Abstract
Media commentator Fletcher writes: "Looking back, we can see that New Orleans was not British journalism's finest hour. Speculation rapidly became fact. Hearsay was presented as hard evidence. Caution diminished as the story grew. Only as the waters subsided did it become clear that many stories of murders, rapes and dead bodies were myths. The number of dead did not rise to tens of thousands - though around 1,000 did die in the state of Louisiana - and there was no epidemic. Andrew Gilligan, who reported from New Orleans for the London Evening Standard, says the press cast a slur on a devastated city: 'A city was libelled. As well as losing homes, and in some cases lives, the whole population was libelled as savages and criminals.'"
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
