LONDON - The world has watched amazed as the
planet's only superpower struggles with the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, with some saying the chaos has exposed flaws
and deep divisions in American society.
World leaders and ordinary citizens have expressed sympathy
with the people of the southern United States whose lives were
devastated by the hurricane and the flooding that followed.

APOCALYPSE NOW
With residents in desperate need of aid, many bodies have been ignored. Criticism of government response mounts. (AFP/Getty Images)
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But many have also been shocked by the images of disorder
beamed around the world -- looters roaming the debris-strewn
streets and thousands of people gathered in New Orleans waiting
-- as the authorities fail to provide food, water and other aid.
"Anarchy in the USA" declared Britain's best-selling
newspaper The Sun.
"Apocalypse Now" headlined Germany's Handelsblatt daily.
The pictures of the catastrophe -- which has killed
hundreds and possibly thousands -- have evoked memories of
crises in the world's poorest nations such as last year's
tsunami in Asia, which left more than 230,000 people dead or
missing.
But some view the response to those disasters more
favorably than the lawless aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
"I am absolutely disgusted. After the tsunami our people,
even the ones who lost everything, wanted to help the others
who were suffering," Sajeewa Chinthaka, 36, as he watched a
cricket match in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
"Not a single tourist caught in the tsunami was mugged. Now
with all this happening in the U.S. we can easily see where the
civilized part of the world's population is."
SINKING INTO ANARCHY
Many newspapers highlighted criticism of local and state
authorities and of President Bush. Some compared the sputtering
relief effort with the massive amounts of money and resources
poured into the war in Iraq.
"A modern metropolis sinking in water and into anarchy --
it is a really cruel spectacle for a champion of security like
Bush," France's left-leaning Liberation newspaper said.
"(Al Qaeda leader Osama) bin Laden, nice and dry in his
hideaway, must be killing himself laughing."
A female employee at a multinational firm in South Korea
said it may have been no accident the U.S. was hit.
"Maybe it was punishment for what it did to Iraq, which has
a man-made disaster, not a natural disaster," said the woman,
who did not want to be named as she has an American manager.
"A lot of the people I work with think this way. We spoke
about it just the other day," she said.
Commentators noted the victims of the hurricane were
overwhelmingly African Americans, too poor to flee the region
as the hurricane loomed unlike some of their white neighbors.
New Orleans ranks fifth in the United States in terms of
African American population and 67 percent of the city's
residents are black.
"In one of the poorest states in the country, where black
people earn half as much as white people, this has taken on a
racial dimension," said a report in Britain's Guardian daily.
Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn, in a veiled
criticism of U.S. political thought, said the disaster showed
the need for a strong state that could help poor people.
"You see in this example that even in the 21st century you
need the state, a good functioning state, and I hope that for
all these people, these poor people, that the Americans will do
their best," he told reporters at a European Union meeting in
Newport, Wales.
David Fordham, 33, a hospital anesthetist speaking at a
London underground rail station, said he had spent time in
America and was not surprised the country had struggled to
cope.
"Maybe they just thought they could sit it out and
everything would be okay," he said.
"It's unbelievable though -- the TV images -- and your
heart goes out to them."
With reporting by Reuters bureaux around the world
© Copyright 2005 Reuters Ltd
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