TF1 20 hours: [broadcast of 03 July 2007]
News Clip: London Latest (1)
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, covering a news story about the public transportation bombings that occurred in London, England on July 7th, 2005. Footage shows rescue workers, wreckage, and a tube station. The story aired at 5:00 A.M.
LONDON PARLIAMENT ATTACK
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 --SUPERS--
:00-:10
Mark Rowley
Acting Deputy Commissioner and Head of Counter Terrorism

:23-:33
Adrian Bailey
Member of the Labour Party


:43 - 46
Twitter/Radoslaw Sikorski

46 - 50
Twitter/claudiascore

:52-1:03
Bobby Nagi
Witness

1:04-end
Angie Moore
Witness


 --LEAD IN--
THREE PEOPLE ARE DEAD, AS WELL AS THE ATTACKER, AND DOZENS ARE INJURED ... AFTER AN ATTACK OUTSIDE THE UK PARLIAMENT ON WEDNESDAY.
SEVEN PEOPLE ARE STILL HOSPITALIZED AND REMAIN IN CRITICAL CONDITION.
WEDNESDAY"S ATTACK WAS THE MOST LETHAL TERRORIST ATTACK IN BRITAIN SINCE THE JULY 7, 2005, BOMBINGS ON THE LONDON TRANSIT SYSTEM.
BUT LONDON AND THE U-K ARE DETERMINED TO CARRY ON.
RYLEE CARLSON HAS THE LATEST IN THE INVESTIGATION.

 --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--
Mark Rowley/Acting Deputy Commissioner and Head of Counter Terrorism: "We are absolutely certain Parliament will be able to do it"s normal business today as they"ve insisted they must do//white flash//It"s business as normal in London."
DESPITE A DEADLY ATTACK OUTSIDE PARLIAMENT WEDNESDAY... LONDONERS ARE DETERMINED TO CARRY ON.
PARLIAMENT WILL BE IN SESSION 
Adrian Bailey/Member of the Labour Party: Every time we walk into Parliament, there are screens telling us about the risk level that day and I think members become immune when it says "dangerous" and so on. It"s something that you live with and don"t really think about."
POLICE HAVE NOT IDENTIFIED THE MAN WHO CARRIED OUT THE ATTACK.
HE MOWED OVER PEDESTRIANS IN FRONT OF PARLIAMENT BEFORE CRASHING INTO A GATE 
THE DRIVER STABBLED AND KILLED AN UNARMED OFFICER - 48-YEAR-OLD KEITH PALMER - BEFORE BEING SHOT AND KILLED BY POLICE.
WITNESSES DESCRIBED THE SCENE.
Bobby Nagi/Witness: We saw a black vehicle, at full speed, and uh it ran over a few people walking on the road. //you could see people flying on the uh sky with the impact of the vehicle,
Angie Moore/Witness:I looked over, and there were 2 or 3 people lying on the sidewalk. So I was a bit concerned with that. But then, there was another group 2-3 people in the same condition. And car parts on the road. 
 --SUGGESTED REPORTER QUESTIONS--
(1) what is happening in Londan and across the UK today?
(2) what is the latest we know about the attacker and the attack itself?
(3) what steps are British officials taking?

