London Terrorist Bombings - 9
Two young, distressed women talk with London police at an Underground subway station.
LONDON/OXFORD CIRCUS
00:00:00:00 BEGINNMING WITH TC:03:21:10-03:21:26(4 BOBBIES) THEN DISSOLVE TO 03:18:05-03:18:10 THEN TO 02:58:13-02:58:17 THEN SHOW POLICE ON HORSES FROM VO P 03418203 :01-:05 AND PAD OUT WITH MORE POLICE PIX. (1:10) /
UK Trial Stills - Stills shown at trial of alleged July 21 bomb plotter
NAME: UK TRIALSTILLS 20070124I TAPE: EF07/0093 IN_TIME: 11:23:22:16 DURATION: 00:01:02:10 SOURCES: Metropolitan Police VNR DATELINE: London, 21 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST ++THESE STILLS WERE RELEASED BY THE METROPOLITAN POLICE SERVICE ON WEDNESDAY 24TH JANUARY 2007, DURING THE TRIAL OF RAMZI MOHAMMED, CHARGED WITH PLOTTING TO BOMB LONDON'S TRANSPORT SYSTEM ON 21 JULY 2005++++ 1. STILL of underground train (Tube) at Oval station 2. Various STILLS of interior of Tube train (items left behind at crime scene) STORYLINE A series of still photographs taken at London's Oval underground station after one of the alleged July 21 bomb plotters tried to set off a rucksack bomb on a Tube train were shown in a British court on Wednesday. The failed attack came two weeks after four suicide bombers killed themselves and 52 bus and underground passengers in London. The images showed items at the crime scene following alleged bomber Ramzi Mohammed's attempt to explode his home-made device on a north bound Tube train between Stockwell and Oval stations. The stills were shown to the jury in Mohammed's trial at Woolwich Crown Court. In all six men are accused of hatching a suicide plot to detonate rucksack bombs on the London transport system on July 21 2005.
LONDON UNDERGROUND ON ALERT
London police guard the London underground subway system after the July 2005 terrorist bombings. Flowers and other mementos are left in memory of the victims of those attacks.
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.
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 


London Terrorist Bombings Memorial
A girl shoves flowers into a makeshift memorial near one of the bombed areas. A letter on the memorial says "Sorry Paul".
UK Night - Nightshots from scenes of London bombings
NAME: UK NIGHT 080705Nxx TAPE: EF05/0605 IN_TIME: 10:10:04:06 DURATION: 00:01:12:00 SOURCES: Sky/TfL/APTN DATELINE: London, 7 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: see script SHOTLIST TRANSPORT FOR LONDON 1. Long shot of wreckage of bus in Tavistock Square, security and people working at site of bus and where last of series of blasts took place SKY - No Access UK/CNNi/Ireland 2. Various security and activity outside two entrances at King's Cross Station. Underground blast between Kings Cross and Russell Square APTN 3. Shot of policeman and cordon at Aldgate Underground Station, where first of four blasts took place between Liverpool St and Aldgate underground stations STORYLINE: As night progressed police, forensic experts and workmen were present at the sites of London's rush-hour explosions. Transport for London footage showed the mangled wreckage of a double-decker bus, which experienced the last of four blasts in the British capital. King's Cross and the rest of the London Underground remained closed. A lone policeman was seen at one of the cordons surrounding Aldgate Station in east London. London's Metropolitan Police said twenty-one people died at the King's Cross underground station, seven at the third blast at Edgware Road station, seven at Liverpool Street and two on the bus near Russell Square. Another 700 people were injured according to the authorities. Police said they hadn't determined whether suicide bombers were involved, and authorities couldn't confirm the authenticity of a claim of responsibility from a group calling itself "The Secret Organization of al-Qaida in Europe." London Terrorist Attacks
UK Suspects 3 - WRAP Police release photos of suspects in latest attacks, adds y'day shots
NAME: UK SUSPECTS 3 220705N TAPE: EF05/0651 IN_TIME: 10:38:18:11 DURATION: 00:03:19:07 SOURCES: Various DATELINE: London - 22 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: See script SHOTLIST: POOL July 22 2005 1. Metropolitan police walking in to news conference 2. SOUNDBITE (English) Sir Ian Blair, Metropolitan Police Commissioner: "This is the greatest operational challenge ever faced by the Metropolitan police service. I think the Metropolitan police service and its sister services are doing a magnificent job, but officers are facing previously unknown threats and great danger. We need the understanding of all communities and the cooperation of all communities, and we need calm. We know that there are rumours sweeping London and I really do appeal for people to listen to facts as they emerge." 