was among those who believed they would shelter in the Superdome for hours - not days.
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We are right here in the city and we're about to starve to death
Superdome Survivor Shelton Alexander
He said: "The National Guard was there, but nobody really was in charge.
'There were so many breakdowns of communication—it was chaos.
"It started getting real crazy with the bathrooms getting backed up and everything.
"Everybody was on edge. That's when it started getting a little chaotic.
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'To watch the elders suffering, patients sitting in the corner all day, unattended, it was just really bad.
"We are right here in the city and we're about to starve to death or get dehydrated.
Shots were fired
"Not knowing if they would just hold us in there against our will and starve us to death crossed our mind.
"We went to each gate, one by one, to see if they would let us out and they wouldn't. They were really holding us back.'
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But, along with 18 others, Shelton was able to flee from the dire conditions Superdome in his Ford truck which was parked nearby.
Ray Nagin, the then-mayor of New Orleans recalled: "I was among the people in the Superdome. I knew what was going on every minute. I did not have air conditioning nor shower facilities."
Superdome manager Doug Thornton added: "We're not a hospital, we're not a hotel. We can't house people for five or six days."
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The shelter was well ordered for the first few hours but descended into carnage
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Hundreds begging to be allowed inside were turned away
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But still today, many struggling to rebuild their lives blame government failure for the slow response and lack of aid - likening the widespread chaos that followed the storm to a war zone.
Due to a series of systematic blunders, authorities struggled to work out a plan to evacuate them to safety.
Prior to the storm, mandatory evacuation orders were issued but cops had struggled to move the poorest residents, who simply had no choice but to stay in their homes and hope for the best.
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Hurricanes are common in that part of Louisiana, and Lynette Boute was among those who ignored the extreme weather warnings, preferring to stay and prepare for the city's iconic Mardi Gras festivities.
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WWL reporter Thanh Truong stayed to describe the horrific situation
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Lynette Boutte survived the devastation of Hurricane Katrina
Credit: National Geographic
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Malik Rahim was among those with no choice but wait out the storm
Credit: National Geographic
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'Every time this happens they try to make me leave,' she insisted. 'I said I'm not leaving my property.'
But as the storm loomed the warnings became more severe and many attempting to flee had to turn back when traffic became gridlocked as the rain became torrential.
Community organiser Malik Rahim added: 'Katrina hit at the worst time to be poor in America, by the end of the month you ain't got no money.
'What makes a disaster a tragedy? A tragedy is when we fail to do what we should be doing.
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"And the first tragedy of Katrina was not being prepared, not having an exit strategy for the 100,000 people that we knew didn't have no means of escaping.'
People said they felt abandoned by humanity. The only way I can describe it is the smell of human suffering
Reporter Thanh Truong
But even after the Category Five hurricane had passed over the city, flood water continued to rise at a terrifying rate and conditions quickly deteriorated.
New Orleans is surrounded by a series of walls known as levees built to reduce the risk of flooding from lakes, canals and the Mississippi River - but the intensity of the storm smashed through the defences.
While President Bush flew over in Air Force One and declared the situation a natural disaster, locals believed the situation was man made and could have been avoided.
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They put the crisis down to the shoddy design and construction of the levees in the wake of Hurricane Betsy in the 1960s.
As the levee walls collapsed, parts of the city flooded at an alarming rate, sweeping away hundreds of houses, and leaving thousands of terrified people trapped in theirs.
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Residents tried to find refuge in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005
Credit: Global Imageworks, LLC.
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Stranded residents gathered underneath motorway bridges
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Eventually aid arrived and was distributed to residents
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Resident Lucrece Philips said: 'Everything changed that day.
'We heard something that sounded like an explosion. That's when the water went from the bottom of the tyre of a car to the second floor of a house within twenty minutes.'
The force of the water rushing through the levees was so intense it even knocked houses off their foundations, leaving them teetering on their edges.
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Residents frantically scrambling onto their rooftops and balconies in a desperate bid to reach higher ground.
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Vulnerable residents were evacuated by plane with no idea where they were heading
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Residents returned to find their homes destroyed
Credit: Journeyman Pictures LTD
Emergency services rushed to rescue as many as possible from dire situations by boat and helicopter.
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But soon dead bodies were floating in the filthy water, which rose to more than 15 feet deep within hours.
Police officer Bobby Norton said: 'Until you see it you can't imagine it.'
Everything changed that day. We heard something that sounded like an explosion
Lucrece Philips
Meanwhile in the Superdome the situation was deteriorating fast - a second wave of more wounded and terrified people who had survived the worst night of their lives tried to cram inside.