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
INTERNATIONAL GREAT BRITAIN TERRORISM ISIS PARLIAMENT LONDON

COVERED CAR BEING TOWED
A covered car being towed that belonged to the suicide bombers that attatcked the London Transit System on July 7, 2005.
UK Trial 2 - WRAP Jury in trial of alleged bomb plotters fails to reach verdict
NAME: UK TRIAL 2 20080801I TAPE: EF08/0782 IN_TIME: 11:22:57:22 DURATION: 00:02:18:12 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION/SKY/AP PHOTOS DATELINE: London -7 July, 2005 File RESTRICTIONS: See Script SHOTLIST AP Photos/Metropolitan Police - No Access Canada/For Broadcast use only - Strictly No Access Online or Mobile Location and date unknown 1. STILL: (left to right) Sadeer Saleem, Mohammed Shakil, Waheed Ali, alleged bomb plotters Sky London - 7 July, 2005 2. Various of remains of bus in Tavistock Square after explosion AP Television London - 7 July, 2005 3. Debris on the road near to parked cars SKY London - 7 July, 2005 ++MUTE++ 4. Wide of scene outside Russell Square with emergency vehicles and workers standing by London underground (subway) blast that took place between Kings Cross and Russell Square underground stations SKY London - 7 July, 2005 5. Policeman helping injured two people 6. Injured man with blood on his face drinking water 7. Injured man with blanket around him lying on ground 8. Injured man being helped to his feet 9. Pan from bystanders outside Edgware Road underground station to fire trucks in attendance 10. Various of cordon around station 11. Fire trucks driving past 12. Ambulances driving past 13. Various of police sniffer dogs on the street Crown Prosecution Service London - 7 July, 2005 14. CCTV footage - passengers on platform, boarding underground train 15. CCTV footage - Train pulling out of station and filling with smoke STORYLINE A British jury said on Friday it had failed to reach verdicts in the case of three men accused of helping to plan the London subway and bus bombings in 2005 - the worst attack on Britain's capital since World War II. Prosecutors said they would consider whether to seek a retrial and that they would make a decision within a week. Judge Peter Gross ordered the men held in custody pending a decision on whether to hold a second trial in the case. The men, who acknowledged at their trial that they knew the four London suicide bombers, have been the only people charged over the attacks on the British capital's transit network. The bombings on July 7, 2005 killed 52 commuters on three underground subway trains and a bus. The accused, Waheed Ali, 25-years old, Sadeer Saleem, 28-years old and Mohammed Shakil, 32-years old, have all denied a charge of conspiring with the bombers to cause explosions. Following 15 days of deliberations, a jury at a London court said it could not agree on verdicts and was discharged. In evidence, prosecutors alleged that the three men had taken part in a test run for the 2005 attacks in December 2004, claiming they had joined some of the eventual bombers to scout out targets including subway stations and a host of tourist sites. Prosecutors claimed that the men had cased out possible targets in London, including the Natural History Museum, the iconic London Eye ferris wheel and the London Aquarium. Some of the locations bore "a striking similarity" to where London bombers Mohammed Siddique Khan, Shehzad Tanweer, Jermaine Lindsay and Hasib Hussain carried out their attacks on July 7, 2005, the prosecution team said. Ali acknowledged in evidence that he had travelled to Pakistan with Khan - the ringleader of the 2005 plot - in 2001 to attend a weapons training camp and again in 2004, when they were joined by Tanweer. He said the men planned to cross the border into Afghanistan to fight coalition troops, but claimed he became sick with diarrhea in Pakistan and could not make the trip. Ali said Khan made several visits there.
Real time video of Union Jacks on Oxford Street, London, UK
Real time video of Union Jacks on Oxford Street on a cloudy day, London, UK
London skyline
The London Eye and BT Tower in the fog and early morning sunshine.
LONDON TERRORIST BOMBING NEWSPAPER HEADLINE
A man reads a newspaper article about the London terrorist bombings on July 7th, 2005.
Italy Suspect - Suspect is extradited to UK over failed London bombings
NAME: ITA SUSPECT 220905N TAPE: EF05/0850 IN_TIME: 10:47:55:24 DURATION: 00:01:29:08 SOURCES: APTN/AP Photos DATELINE: Rome, 22 Sept 2005/Recent RESTRICTIONS: see script SHOTLIST APTN September 22, 2005 1. Wide Rebibbia Prison 2. Prison guard 3. Police motorcycle escort 4. Man in guard tower 5. Van pulling out with escorts 6. Convoy leaving prison grounds with sirens AP PHOTO/Italian Police - No Access Canada/Internet Recent 7. STILL photograph of Somali-born Hamdi Issac, also known as Osman Hussain, a naturalised British citizen, one of the four suspects in the July 21 bombing attempts in London, is seen here after he was arrested in Rome on July 29, 2005 8. STILL photograph of Somali-born Hamdi Issac, also known as Osman Hussain, a naturalised British citizen, of the four suspects in the July 21 bombing attempts in London, is seen here after he was arrested in Rome on July 29, 2005 STORYLINE The suspect in the failed July 21 London bombings who was arrested in Rome last July was being extradited to Britain on Thursday. Hamdi Issac was taken from his prison cell on the outskirts of Rome in a police van and escorted by police to Rome's Ciampino airport for extradition to Britain. Issac, a British citizen also known as Osman Hussain, was arrested on an international arrest warrant in the Italian capital on July 29. British authorities want to prosecute him for his alleged role in the attempted bombing at the Shepherd's Bush underground station. No one was killed in the four, near-simultaneous failed attacks, which happened two weeks after the July 7 suicide bombings on London's transport system that killed 56 people, including the four bombers. Issac fought extradition, but Italy's highest court on September 13 upheld a lower court's decision to extradite him to Britain. The transfer must happen by Friday, said Paolo Iorio, a lawyer representing the British government in the case.
New audio message from Oussama Ben Laden
DEADLY TERROR ATTACK IN LONDON (930pET PKG)
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 <pi>***Warning. This item contains material that some viewers may find disturbing due to the graphic nature. Each station must exercise its own judgment in determining whether it is appropriate for broadcast to its audience.*** </pi>