3. Wide at news conference showing panel and CCTV image of suspect at Oval underground station, UPSOUND (English) Andy Hayman, Specialist Operations: "We believe this man had travelled northbound, on the northern line from Stockwell underground station to the Oval." AP PHOTOS - NO ACCESS CANADA/INTERNET July 21 2005 4. CCTV image of suspect at Oval underground station APTN July 21 2005 5. Exterior Oval Underground station cordoned off 6. Fire engines outside POOL July 21 2005 7. Wide at news conference showing panel and CCTV image of suspect on bus in Hackney, UPSOUND (English) Andy Hayman, Specialist Operations: "The image that's now showing is of a man at the rear of that top deck on that bus at about 12." AP PHOTOS - NO ACCESS CANADA/INTERNET 8. CCTV image of suspect on bus in Hackney SKY- NO ACCESS UK/CNNi/IRELAND July 21 2005 9. Aerials of empty bus in closed off road 10. Ground shot of blown out window of bus POOL July 22 2005 11. Close up of CCTV image shown at news conference of suspect leaving Warren Street underground station, UPSOUND (English) Andy Hayman, Specialist Operations: "The image that's now showing of the third person we want to identify shows a man leaving Warren Street underground at approximately 12.39 hours." AP PHOTOS - NO ACCESS CANADA/INTERNET July 21 2005 12. Suspect leaving Warren Street underground station APTN July 21 2005 13. Police on bikes outside Warren Street Underground station, going under cordon 14. Wide shot around Warren Street, crowds of people being evacuated AP PHOTOS - NO ACCESS CANADA/INTERNET July 21 2005 15. Suspect at Westbourne Park Underground Station POOL July 22 2005 16. CCTV image of suspect at Westbourne Park Underground who police believe left a device on the Hammersmith and City line, UPSOUND (English) Andy Hayman, Specialist Operations: "He was wearing a dark shirt and trousers and was later reported to be wearing a white vest." APTN July 22 2005 17. Police man putting cordon tape around Shepherd's Bush Underground Station 18. Crowds leaving station POOL July 22 2005 19. Wide shot at news conference showing images of all four suspects in CCTV photos, UPSOUND (English) Andy Hayman, Specialist Operations: (bite starts under previous shot) "Now yesterday's incidents do bear similarities to the bomb attacks in London on July 7th in so much as there are three underground trains and a bus that were targeted. There are other features that are emerging which are also of interest to detectives. Now we are actively pursuing lines of inquiry." 20. Four way shot of images of suspects STORYLINE British police released photographs on Friday of four men suspected of launching a second wave of terrorist attacks on London's transport system and appealed for the public's help in tracking them down. Thursday's attacks bore similarities to the fatal bombings on July 7, in which 52 people and four suspected suicide bombers were killed on three Underground (subway) trains and a bus. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Ian Blair appealed to the public for help in identifying the four men but he stressed everyone should stay calm. Andy Hayman, assistant commissioner of London's Metropolitan Police, said the force urgently needed to trace the four men suspected of leaving the bombs made from homemade explosives on three Underground (subway) trains and a bus across London on Thursday. All four devices partially detonated, Hayman said, giving no further details. There were no casualties. He urged any members of the public who knew or spotted the men to contact the police immediately and warned they must not be approached. The photos showed a man running through a station in a dark shirt with "New York" printed on the front; another man on the top deck of a bus wore a gray shirt, and two other men were shown at separate stations. Investigators have been searching for fingerprints, DNA and other forensic evidence collected from Thursday's attacks on three trains and a double-decker bus, which were reminiscent of suicide bombings only two weeks ago that killed 52 people and the four attackers. The police appeal came after plainclothes police chased a man through Stockwell tube station in south London on Friday, They wrestled him to the floor of a train car and shot him to death in front of stunned commuters. Police said the shooting was directly linked to the investigations of the bomb attacks on London's transit system. But reports emerged later on Friday that the man killed in Stockwell was not one of the four bombing suspects that police released CCTV footage of on Friday. LONDON TERRORIST ATTACKS
UK Charge - Bomb suspect charged