With their houses in ruins, they had no choice.
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Police officer Ed Bush said: 'When the levees broke everything changed.
'They were brought to the Superdome because there was nowhere else to go.
'It was desperation - but they were coming to another hell.'
By day three 30,000 desperate people were crammed into the stadium - and armed guards were stationed at the doors to prevent people trying to fight their way out.
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Military helicopter rescued stranded residents in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
Credit: John Keller
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Lucrece Phillips was among the survivors
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Houses were flattened by the force 5 hurricane
Credit: Alamy
Critical situation
In the surrounding streets, the city descended into lawlessness as starving people gathered on motorway bridges and flyovers, while others resorted to looting shops and supermarkets as they waited for fleets of buses and ships which had been promised to evacuate the city.
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Medical facilities were overloaded, there was no phone signal and the situation was declared critical.
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An elderly woman is carried from the Superdome after gunshots were heard
Credit: AFP
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Plans to rebuild New Orleans have been slow to take effect
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A new levee system is designed to prevent another tragedy
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It appeared that the police had lost control as violence broke out - and when police, helicopter pilots and SWAT teams were shot at, all rescue operations were abandoned.
After five days, tens of thousands were still waiting, struggling for survival and sharing what scraps of food they could find until the armed National Guard relief convoy finally rumbled into town in tanks and armoured vehicles.
Slowly elderly people and children were evacuated by school buses and sent to the airport, but main roads leading out of the city were blocked, and desperate families trying to leave on foot were stopped.
Malik Rahim added: 'I'm not a naive person but nothing prepared me for what happened after Katrina.'
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They were brought to the Superdome because there was nowhere else to go. It was desperation - but they were coming to another hell
Police officer Ed Bush
Over the following months almost a million displaced refugees were rehoused in 30 different states, in the largest mass migration the US had seen since the 1930s.
When the water eventually receded, many attempted to return to New Orleans but were heartbroken to find their homes vandalised and in ruins among the wreckage.
In October the search for survivors ended and the official death toll stood at 1,392.
Over the following years money was poured into rebuilding the levees and returning people to their communities.
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A government scheme called The Road Home was set up to cover the cost of relocating, repairs and rebuilding the hardest hit areas - but thousands were told they were not eligible for payouts and found themselves caught up in overwhelming red tape.
One of the worst affected neighbourhoods, the Lower Ninth Ward is still a ghost town - before the hurricane the population was over 14,000, now it is just 4,630.
And, twenty years after the disaster that devastated New Orleans, experts fear that global warming and rising sea levels may mean that another natural disaster could turn into a tragedy again.
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A baby is carried away from the superdome
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Evacuees from the Superdome argue line up for a bus trip to the Houston Astrodome days after Hurricane Katrina
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The Irish Sun
17 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
I was on FaceTime call with my best friend when she was killed in a horror car crash – her screams will haunt me forever
A YOUNG woman who was on FaceTime with her best pal when she was killed in a car crash says she'll be haunted by the memory forever. Ebony Neville heard tragic work colleague Stephanie Nye-Diroyan suddenly scream as the video call cut out. 9 Ivan Zailac and Stephanie Nye-Diroyan (right) just seconds before the fatal crash Credit: Ebony Neville 9 Stephanie, 21, was killed in the horror collision Credit: Central News 9 Ebony Neville (left) and Stephanie were best pals, having met at work months before Credit: Ebony Neville The 21-year-old then began frantically trying to call her friend back before getting into her own car and driving along the same route, eventually coming across the crash site. Stephanie, 21, was a passenger in a BMW being driven by another work colleague, Ivan Zaliac, 24, when they ploughed into a lorry at nearly 100mph on Mollison Avenue, in Enfield North London. Ebony told The Sun: "Seconds before the phone cut out you could hear the engine revving and Stephanie's scream - then it froze on her face." She added: 'I tried to ring her back - I don't know what I was thinking had happened. READ MORE NEWS DEATH SMASH Sales exec killed colleague in 100mph horror crash - but walks free from court 'I then got in my car and I didn't know where to go, I knew that they were in Brimsdown, in that local area, but I had no idea where.' Zaliac - who walked free from court last month after being deemed unfit to stand trial - had been giving Stephanie a lift on October 23 2022 after they finished work at nearby second hand car dealership Big Motoring World. Ebony was ill that day and Stephanie had agreed to stop off to see her on her way home when she died. The crash happened at 7.54pm. 