 --SUPERS--
00 - 06
Mark Rowley
Metropolitan Police Acting Deputy Commissioner

06 - 15
ITN

15 - 20
google earth

20 - 28
Twitter/@claudiascore

28 - 32
Metropolitan Police

32 - 55
ITN

32 - 42
ITN
Mark Rowley
Metropolitan Police Acting Deputy Commissioner

58 - END
ITN
Theresa May
British Prime Minister


 --LEAD IN--
A man killed four people, including a police officer, outside the UK Parliament on Wednesday in what British police are looking at as an act of terror. It was the most lethal terrorist attack in Britain since 2005, when 52 people and four attackers died in the July 7 bombings on the London public transportation system. Rylee Carlson has the latest in the investigation.

 --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--

 <pi>Mark Rowley/ Metropolitan Police Acting Deputy Commissioner:</pi> "today is an incredibly sad and somber day, especially for the metropolitan police service.
AT LEAST FOUR PEOPLE WERE KILLED AND DOZENS INJURED IN LONDON WEDNESDAY IN WHAT AUTHORITIES ARE INVESTIGASTING AS "ISLAMIST-RELATED TERRORISM"
A MAN IN AN S-U-V MOWED OVER PEDESTRIANS ON A BRIDGE, BEFORE CRASHING INTO A GATE OUTSIDE OF THE HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT. 
THE DRIVER THEN JUMPED FROM HIS VEHICLE AND STABBED AN UNARMED OFFICER, BEFORE BEING SHOT AND KILLED BY POLICE.
THE UNARMED OFFICER, 48-YEAR-OLD KEITH PALMER, DID NOT SURVIVE.
 <pi>Mark Rowley/ Metropolitan Police Acting Deputy Commissioner" </pi> "we"ve lost one of our own as he acted to protect the public and his colleagues. This is a day we plan for but we hope would never happen, sadly now it is a reality."
PARLIAMENT WAS PLACED ON LOCKDOWN AND LAWMAKERS FORCED TO REMAIN IN THE MAIN DEBATING CHAMBER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS AS FIREARMS OFFICERS RUSHED TO THE SCENE OUTSIDE.
SEVERAL LOCKDOWNS AROUND THE AREA WERE LIFTED LATE IN THE EVENING. 
PARLIAMENT PLANS TO MEET AS USUAL, THURSDAY. 
 <pi>Theresa May/ British Prime Minister:</pi> "The sick and depraved terrorist attack on the streets of our Capital this afternoon... The location of this attack was no accident. The terrorists chose to strike at the heart of our Capital City, where people of all nationalities, religions and cultures come together to celebrate the values of liberty, democracy and freedom of speech."
REPORTING FROM LONDON, I"M RYLEE CARLSON.

