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Summary
NAME: UK SCENES 240705N TAPE: EF05/0656 IN_TIME: 10:46:57:21 DURATION: 00:02:25:00 SOURCES: POOL DATELINE: London, 24 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. Exterior Warren Street underground station 2. Train approaching platform 3. Interiors train 4. Close-up of newspaper headline 5. Woman reading newspaper 6. Train leaving Oval station 7. People on escalator 8. Wide shot of people in station entrance 9. Newspaper billboard with headline reading "Bombing victims: special edition" 10. Zoom out to entrance of Oval underground station 11. Pan form Oval sign to train leaving platform 12. Northern Line plaque indicating Stockwell station 13. Escalator moving down 14. Train approaching Stockwell underground platform, doors of train opening 15. Interiors train 16. Shepherds Bush underground station platform 17. Man standing at Shepherds Bush underground station 18. Train departing station platform STORYLINE London Underground (subway) stations targeted by bombers on Thursday, have reopened three days after the latest attempts to unleash terror in the British capital. At Warren Street, Oval, Shepherd's Bush stations, sites of the failed bomb attempts of Thursday (July 21) and in Stockwell, where an innocent Brazilian man, Jean Charles de Menezes, 27, was shot by police in front of horrified passengers, on Friday , normalcy had - at least superficially - resumed. However, the atmosphere remains tense and several security alerts on Saturday meant roads, stations and sections of lines kept shutting for short periods. Indeed, a new opinion poll has revealed that 33 per cent of respondents said that they would be less likely to travel to London, since the city became the target of the bombers. In the survey for the Daily Mirror newspaper and morning TV programme GMTV, 49 per cent also stated that they would support armed police patrolling buses and trains, with 39 per cent against. The next test of London's Underground will come on Monday morning when almost three million anxious commuters will head to work, aware that the terrorists may strike again. London Terrorist Attacks
Footage Information
Source | ABCNEWS VideoSource |
---|---|
Title: | UK Scenes - London subway stations targeted on Thursday, reopen |
Date: | 07/24/2005 |
Library: | APTN |
Tape Number: | VSAP456884 |
Content: | NAME: UK SCENES 240705N TAPE: EF05/0656 IN_TIME: 10:46:57:21 DURATION: 00:02:25:00 SOURCES: POOL DATELINE: London, 24 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. Exterior Warren Street underground station 2. Train approaching platform 3. Interiors train 4. Close-up of newspaper headline 5. Woman reading newspaper 6. Train leaving Oval station 7. People on escalator 8. Wide shot of people in station entrance 9. Newspaper billboard with headline reading "Bombing victims: special edition" 10. Zoom out to entrance of Oval underground station 11. Pan form Oval sign to train leaving platform 12. Northern Line plaque indicating Stockwell station 13. Escalator moving down 14. Train approaching Stockwell underground platform, doors of train opening 15. Interiors train 16. Shepherds Bush underground station platform 17. Man standing at Shepherds Bush underground station 18. Train departing station platform STORYLINE London Underground (subway) stations targeted by bombers on Thursday, have reopened three days after the latest attempts to unleash terror in the British capital. At Warren Street, Oval, Shepherd's Bush stations, sites of the failed bomb attempts of Thursday (July 21) and in Stockwell, where an innocent Brazilian man, Jean Charles de Menezes, 27, was shot by police in front of horrified passengers, on Friday , normalcy had - at least superficially - resumed. However, the atmosphere remains tense and several security alerts on Saturday meant roads, stations and sections of lines kept shutting for short periods. Indeed, a new opinion poll has revealed that 33 per cent of respondents said that they would be less likely to travel to London, since the city became the target of the bombers. In the survey for the Daily Mirror newspaper and morning TV programme GMTV, 49 per cent also stated that they would support armed police patrolling buses and trains, with 39 per cent against. The next test of London's Underground will come on Monday morning when almost three million anxious commuters will head to work, aware that the terrorists may strike again. London Terrorist Attacks |
Media Type: | Summary |