'It was literally a quick call,' explained Ebony. 'She worked that day - it was a Sunday - and I wasn't in. 'It was a quick catch up, really. A catch up with a friend, that's all. She was such a good friend, she'd been non-stop checking in throughout the day - but couldn't ring me until she finished work. 'We were on the phone and then it froze on Stephanie's face, and the call cut out.' Three pedestrians injured by falling rubble as van crashes through multi-storey car park wall in UK city centre She added: 'I then rang her personal phone. I also rang Ivan's phone, both were disconnected and were being put through to voicemail.' Ebony said she waited 20 minutes and was 'still ringing during this time… just to try and find out what had happened'. She rang the police and found out there'd been a 'bad crash' in Brimsdown so 'drove around'. 'It wasn't too far from my house, it was about an 11-minute drive,' Ebony said. 'The road was blocked off. I hadn't been told who was involved in the crash or what had happened. 'I wasn't allowed to know any information.' She was then directed to The Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel in the East End, where Stephanie had been taken. Holding back tears, Ebony said: 'I did everything I could that day and I wouldn't change anything. I went to the hospital… I wasn't allowed to know anything without Stephanie's mother knowing first.' 9 Zailac was deemed unfit to stand trial earlier this month Credit: Central News 9 Mollison Avenue in Brimsdown where the crash took place Credit: Google Maps 9 Stephanie and her mum Nicholle Diroyan (left) Credit: Ebony Neville A screen shot she captured of Stephanie during the call, a few minutes before the crash, was shown in court. Ebony took to the stand to give evidence. She said: 'I was quite upset and ran out of the room immediately afterwards, and put myself together before returning.' Zailac suffers from amnesia and doesn't remember the details of what happened after suffering a brain injury in the collision and subsequent psychiatric issues. He had been ruled unfit to stand trial so the jury had to formally decide whether he did the act alleged, namely causing Stephanie's death by dangerous driving. The jury then found he did carry out the act. Judge Sarah Munro, KC, said Zailac will be supervised by a nominated social worker and the Hillingdon mental health team for two years. 'This is the only way your mental health can be restored in order for a decision to be made as to whether there are further legal consequences for you to face,' the judge said. Prosecutor Frederick Hookway told the court that the Crown intends to put Zailac on trial if he recovers. 'The objective of this order is for the improvement of the defendant's mental health not only for his own sake but for the future of these proceedings,' he said. 'The crown do intend to reinstitute these proceedings when and if appropriate.' Stephanie's mum Nicholle Diroyan sobbed as she read her victim impact statement at the Old Bailey on July 7. She said: 'The pain of losing her is immeasurable and every day without her feels incomplete.' Ebony, who now lives in Manchester, has launched a petition to try and ensure Stephanie's family get justice. 'There's been three years of constant delays and adjournments - and now we're told it'll be 2027 before we know if Ivan can even stand trial. 'It's the waiting. We're left in the dark.'. 'I feel so sorry for Stephanie's mum Nicholle - who's always at the court but then left frustrated each time.' Ebony added: 'We were told the jury returned a verdict in a record time. Quickest for death by dangerous driving for 27 years. 'Despite this clear outcome, family and friends are waiting for justice.' Referring to the two-year order, she said: 'It's a deterrent of the law, rather than an enforcement.' She added: 'That grievance, when everything is brought back up. I'm quite shaky on this call, it's traumatic to relive the tragic crash and death of Stephanie.' Ebony went on to say: 'Stephanie was the most lovely, genuine, outgoing person. She was there for her friends, she was there for her family. 'If anyone needed her, she'd message, she'd ring, she'd be there for you. To see her face in the newspaper in such a tragic way, and yet we're still yet to receive any justice, is so heartbreaking.' Stephanie had hired Ebony several months before, and was her manager before being promoted to the finance department shortly prior to her death. 'We became friends so quickly,' she said. 'The week before she died we were in Manchester and Nottingham, just enjoying ourselves. 'I was always going round to hers and picking her up or going for lunch break. 'Sometimes we'd get a takeaway into work and would be sitting there with 10 different Greggs items. She was amazing.' Ebony added: 'We believe she's looking down on us so proud of us all.' For more on Ebony's petition see here. Do you know more? Email 9 Ebony had rushed out in her own car after learning about the crash Credit: Ebony Neville 9 Stephanie with her pals Ella, Mia and Millie on a night out Credit: Ebony Neville