 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----


TF1 20 hours: [broadcast of August 6, 2005]
UK KNIFE ATTACK: WITNESSES SAY "WE WERE LUCKY"
**FOR ADDITIONAL SCRIPT INFO SEE IN-13TH**

 --SUPERS--
Thursday
London

Philippa Baglee
Witness

Janet Pavely
Witness

 --SOT--
(Philippa Baglee, witness) "I came out of the Atrium (bar) to have a cigarette and I saw people standing over there looking at the ground, I could see someone laying down and a guy with a motorbike helmet balanced on his head just walking up and down."
(Janet Pavely, witness) "You"ve just got to be very self-aware when you"re out and about. It could happen anywhere. I don"t think it would stop us from coming back. We were lucky last night. We were going to walk, we took a cab instead. Who knows?"

 --CNN WIRE--
 Highlights
-- The suspect"s mental health is being investigated, police say
-- Terrorism is also a line of inquiry, according to authorities
 London knife attack leaves 1 dead, 5 hurt

 [Breaking news update, 7:11 a.m.]


 London police are looking at mental health issues as the main line of inquiry in a knife attack on Wednesday night that left an American woman dead.
 Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley essentially ruled out terrorism as the likely motive in the attack, in which citizens from Britain, Australia and Israel were also injured.
 The suspect is a Norwegian national of Somali origin, Rowley said.
 Rowley described the attack as "spontaneous," with victims selected at random.


 [Previous story, posted at 7:00 a.m.]

 Londoners woke up Thursday to a heavier police presence on their streets after a woman was stabbed to death and five others injured in the heart of the city late Wednesday night.
 The London Metropolitan Police said it had arrested a 19-year-old man on suspicion of murder and was focusing its lines of inquiry "on mental health while retaining an open mind regarding the motive."
 A police statement rolls back earlier comments by officials briefed on the investigation, who had told CNN they believed the stabbing was a terror attack based on initial evidence.
 Counterterrorism police are supporting but not leading the investigation, authorities said later.

 Attack hours after security boosted

 The attack happened in Russell Square, an area popular with tourists near museums and upscale hotels and homes. 
 The stabbing came hours after authorities announced London would increase its presence of armed police by 600 officers following recent terror attacks across Europe -- part of what it called Operation Hercules. 
 "As a precautionary measure (Thursday), Londoners will wake up and in the morning they will notice increased police presence on the streets, including armed officers," Mark Rowley, the Scotland Yard assistant commissioner, told reporters. "This is there to provide reassurance and safety. We ask the public to remain calm, vigilant and alert."

 Dying in their arms

 The woman killed was in her 60s, police said, while two other women and three men were injured. Two of the victims remain in the hospital. Officials said one of the injured appears to be American. 
 Police were called after 10:30 p.m. Wednesday following reports of a man "seen in possession of a knife injuring people," authorities said in a statement.
 Officers used a stun gun on the suspect, and he was arrested less than 10 minutes later, authorities said.
 He was treated in the hospital and is in police custody at a south London station, police said.
 Little more is known about the suspect.
 A 40-year-old Brazilian man living in London told CNN a Spanish family stopped and asked him to call an ambulance. 
 "I thought someone had collapsed or passed out, that was my first impression," said Fernando, who did not want to give his last name. 
 He said one of those family members was holding the dying woman and helping and reassuring her. She had been stabbed in the back, Fernando said, adding that he was in shock.
 "It was not nice to see someone dying," he said.

