More than 2,000 children from Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama are still missing or separated
According to The South Bend Tribune, more than two thousand children still remain missing or separated after Hurricane Katrina in AL, LA and MS.
More than 2,000 children from Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama are still missing or separated from at least one parent or other caregiver, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which is maintaining a database of the missing.
So far, more than 750 children from Louisiana have been reunited with their families. Fifty had been placed in foster care, but the vast majority of the separated are believed to be with relatives or family friends, scattered across the country.
Search here for missing children photos of Hurricane Katrina
Posted September 20, 2005 by Scared Monkeys Child Welfare, Missing Persons, Natural Disaster | no comments |
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