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
Our benefits street is like a slum… people flog sex at all hours & I strung up wall of dead rats to deter druggies
One horrified resident told us thugs set fire to a pile of rubbish outside an OAP's home which killed all 90 of his pigeons 'LAWLESS HELLHOLE' Our benefits street is like a slum… people flog sex at all hours & I strung up wall of dead rats to deter druggies DODGING a squashed rat, a young man and woman race each other on mobility scooters, while the distinctive smell of weed momentarily interrupts the putrid stench of decaying rubbish. Meanwhile mountains of black bin liners are strewn across streets, many of which spew their contents onto the pavements, while piles of mattresses, fridge freezers and sofas congregate in back alleys. Advertisement 17 Eastwood, an area of Rotherham in South Yorkshire, has been branded 'lawless' by desperate locals Credit: Glen Minikin 17 The issue of fly-tipped rubbish is so acute it's causing the rat population to soar Credit: Glen Minikin 17 One angry resident, granddad-of-11 Dave Russell, created a 'Wall of Rats' with some of his kills to demonstrate the scale of the problem to the council Credit: Glen Minikin This is Eastwood, an area of Rotherham in South Yorkshire branded 'lawless' by desperate locals, some of whom claim it's become a total no-go area at night due to escalating issues with anti-social behaviour, drugs and loud parties. The problem is so bad that a Public Spaces Protection Order (PSPO) issued by the council in 2019 has now been extended to 2028 - with demands that residents refrain from street drinking and partying until the small hours, dumping rubbish on the streets, and bring in their wheelie bins to curb the ever-expanding rodent population. Locals say they have been battling for months to keep the vermin under control - with one desperate man stringing up a line of 20 carcasses on a fence to show the council the harrowing extent of the problem. Father-of-two Andrew Wilshaw, 45, tells The Sun when we visit: 'This used to be a great area but in the past 10 years it has gone downhill before my eyes. Advertisement 'I am doing my best to help it. We didn't have much but we had standards. Now it's more like a third world country.' The main streets covered by the PSPO are Fitwilliam Road, the Doncaster Road corridor, Eldon Road and the stretch up to the Mushroom roundabout. South Yorkshire Police records showed anti-social behaviour incidents in the area had "increased steadily" since the order was last renewed, with 568 reports between 2021-2024. A total of 60 Fixed Penalty Notices have been issued since the order was introduced in 2019 - though we witnessed several violations on our visit alone. Advertisement Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council does try to keep up with demand by making clear-up trips six days a week - but still the rubbish piles up. Andrew, who works in security, now patrols the area every Monday morning taking photos documenting the damage from the weekend in an attempt to help clean up his community. I live in UK's saddest council estate with 'carpet' of 800 vodka bottles… it makes Shameless look like The Borrowers He set up the Facebook group How Clean in Eastwood, which has 800 members. Andrew - who took us around the areas in our car fearing we'd be a target if we walked around with expensive camera equipment - says: 'I started posting the sights and rubbish I saw on my own Facebook page but it blew up, so I set up the dedicated page around a year ago. Advertisement 'The idea is that we shame the council into action, because the PSPOs they have in place do nothing. 'A lot of people will get me to post their photos for them because they're too scared of reprisals to do it themselves. 'All the people who used to care have had enough and moved out. Most of those left living in this mayhem are the elderly. It's awful. 'I moved in with my ill parents a bit further up the road around 10 years ago and managed to sell my house in the thick of the problem area. Advertisement 'I thank God that happened because I wouldn't get anything for it now.' 'Wall of Rats' 17 Father-of-two Andrew Wilshaw set up the Facebook group How Clean in Eastwood, which has 800 members, to try to shame the council into action Credit: Glen Minikin 17 Dave has started laying down poison, and has gone through two tubs in the past three months Credit: Glen Minikin 17 Dave hung up a string of rodent carcasses outside his house Credit: Glen Minikin Advertisement 17 Some residents say they are too scared to let their kids play outside because there are so many rats and rodent faeces Credit: Glen Minikin Petty crime and the brazen dumping of rubbish - which is fuelling a surging population of rodents - is blighting the lives of many Eastwood residents we speak to. Granddad-of-11 Dave Russell, 74, created a 'Wall of Rats' with some of his kills. He explains: 'The rats used to be lined all across but the birds have been eating them. Advertisement 'I did it to show the council how bad it is for us. This is what we live with. 'It also stops the local druggies coming here and using it as a place to hang about. 