 "We were lucky"

 Emma Mountford, 41, a British woman from Derbyshire, said she feels "helpless and sad" after the attack. She said she had noticed an increased armed police presence in the city.
 "The scariest things about these attacks are they completely out of the blue, carried out by ordinary people," Mountford told CNN outside the British Museum near the scene of the attack.
 "We"re were saying to (the) taxi driver, you can"t let it stop you from doing things, otherwise you"d be terrified to leave the house. I just make sure the children stay close and always be on the (lookout) for anything odd or out of the ordinary."
 Philippa Baglee told CNN she saw the aftermath of the attack. 
 "I came out of the Atrium (bar) to have a cigarette, and I saw people standing over there looking at the ground. I could see someone laying down and a guy with a motorbike helmet balanced on his head just walking up and down," she said.
 Janet Pavely, who was with Baglee, said people had to be "very self-aware" when out in public now. 
 "It could happen anywhere. I don"t think it would stop us from coming back. We were lucky last night. We were going to walk, we took a cab instead. Who knows?" she said.
 Police were lifting cordons around the crime scene by late Thursday morning. Workers sprayed and scrubbed the sidewalks clean as people began to leave flowers at the site.

 London mayor calls for calm

 London Mayor Sadiq Khan urged residents to remain "calm and vigilant" following the attack. 
 "The safety of all Londoners is my number one priority and my heart goes out to the victims of the incident in Russell Square and their loved ones," Khan said in a statement from his press office. 
 Khan asked Londoners to report anything suspicious to the police.
 "We all have a vital role to play as eyes and ears for our police and security services and in helping to ensure London is protected," he said. 
 Former FBI agent Bobby Chacon said that "the normal posture" in these situations is "to calm the public and say we don"t have any information that it"s terrorism yet."
 "The fact that they"re even mentioning terrorism leads me to believe that some of the witnesses and some of the victims may have said that this guy may have made some statements while he was carrying out the attack," he said. 

 Russell Square

 Russell Square, in the Bloomsbury district of west-central London, is a busy passing point to get to sites, including the British Museum and the main buildings of the University of London. 
 The park isn"t particularly bustling at night compared with other nearby neighborhoods that are home to more restaurants and bars.
 In the July 7, 2005, terror attacks on London, the most devastating of the four bombs hit the Underground subway line running close to Russell Square.
 In December, Muhyadin Mire, 29, was charged with attempted murder after authorities say he carried out an unprovoked knife attack in a subway station in London"s Leytonstone suburb.


