GALLERY: Global market crisis
Photos from around the world documenting the deepening financial crisis over the last two days.
VIDEO: McCain, Obama square off
Watch John McCain and Barack Obama square off in the second of three presidential debates.
Search News24
     World : News Get News24 on your mobile Terms & conditions 
Homepage
World
News
US Elections
South Africa
Africa
Sport
Entertainment
Sci-Tech
Finance
Health
Galleries
 
News24 turns 10
US Elections
Zimbabwe
Xenophobia
Aids Focus
Power Crisis
More...
 
MyNews24
Columnists
Sports Columnists
Feedback
 
National Lottery
UK Lottery
Travel
Competitions
Horoscopes
TV Guides
Classifieds
Currie Cup game
 
Sudoku
Aces High
Silly Solitaire
Word Cube
Make 24
Golf Solitaire
Battleship
 
Stidy
The Biggish Five
Treknet
 
Newsletters
Weather

Cape Town:
13-24°C

Durban:
16-26°C

Johannesburg:
7-26°C

Weather Page

Traffic
Gauteng KwaZulu-Natal Eastern Cape Western Cape
All regions
Indicators
Rand/$ 9.4200
Rand/£ 16.0200
Rand/€ 12.5900
Gold/oz $847.50
Gold Mining 1898.59
+10.14%
All-share index 20595.23
-3.09%
 
Nerve-wracked
A psychologist and a psychiatrist answered users? questions on anxiety disorders on World Mental Health Day.

 
Afrikaans
English

Lights out for city
15/08/2003 00:59  - (SA)  

Want to know more?
Answerit can help.

Larry McShane

New York - In Times Square, the crossroads of the world, all the neon and bright lights were impossibly dark on Thursday afternoon. Giovanni Leonardo stood in an enormous line, waiting for the bus above a subway station where no trains were running.

"It feels like September 11 all over again," said Leonardo, 26, of Staten Island. "It's that 'What's going on?' feeling."

What was going on was plenty of nothing: no power, no air conditioning, no traffic lights, no subways after the power went "pffft" at 16:11 (20:11 GMT) on a steamy August day. People were stranded in elevators or inside trains.

"Wherever the trains were when the electricity went out," said a transit spokesperson, "that's where they are right now."

Mayor Michael Bloomberg quickly assured New Yorkers that terrorism was not involved - the first thought that occurred to Manhattan hair stylist Renato Vasconcelos.

"This is just too weird," he said after giving six panicked customers a quick rinse.

Manhattan streets were flooded with pedestrians, most with no idea of how they might get home to the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens, New Jersey or Connecticut. "Westchester for $," read a sign held by one woman standing near Governor George Pataki's East Side office, headed for the suburbs.

In lower Manhattan, people wandered the streets in a scene far too reminiscent of the World Trade Centre attacks. At some intersections, pedestrians stood directing traffic.

Many businesses were forced to shut down early, their cash registers and lights rendered impotent by the massive outage.

On the Brooklyn Bridge, many folks were already walking across the East River on their way home, the same route they'd taken on September 11 or during a transit strike.

Pay phones saw lines a dozen deep as people struggled to call home when their cell phones went out. At Patrick Conway's, a bar near Grand Central Terminal, commuters hurriedly downed beers before the bottles turned warm as temperatures hovered in the 30°C.

The bar's owner, to the delight of his patrons, promised to stay open as long as the power from his generator held out.

Power went out in all five boroughs as well as the suburbs in the worst outage to strike the nation's largest city since 1977, when electricity disappeared for 25 hours.

Wisconsin tourist Cathy Ley, 46, left her Times Square hotel to join thousands of others on the street.

"We wanted to come out where there was light," she said. "We want to see the lights tonight. We hope it doesn't last too long."

The city's subway stations were plunged into darkness, with passengers waiting on platforms before heading upstairs for a bus. Buses were packed past capacity, and with good reason: they were among the only places in the city where the air conditioning was still blowing.

City hospitals, for the most part, were operating normally on generators. The Port Authority said all passengers had been safely evacuated from 10 trains that were stuck under the Hudson River or underground when the power went out.

At Kennedy International and LaGuardia Airports, all takeoffs were stopped but incoming flights were allowed to land. Both airports were working on backup power sources.

- AP



What is this?
Yahoo Digg Del.icio.us Facebook Brought to you by OUTsurance Car Insurance
 
News24 Headlines on your Facebook profile News24 on mobile  


VEHICLE SEARCH
VOLKSWAGEN
2008
Golf 5 2.0 Trendline 85kW 5-dr
R169900
FORD
2004
Focus 1.6i Ambiente
R89990
NISSAN
2007
Tiida 1.6 Visia+
R146930
BMW
2007
X3 3.0i E83 4x4 AT
R439000
FORD
2008
Fiesta 1.4 Base 5-dr MY06
R115000
HONDA
2007
Civic 1.8 VXi
R169900
VOLKSWAGEN
2006
CitiGolf 1.6i VeloCiti 5-dr
R79990
VOLVO
2004
V70 2.0 T Estate
R144900
BMW
2001
318i E46 AT
R64487

 

About us | Advertise | Contact us | Job opportunities | Press Releases | Site map

Back to top
 Sponsored links
Life Insurance
Car Insurance
UK Lottery
First for Women
Your Homeloan
Bid or Buy
Medical Aid
Education
SA TV Online
Best Car Deals
Loans & Credit Cards
Compare Quotes
Life Insurance for Women
Car Servicing & Repair
Piggs Peak Casino