'My garden fence is topped with barbed wire to stop burglars after our shed was broken into a few years back. We also have CCTV. The rats used to be lined all across but the birds have been eating them. I did it to show the council how bad it is for us. This is what we live with Dave Russell 'You can't have your back door open for fear you'll get a rat in your house. You see them darting across your garden all the time. Advertisement 'I catch three or four every day. I used to leave live traps and then kill them by drowning them - the snapper traps leave a bit of a mess. 'I have started laying down poison, it's £9 for a pack of 20 - in the past three months I've used two tubs. But still we have so many, it does nothing to keep the numbers down. 'Nobody should have to live like this, we are constantly bleaching and cleaning because rats are full of disease.' Father-of-one Mohammed Khan, 34, has had to replace his Mitsubishi Outlander 4x4 car three times after rats got inside and chewed wires. Advertisement He says: 'They're rampant. I'd say I've spent around £25- £30,000 on cars over the last couple of years. 'Once they've got in and eaten the foam that's it, your car is done for. 'I spend around £80 a month on pest control to try and make my garden safe for my child but really you can't let your kid play outside in this. 'It's far too dangerous. Even if you don't see a rat, there is poo left behind.' Advertisement 'Lawless' 17 Resident Kaz Gunn refuses to move from the estate even though she's had to get her door replaced twice from thugs constantly bashing it Credit: Glen Minikin 17 Petty crime and the brazen dumping of rubbish - which is fuelling a surging population of rodents - is blighting the lives of many Eastwood residents we speak to Credit: Glen Minikin 17 The council does extra clean-up operations in the area, but frustrated locals say it doesn't seem to make much difference Credit: Glen Minikin 17 Kaz says some residents have mobility scooters even though they're not disabled Credit: Glen Minikin Advertisement Resident Kaz Gunn, 55, refuses to move from the estate even though she's had to get her door replaced twice from thugs constantly bashing it. Kaz, who suffers with osteoporosis, says: 'I always speak out and take photos of people throwing rubbish, but then I make myself a target. 'Anybody who passes my door will always make sure to give it a good thud on their way by. It's quite alarming and I am scared, but I refuse to budge. 'I may be small and skinny but I won't take any crap. Advertisement 'To make it even worse the whole place floods when we get plenty of rain because the drains are all blocked. 'We are living in a hellhole. It's lawless, the number of rats is immense, the streets are covered with them at night, and the parties that go on until 6am on a weekend are a nightmare. We are living in a hellhole. It's lawless, the number of rats is immense, the streets are covered with them at night, and the parties that go on until 6am on a weekend are a nightmare Kaz Gunn 'The noise here is awful. We get noise abatement people out to take measurements every so often but nothing is ever done about it. 'It's also mobility scooter central. I'd love to have a mobility scooter but can't get one for love nor money, but loads of people have them round here.' Advertisement Kaz points out a woman zipping by holding a bag of shopping in one hand while gripping the handlebar and a phone pressed to her ear in her other. 'She's not disabled,' Kaz says. 'She's a mum-of-two who lives over there. 'You also get people coming to your door trying to sell you stuff. I've had somebody try and sell my cat to me before, then a fella started breeding kittens to get money so now you see more cats than ever. 'Another fella was trying to sell a wheelie bin which he'd obviously nicked from somebody else's house. Advertisement 'As much as I'm terrified, I also have a lot of friends here who look out for me. I have CCTV to protect me.' 'Heartbreaking' 17 Though pushchairs are a regular feature outside the dishevelled terraced houses, Andrew tells us they are primarily used to transport waste Credit: Glen Minikin 17 Andrew says you can't have anything in your garden or it will get nicked Credit: Glen Minikin Bar the odd corner shop and a new play park for kids, there is not much to do in the PSPO catchment, with cafes and pubs long gone. Advertisement Despite it being the school summer holidays, the streets are void of children playing. Though pushchairs are a regular feature outside the dishevelled terraced houses, Andrew tells us they are primarily used to transport waste. 'You see so many prams outside the houses - they look innocent enough but they're actually for the people to pile high with rubbish and take it to be dumped. It's crazy,' he says. 'There are a couple of fellas around here who have vans and operate as the local skip. They take loads of rubbish and dump it. Advertisement 'We know who these people are yet nothing is done. 'Somebody set fire to some rubbish piled outside an old fella's home just last week and it killed all 90 of his pigeons. Somebody set fire to some rubbish piled outside an old fella's home just last week and it killed all 90 of his pigeons Andrew Wilshaw 'And you certainly can't have anything in your garden or it will get nicked. It's heartbreaking. 