 -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----

 --KEYWORD TAGS--
ENGLAND EUROPE ATTACK UNITED STATES 


PRIME MINISTER TONY BLAIR ADDRESSES THE MEDIA
In London, Prime Minister Tony Blair addresses the media about the wrongful killing of Jean Charles de Menezes who police thought was a terrorist involved in the July 7, 2005 London bombings.
UK Arrests - Three men in court charged with conspiring with July 7 bombers
NAME: UK ARRESTS 20070407I TAPE: EF07/0412 IN_TIME: 10:47:32:07 DURATION: 00:01:17:06 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION/SKY DATELINE: Various - See Script RESTRICTIONS: Part No Access UK/RTE/CNNi SHOTLIST Sky News - No Access UK, RTE, CNNi London - 7 April 2007 1. Various of police van carrying to court three men charged with conspiring with suicide bombers AP Television FILE: London - 7 July 2005 2. Ambulance in Edgware road carrying wounded to hospital UPSOUND: siren 3. Policeman running up street, shouting at people to move away 4. Medical workers helping injured into ambulance 5. Ambulance driving away UPSOUND: siren Police Video FILE: Luton - 28 June 2005 6. STILL: CCTV footage showing three of the bombers starting their trip 7. STILLS: Various stills from CCTV footage showing three of the bombers walking through ticket barriers AP Television FILE: London - 11 May 2006 8. Various exteriors of Kings Cross Underground station 9. Newspaper kiosk outside Kings Cross station 10. Headline reading: "7/7 Bombing Reports" STORYLINE Three men appeared in a London court on Saturday, charged with conspiring with four suicide bombers who killed 52 commuters on London's transport system on July 7 2005. Mohammed Shakil, 30; Sadeer Saleem, 26; and Waheed Ali, 23, are the first people to be charged in connection with the bombings, the deadliest attack on London since World War II. All three men are from the Beeston area of Leeds in northern England, which was home to several of the July 7 bombers. Prosecutors charge that between November 1 2004, and June 29 2005, the defendants conspired to cause explosions on London's transport network "and/or tourist attractions in London of a nature likely to endanger life or cause serious injury." It is the first official suggestion by officials that the July 7 plot might have targeted tourist landmarks. The bombs, carried in knapsacks, exploded on three subway trains and a double-decker bus. Two of the men were arrested on March 22 as they prepared to fly to Pakistan from Manchester Airport. The third was detained in Leeds on the same day. Police have said they expect to make more arrests in the case.
Greenwich Park
3 clips showing the Greenwich Park, one of the Royal Parks of London, with people enjoying their free time
WORKERS SORTING THROUGH TRASH
Police workers searching though garbage for evidence that might help authorities find out who helped the suicide bombers that attacked the London Transit System on July 7, 2005.
UK Bombers 3 - New CCTV footage of 7/7 bombing dry run, 7/7 blast scenes
NAME: UK BOMBERS 3 20080501I TAPE: EF08/0456 IN_TIME: 11:05:14:22 DURATION: 00:03:13:19 SOURCES: POLICE HANDOUT DATELINE: London - 28 June/7 Jul 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST June 28, 2005 1. CCTV footage showing three of the four 7/7 London bombers, Mohammed Siddique Khan, Shezhad Tanweer and Jermaine Lindsay, walking towards underpass leading to King's Cross Thames Link station 2. CCTV footage showing Khan, Tanweer and Lindsay entering Baker Street tube station 3. CCTV footage showing Khan, Tanweer and Lindsay in ticket hall of Embankment tube station 4. CCTV footage showing Khan, Tanweer and Lindsay on stairs to platform of Embankment tube station 5. CCTV footage showing Khan, Tanweer and Lindsay entering King's Cross rail station 6. CCTV footage showing Khan, Tanweer and Lindsay in ticket office of Luton rail station before heading into London July 7, 2005 7. Various of CCTV footage between Liverpool Street and Aldgate East underground stations on 7th July 2005 showing blast effect July 7, 2005 8. CCTV footage of reaction to explosion on bus No. 30 from the reception of the British Medical Association building in Tavistock Square 9. CCTV footage from a bus which was just ahead of the No.30 show panicking passengers jumping out of their seats in shock STORYLINE A London jury saw CCTV footage on Thursday of the moment two of the July 7, 2005 suicide bombers detonated their devices, one on a train on the London Underground network, the other on a double-decker bus. Footage played at Kingston Crown Court showed a train departing Liverpool Street tube station moments before it was struck by suicide attacker Shezhad Tanweer. CCTV cameras at Liverpool Street filmed commuters getting onto the train as it arrived at the platform. Less than a minute later, after the busy platform emptied and the train pulled out of the station, a flash can be seen in the tunnel. Clouds of dust can be seen with people seen running away. The platform remains deserted until police officers arrive. The court also saw the reactions of people near the No 30 bus in Tavistock Square, which was hit by bomber