The Prague Post - Tears, tourism on Bourbon Street after US terror nightmare

EUR -
AED 4.113296
AFN 78.39151
ALL 98.492787
AMD 433.323272
ANG 2.00421
AOA 1026.921996
ARS 1274.402224
AUD 1.74767
AWG 2.015768
AZN 1.900656
BAM 1.956912
BBD 2.262787
BDT 136.157363
BGN 1.962069
BHD 0.422066
BIF 3286.82226
BMD 1.119871
BND 1.456593
BOB 7.743503
BRL 6.363895
BSD 1.120687
BTN 95.758684
BWP 15.186307
BYN 3.667648
BYR 21949.477442
BZD 2.251159
CAD 1.562836
CDF 3214.030904
CHF 0.934236
CLF 0.027415
CLP 1052.02927
CNY 8.070908
CNH 8.067771
COP 4705.139259
CRC 568.548427
CUC 1.119871
CUP 29.676589
CVE 110.951244
CZK 24.937294
DJF 199.023535
DKK 7.459883
DOP 66.01637
DZD 149.319164
EGP 56.161879
ERN 16.798069
ETB 148.720929
FJD 2.545248
FKP 0.841996
GBP 0.841331
GEL 3.068193
GGP 0.841996
GHS 13.884636
GIP 0.841996
GMD 80.630845
GNF 9693.042989
GTQ 8.609892
GYD 234.463219
HKD 8.741861
HNL 29.060412
HRK 7.538414
HTG 146.479768
HUF 402.636295
IDR 18500.21785
ILS 3.982318
IMP 0.841996
INR 95.692275
IQD 1467.0314
IRR 47146.581439
ISK 144.709971
JEP 0.841996
JMD 178.641502
JOD 0.794323
JPY 162.757578
KES 145.012978
KGS 97.932565
KHR 4499.642773
KMF 493.304974
KPW 1007.840434
KRW 1563.284518
KWD 0.344193
KYD 0.933943
KZT 572.300727
LAK 24211.616779
LBP 100715.286744
LKR 334.504997
LRD 223.530916
LSL 20.191141
LTL 3.306689
LVL 0.677399
LYD 6.176112
MAD 10.401921
MDL 19.522354
MGA 5078.61653
MKD 61.57208
MMK 2351.22366
MNT 4003.70141
MOP 9.013421
MRU 44.369085
MUR 51.379835
MVR 17.313098
MWK 1944.096211
MXN 21.823496
MYR 4.793138
MZN 71.562256
NAD 20.325947
NGN 1793.966339
NIO 41.166346
NOK 11.657004
NPR 153.213895
NZD 1.906083
OMR 0.431132
PAB 1.120652
PEN 4.126162
PGK 4.553366
PHP 62.474219
PKR 315.352658
PLN 4.249324
PYG 8947.08363
QAR 4.077413
RON 5.105521
RSD 117.328811
RUB 89.590204
RWF 1591.337115
SAR 4.200412
SBD 9.355813
SCR 15.921104
SDG 672.477562
SEK 10.889892
SGD 1.451868
SHP 0.880043
SLE 25.385088
SLL 23483.141424
SOS 640.492517
SRD 40.697805
STD 23179.074858
SVC 9.806053
SYP 14559.847833
SZL 20.325632
THB 37.162366
TJS 11.604494
TMT 3.925149
TND 3.379209
TOP 2.622852
TRY 43.499382
TTD 7.610596
TWD 33.799838
TZS 3015.456173
UAH 46.478391
UGX 4090.324075
USD 1.119871
UYU 46.688612
UZS 14530.329924
VES 105.310496
VND 29057.860506
VUV 134.442989
WST 3.096886
XAF 656.359241
XAG 0.034305
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.026508
XDR 0.822699
XOF 646.16595
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.342652
ZAR 20.165191
ZMK 10080.18818
ZMW 29.928406
ZWL 360.598101
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    63.81