'Every so often there will be a power cut because of all the power being used to grow cannabis in some houses. Advertisement "It's not fair because Eastwood was already a working class area and we've now become a dumping ground for people and rubbish. 'Sometimes I wonder why I keep doing this but then somebody in their 80s will come to me with concerns and fears, and I keep going.' He adds: 'It's not great to walk around here during the day but you'd be insane to come here at night. 'Each night there will be around 40 Slovakian Roma people drinking in the park. Advertisement 'The council stupidly put around a dozen benches there so it makes the problem worse, and even the police don't come here. If they did there'd be hell. 'You get accosted at all hours by people asking, 'Do you want anything?' This can be drugs or sex.' 'Getting worse' 17 Some residents say there's an issue with groups of people drinking in the park in broad daylight Credit: Glen Minikin 17 The main streets covered by the PSPO are Fitwilliam Road, the Doncaster Road corridor, Eldon Road and the stretch up to the Mushroom roundabout Credit: Glen Minikin Advertisement 17 Andrew says Eastwood was already a working class area and it's now become 'a dumping ground for people and rubbish' Credit: Glen Minikin 17 A squashed rat lies decaying in the middle of the road in Eastwood Credit: Glen Minikin Eastwood is a melting pot of ethnicities, with a big Asian population who migrated in the 70s, and a large Slovakian Roma population that has increased over the past decade. Thirty-five languages are spoken at Eastwood's St Ann's Primary school. Advertisement One Roma mum-of-four, 36, who did not wish to be named, tells us: 'We are always to blame for all the rubbish but people come from outside in big vans and dump it. It is not us. 'I do not see so much wrong with all being out together in the street. We like to be together.' Another resident who did not wish to be named says: 'It is easy to put some of the blame onto the Roma families but the real problem is the landlords. 'The homeowners who moved out are now the landlords and they allow their tenants to do what they want and let them live in horrendous conditions.' Advertisement You get accosted at all hours by people asking, 'Do you want anything?' This can be drugs or sex Andrew Wilshaw Private landlords in Eastwood have to comply with Selective Licensing, a scheme put in place from 2020 to 2025 to make sure landlords maintain certain conditions and are subject to council checks. It is waiting to be renewed. 'On paper Selective Licensing and PSPOs are wonderful, but if nobody is enforcing them then they're not going to work,' the man continued. 'Something should have been done about Eastwood a long time ago. Instead it has been left to rack and ruin and it's getting worse. 'Private landlords hand over their properties with not so much as a tenancy agreement. Advertisement 'Everybody here is on benefits. Apparently many houses have their meters rigged up for gas and electricity and nobody bats an eyelid. Everybody here is on benefits. Apparently many houses have their meters rigged up for gas and electricity and nobody bats an eyelid Local resident 'The amount of nice cars around here when nobody is working is phenomenal. They're all mobility cars. 'Drinking in the street is a major problem, and people chucking their furniture into the street is standard. 'But if you ring the council, they say you need to ring the police, and they tell you to ring the council, and you go round in circles. Advertisement 'It's intolerable. We shouldn't be living like this. These are 100-year-old terraces and the best thing for them would be to knock them all down.'


RTÉ News
3 hours ago
- RTÉ News
BBC launches investigation into Strictly stars' 'cocaine use'
The BBC has launched an investigation into alleged cocaine use by two of the stars of Strictly Come Dancing. Reports in The Sun allege their drug use was discussed on the BBC dancing show and said that the corporation had appointed law firm Pinsent Masons to lead the investigation. According to reports, the allegations were made in a legal submission by law firm Russells in March on behalf of former contestant Wynne Evans, who was dropped by the BBC after apologising for using "inappropriate language" during the launch of the Strictly tour. Others have also reported drug use on the show, according to The Sun. A BBC spokesperson said: "We have clear protocols and policies in place for dealing with any serious complaint raised with us. "We would always encourage people to speak to us if they have concerns. It would not be appropriate for us to comment further." it is understood that the BBC often appoints external law firms to help it lead investigations, while reporting back to an internal team. The cast members involved in the investigation were not named by The Sun. It comes after the BBC launched a review into Strictly in 2024 that looked into allegations of bullying and harassment against former professional dancer Giovanni Pernice, made by his former dance partner Amanda Abbington. The corporation upheld some, but not all, of the complaints made - and introduced a series of new measures aimed at improving welfare. This included the introduction of a chaperone who is present "at all times" during training room rehearsals. EastEnders star James Borthwick was also suspended from the BBC after a video emerged of the actor using a slur on the set of the dance programme.