Hasib Hussain. The previously unreleased footage was played in the trial of three men accused of helping the bombers plan their attack. The court also saw CCTV images of three of the July 7 suicide bombers during a reconnaissance trip to London on 28 June, 2005. Tanweer, Mohammed Siddique Khan and Jermaine Lindsay made the trip from Leeds to London nine days before the attacks. The trio spent four hours in the capital during their trip, visiting various locations on the underground train network. Waheed Ali, Mohammed Shakil and Sadeer Saleem, are accused of conspiring with Khan, Tanweer, Lindsay, Hussain to cause explosions between November 17, 2004 and July 8, 2005. They deny the charge. The July 7 bombings were the deadliest attack on London since World War II. The four bombers and 52 commuters died in blasts on three subway trains and a double-decker bus, and more than 700 people were injured.
London Piccadilly Street at the Ritz Arcades
Real time shot made in 4K/Ultra High Definition
20 hours the newspaper: [broadcast of August 5, 2005]
AERIAL OF A CAR SEIZED BY LONDON POLICE
An aerial of a car seized by police which they believe is owned by one of the terrorists that participated in the July 7, 2005 bombing of the Public Transit System.
UK Arrests 2 - WRAP Three men in court charged with conspiring with July 7 bombers
NAME: UK ARRESTS 2 20070407Ix TAPE: EF07/0412 IN_TIME: 11:16:21:16 DURATION: 00:01:34:01 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION/SKY DATELINE: London - 7 Apr 2007/FILE RESTRICTIONS: Pt No Access UK/RTE/CNNi SHOTLIST Sky News - No Access UK, RTE, CNNi London - 7 April 2007 1. Various of police van carrying to court three men charged with conspiring with suicide bombers AP Television FILE: London - 7 July 2005 2. Ambulance in Edgware road carrying wounded to hospital UPSOUND: siren 3. Policeman running up street, shouting at people to move away 4. Medical workers helping injured into ambulance 5. Ambulance driving away UPSOUND: siren Police Video FILE: Luton - 28 June 2005 6. STILL: CCTV footage showing three of the bombers starting their trip 7. STILLS: Various stills from CCTV footage showing three of the bombers walking through ticket barriers AP Television FILE: London - 11 May 2006 8. Various exteriors of Kings Cross Underground station 9. Newspaper kiosk outside Kings Cross station 10. Headline reading: "7/7 Bombing Reports" ++MUTE++ Sky News - No Access UK, RTE, CNNi London - 7 April 2007 11. Police van carrying three men charged with conspiring with suicide bombers away from court STORYLINE: Three men appeared in a London court on Saturday, charged with conspiring with four suicide bombers who killed 52 commuters on London's transport system on July 7 2005. Mohammed Shakil, 30; Sadeer Saleem, 26; and Waheed Ali, 23, are the first people to be charged in connection with the bombings, the deadliest attack on London since World War II. All three men are from the Beeston area of Leeds in northern England, which was home to several of the July 7 bombers. Prosecutors charge that between November 1 2004, and June 29 2005, the defendants conspired to cause explosions on London's transport network "and/or tourist attractions in London of a nature likely to endanger life or cause serious injury." It is the first official suggestion by officials that the July 7 plot might have targeted tourist landmarks. The bombs, carried in knapsacks, exploded on three subway trains and a double-decker bus. Two of the men were arrested on March 22 as they prepared to fly to Pakistan from Manchester Airport. The third was detained in Leeds on the same day. Police have said they expect to make more arrests in the case. The three men were ordered to be detained until their next court appearance, at London's Central Criminal Court, on 20 April 2007.
Interview with Sadiq Khan Mayor of London on 20th anniversary of 7/7 London terrorist attacks
Sadiq Khan Mayor of London interview; Rec Date: 18.12.2024 ENGLAND: East London: City Hall: INT Sadiq Khan (Mayor of London) interview by reporter Simon Harris at City Hall (8/10) Q: July sees the 20th anniversary of the 7/7 terrorist attacks (bombings) its an important moment for the city A: Sadiq Khan (Mayor of London) interview SOT - on recounting wherabouts on 07.07.2005 london terror attacks and reflecting on the incident - 52 lives being lost that day - on importance to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the bombings and working with bereaved families and community organisations to put together events Q: is the threat from terrorists less now than it was in then (2005)? A: Sadiq Khan (Mayor of London) interview SOT - on phase used by counter terror organisations and police being 'its not a matter of if, its when, that's the attitude we have in realtion to terrorists...' Q: Still? SOT A: Sadiq Khan (Mayor of London) interview SOT - 'They hate for what we stand for, our diversity, our pluralism, human rights, democracy and soe we have got to be vigilant at all times. I am afraid the nbad news tis there is still this ongoing threat to our great city'
13 hours the newspaper: [broadcast of 20 July 2005]