    +1.27%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    22.38

    +0.54%

  • CMSC

    0.1350

    22.1

    +0.61%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    10.5

    -0.38%

  • GSK

    1.3500

    37.57

    +3.59%

  • AZN

    1.7300

    67.96

    +2.55%

  • NGG

    2.6000

    70.03

    +3.71%

  • BTI

    0.8200

    41.37

    +1.98%

  • RIO

    0.7200

    62.75

    +1.15%

  • RELX

    0.9800

    54.04

    +1.81%

  • RYCEF

    0.2600

    10.79

    +2.41%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    90.99

    +0.27%

  • JRI

    0.1035

    12.74

    +0.81%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    21.63

    +1.71%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    9.27

    +2.48%

  • BP

    -0.2500

    30.11

    -0.83%

Tears, tourism on Bourbon Street after US terror nightmare
Tears, tourism on Bourbon Street after US terror nightmare / Photo: ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS - AFP

Tears, tourism on Bourbon Street after US terror nightmare

Thirty-six hours after New Orleans was rocked by a terror attack, bar worker Samantha Petry wiped her tears and placed flowers Thursday on Bourbon Street, which reopened with few hints of the trauma inflicted on the iconic nightlife hub.

Text size:

Cleaning crews had washed down streets of the famed French Quarter after authorities largely concluded their on-site investigation of a grisly New Year's truck-ramming attack that left at least 14 people dead and 30 others injured.

At the entrance to Bourbon Street, 14 yellow roses were placed along a wall where an elderly man dropped to his knees and prayed, his head nearly touching the sidewalk. Crosses were erected nearby as a makeshift memorial.

Business owners and co-workers hugged. A jazz band performed a traditional New Orleans "second line" that featured people marching and dancing down Bourbon Street in mourning and celebration.

Petry walked over and added her bouquet to the flowers, as curious tourists walked onto the normally packed promenade full of drinking establishments, jazz and blues clubs, restaurants and strip joints.

She works at the Cat's Meow karaoke bar, but she bristled at how quickly Bourbon Street was reverting to party central after tragedy.

"No, I'm not happy" about the area's rapid reopening, she told AFP, adding she would have preferred time to mourn those who died and seek to confirm all her friends were OK.

"It's all for money," added Petry, who moved to Louisiana from California. "But at the same time, I do have a livelihood and I have to work."

She and her co-workers endure the slow season in order to work New Year's Eve, and major events like Mardi Gras and the NFL's upcoming Super Bowl championship, Petry said.

"But how am I going to feel safe to work here?"

Nothing on Bourbon suggested a mass casualty incident had occurred.

Daiquiri bars and strip clubs were open, restaurants served seafood and Cajun specialties -- all under the watchful eye of police who patrolled the streets and entrance points, including one blocked by a truck.

"We're not going to let terror ruin our weekend. We've had this trip planned forever," said 20-something college graduate Ingrid Dolvin, wearing a necklace of plastic beads and carrying a frozen drink.

"Yesterday, tensions were kind of scary, but today feels like a completely normal day back on Bourbon Street," she told AFP.

Dolvin said she was "obviously thinking about all the victims and the families" but felt safe given the police presence and security sweeps following the attack.

"New Orleans is a city of tremendous spirit. You can't keep it down. You really can't. And we're seeing that today," US President Joe Biden said Thursday.

- 'We celebrate life' -

Authorities say a US Army veteran inspired by Islamic extremists rammed his rented Ford pickup truck into revellers. The bloodshed only ended when the suspect crashed, and was shot and killed by police after an exchange of gunfire.

Video footage circulating online shows the suspect, identified as US citizen Shamsud-Din Jabbar of Texas, driving the pickup slowly through traffic on Canal Street after 3:00 am Wednesday, then turning sharply around a police vehicle and barrelling down Bourbon Street to begin his deadly rampage.

A day and a half later, tourists wandered down the street snapping photos and ducking into bars. An evening of revelry for some was ahead.

Suddenly, a man in a full-length mirrored suit stepped out from a side street onto Bourbon, high-fiving visitors and posing for selfies.

Mirror Man, as he identified himself, said his goal was "to bring joy back to the city of New Orleans."

But is the return to normalcy too soon?

"In New Orleans, this is what we do," he told AFP. "We celebrate life -- during, before and after, unfortunately."

David Tripp, who works in the Harley Davidson shop on Bourbon Street, shared a similar sentiment, noting that the city, and especially the debauchery of the nightlife spot, stops for no disaster -- natural, such as a hurricane, or manmade.

"I think it was the right thing to do... The businesses need it," the 62-year-old New Orleans native said.

"We can't let nothing hold us down," he added.

"I've been here through (hurricane) Katrina and all. We get right back up and running. That's how we are."

O.Holub--TPP