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Summary
NAME: UK TENSION 230705N TAPE: EF05/0654 IN_TIME: 10:13:46:13 DURATION: 00:02:57:24 SOURCES: APTN DATELINE: London, 23 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. Police leading right-wing march nearby Regent Park Mosque (London Central Mosque) 2. Police blocking protesters 3. Police arriving 4. More of march 5. Protesters entering Baker Street underground station 6. Police and protesters on the underground 7. Protest approaching Westminster 8. Man being shoved along by police 9. Protesters chanting right wing slogans 10. Protesters marching and chanting 11. SOUNDBITE (English): Alan Wild, protester: "I have to hand my passport in during England (football) games for two weeks, right. Sign up at a police station all over the country, have a registration card, right. And if they can do that to me being English, as a football hooligan, why can't they do it to the asylum seekers and everyone else who comes into the country?" 12. Police vans approaching Westminster area 13. Wide shot of march 14. SOUNDBITE (English): Stuart Dean, West Ham, London "At least make a point. In this country, if you're a white, English heterosexual male and you say something then you're immediately racist, homophobic, you're sexist, whatever. But this is the only way you can do it, this is the only way you can do it." 15. Police vans parked 16. Exterior Mile End underground station 17. People milling around outside station 18. Woman talking to police officers 19. Pan from underground entrance to police van parked outside STORYLINE: Right-wing protesters held an anti-Muslim march through London on Saturday, prompted by the attacks in the British capital on the 7 July, which killed 56 people, including the four suicide bombers. Around 30 protesters set off their march near the London Central Mosque, and continued down to the Westminster area, where the Houses of Parliament are located. Police presence was double that of the protesters, who were divided into at least three groups and dispersed as often as possible. Police say they made some arrests. Tension between communities across the country has been feared since the suicide attacks over two weeks ago, and the subsequent bombing attempts in the London transit system on the 21 July, which failed to detonate. Security alerts kept Londoners on edge earlier on Saturday, with police briefly evacuating east London's Mile End underground station in one such incident after a witness reported the smell of something burning. The underground service was suspended on parts of two subway lines, but police said later that the incident "turned out to be nothing". Meanwhile, a man police killed in a dramatic subway shooting apparently had nothing to do with a series of bombing attacks on London's transit system, police said on Saturday, calling it a "tragedy" and expressing their regret. Police had pursued the man and shot him point-blank on Friday in front of horrified passengers on a train at the Stockwell station in south London, later saying he was "directly linked" to the attempted bombings the previous day. LONDON TERRORIST ATTACKS
Footage Information
Source | ABCNEWS VideoSource |
---|---|
Title: | UK Tension - Right wing protestors clash with police, security alert at station |
Date: | 07/23/2005 |
Library: | APTN |
Tape Number: | VSAP456810 |
Content: | NAME: UK TENSION 230705N TAPE: EF05/0654 IN_TIME: 10:13:46:13 DURATION: 00:02:57:24 SOURCES: APTN DATELINE: London, 23 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. Police leading right-wing march nearby Regent Park Mosque (London Central Mosque) 2. Police blocking protesters 3. Police arriving 4. More of march 5. Protesters entering Baker Street underground station 6. Police and protesters on the underground 7. Protest approaching Westminster 8. Man being shoved along by police 9. Protesters chanting right wing slogans 10. Protesters marching and chanting 11. SOUNDBITE (English): Alan Wild, protester: "I have to hand my passport in during England (football) games for two weeks, right. Sign up at a police station all over the country, have a registration card, right. And if they can do that to me being English, as a football hooligan, why can't they do it to the asylum seekers and everyone else who comes into the country?" 12. Police vans approaching Westminster area 13. Wide shot of march 14. SOUNDBITE (English): Stuart Dean, West Ham, London "At least make a point. In this country, if you're a white, English heterosexual male and you say something then you're immediately racist, homophobic, you're sexist, whatever. But this is the only way you can do it, this is the only way you can do it." 15. Police vans parked 16. Exterior Mile End underground station 17. People milling around outside station 18. Woman talking to police officers 19. Pan from underground entrance to police van parked outside STORYLINE: Right-wing protesters held an anti-Muslim march through London on Saturday, prompted by the attacks in the British capital on the 7 July, which killed 56 people, including the four suicide bombers. Around 30 protesters set off their march near the London Central Mosque, and continued down to the Westminster area, where the Houses of Parliament are located. Police presence was double that of the protesters, who were divided into at least three groups and dispersed as often as possible. Police say they made some arrests. Tension between communities across the country has been feared since the suicide attacks over two weeks ago, and the subsequent bombing attempts in the London transit system on the 21 July, which failed to detonate. Security alerts kept Londoners on edge earlier on Saturday, with police briefly evacuating east London's Mile End underground station in one such incident after a witness reported the smell of something burning. The underground service was suspended on parts of two subway lines, but police said later that the incident "turned out to be nothing". Meanwhile, a man police killed in a dramatic subway shooting apparently had nothing to do with a series of bombing attacks on London's transit system, police said on Saturday, calling it a "tragedy" and expressing their regret. Police had pursued the man and shot him point-blank on Friday in front of horrified passengers on a train at the Stockwell station in south London, later saying he was "directly linked" to the attempted bombings the previous day. LONDON TERRORIST ATTACKS |
Media Type: | Summary |