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ABCNEWS VideoSource
UK Brazilian - WRAP Vigil for Brazilian shot dead, still, Aldgate station reopens
07/25/2005
APTN
VSAP456915
NAME: UK BRAZILIAN 250705Nx TAPE: EF05/0658 IN_TIME: 10:55:54:23 DURATION: 00:01:03:01 SOURCES: APTN/SKY DATELINE: London, 25/24 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: see script SHOTLIST: APTN 25 July 2005 1. Aldgate station gates being reopened 2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Vox pop "It is a symbolic moment, you've got to carry on, go forward, and just remember who lost their lives, but we've got to go to work." 3. Close up of tube announcement 4. Commuters at tube station 5. Police at tube station 6. Wide shot of tube station entrance SKY - NO ACCESS UK/IRELAND/CNNi NIGHT SHOTS 24 July 2005 7. Exterior of Stockwell Station 8. Wide shot of people at vigil for Brazilian man, Jean Charles de Menezes 9. Close up of candle 10. Note reading "Dear Jean Charles de Menezes, Never forget the victims of ignorance, 'regret' is never enough." 11. Photo of de Menezes, pull out to message reading "5 bullets in our hearts, who's guilty?" 12. Message reading "To the British Police - we need answers! We need Justice!" STORYLINE: London's Aldgate underground station reopened on Monday for the first time since the bomb attacks of July 7. Police say Shahzad Tanweer killed himself and seven other people in the station at the eastern edge of London's financial district when he detonated a bomb on a Circle Line train. That train route remains suspended, but the Metropolitan Line was running normally again through the station. Meanwhile, a vigil was held for Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes, 27, on Sunday night at Stockwell underground station. De Menezes was shot in the head at close range on Friday as police hunted bombers who targeted the London Underground the day before. One message read: "Never forget the victims of ignorance, 'regret' is never enough." Another read "To the British Police - we need answers! We need Justice!" Menezes was followed by plainclothes officers after he left a flat that was under surveillance. According to officials, his clothing and behaviour aroused the suspicions of the police who ordered him to stop. Witnesses said Menezes ran into a tube car, where an officer shot him five times in the head. It was unclear why Menezes, who spoke English, did not stop. London's Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Ian Blair expressed deep regret for Menezes' killing, which he described as a "tragedy," but defended his officers' right to use deadly force against suspected suicide bombers. The incident provoked a widespread controversy as critics questioned the legitimacy of the British police's apparent shoot-to-kill policy.
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