NAME: UK CHARGE 070805N TAPE: EF05/0698 IN_TIME: 10:33:42:06 DURATION: 00:01:26:24 SOURCES: Various DATELINE: Birmingham, London - File RESTRICTIONS: See script SHOTLIST PLEASE NOTE CLIENTS WHO BROADCAST TO THE UK ARE ADVISED BY THE POLICE NOT TO USE THE SHOTS OF YASSIN HASSAN OMAR AS IDENTIFICATION MAY BE AN ISSUE IN COURT PROCEEDINGS. SKY NEWS - No Access UKCNNi/Ireland FILE: Birmingham, 27 July 2005 1. Aerials of house in Heybarnes Road where arrest took place APTN FILE: Birmingham, 27 July 2005 2. Various of police in street Police handout FILE: London, 21 July 2005 3. CCTV picture of Yassin Hassan Omar, suspect in failed July 21 bombings at Warren Street underground 4. Close up CCTV picture of Yassin Hassan Omar, suspect in failed July 21 bombings at Warren Street underground APTN FILE: Birmingham, 27 July 2005 5. Exterior of house 6. Close up of front door lying on ground outside house, pan up to house entrance 7. Police outside house 8. Downstairs window, pan to upstairs window 9. Mid of police outside house STORYLINE London police on Saturday charged Yassin Hassan Omar, one of the suspects in the July 21 attacks on London, with conspiracy to murder and possession of explosives - the first charges to be laid in Britain against any of the would-be bombers. Omar, 24, is suspected of trying to bomb an underground train near Warren Street station on July 21. The Metropolitan Police said he was charged with conspiring "with others unknown to murder passengers on the transport for London system." He faces three other charges: attempted murder; making or possessing an explosive substance with intent to endanger life or cause serious injury; and conspiracy to use explosives. Omar, who was arrested in the central English city of Birmingham on July 27, is due to appear in a London court on Monday. Two other suspects in the failed July 21 transit bombings, Muktar Said Ibrahim, 27, and Ramzi Mohammed, were arrested in London on July 29 and are being questioned by police. A fourth, known as Osman Hussain and Hamdi Issac, was arrested in Rome and is being held there on international terrorism charges. Police have charged six people with failing to disclose information about the suspects' whereabouts. A further 10 are being questioned in connection with the attacks. The July 21 attacks came two weeks after suicide bombers killed 56 people on three subway trains and a bus.
UK Scenes - London subway stations targeted on Thursday, reopen
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
UK Still Photo - Police release CCTV picture of bombing suspects
NAME: UK STILL 160705N TAPE: EF05/0632 IN_TIME: 10:36:25:21 DURATION: 00:00:19:05 SOURCES: Metropolitan Police DATELINE: London - 7 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. CCTV Still of four London bomb suspects STORYLINE British Police on Saturday released an image captured by surveillance cameras showing the four suspected suicide bombers on the morning of the July 7 bombing in London. The CCTV image shows the four men with backpacks entering the train station in Luton, north of London, at approximately 7.20am on the morning of the attack. Investigators say the four took a train from Luton to London's King's Cross station, where they split up to carry out the bombings. The head of the Anti-Terrorist Branch, DAC Peter Clarke appealed for the public to come forward with any information. Police have confirmed the identity of the four suspected bombers. Mohammed Sidique Khan, aged 30, is believed to have died in the explosion at Edgware Road. Germaine Lindsay, aged 19, died in the explosion between King's Cross and Russell Square underground stations. Hasib Hussain, aged 18, died in the explosion on the bus in Tavistock Square and Shahzad Tanweer, aged 22, died in the explosion at Aldgate.
UK Video - Pictures of failed July 21 tube attac
NAME: UK VIDEO 20070123I TAPE: EF07/0090 IN_TIME: 10:00:09:00 DURATION: 00:02:55:00 SOURCES: POLICE VNR DATELINE: London, 23 Jan 2007 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST ++THIS CCTV FOOTAGE WAS RELEASED BY THE METROPOLITAN POLICE SERVICE ON TUESDAY 23RD JANUARY 2007, DURING THE TRIAL OF RAMZI MOHAMMED, CHARGED WITH PLOTTING TO BOMB LONDON'S TRANSPORT SYSTEM ON 21 JULY 2005++++ 1. Various views of suspect Ramzi Mohammed on board a Northern Line tube on 21/7/05 (two views of same footage - from either end of the train carriage), passengers' faces obscured 2. Various views of suspect Ramzi Mohammed leaving the train at Oval station, passengers' faces obscured STORYLINE CCTV footage was shown in a British court on Tuesday of the moment one of the alleged July 21 terror plotters tried to set off his rucksack bomb on an underground (Tube) train, two weeks after four suicide bombers killed themselves and 52 bus and underground passengers in London. The grainy pictures showed alleged bomber Ramzi Mohammed attempting to explode his home-made device on a north bound Tube train between Stockwell and Oval stations. The footage, which has already been shown to the jury in the trial at Woolwich Crown Court, shows a passenger, firefighter Angus Campbell, arguing with Mohammed in the minutes after his alleged bomb failed to go off, and the panic that ensued onboard. When the train stopped at Oval station, several passengers tried to stop Mohammed escaping, the court heard. In all six men are accused of hatching a suicide plot to detonate rucksack bombs on the London transport system on July 21 2005.
UK Arrests - Two men arrested in connection with failed London bombings
NAME: UK ARRESTS 010805Nx TAPE: EF05/0680 IN_TIME: 10:19:04:23 DURATION: 00:02:34:12 SOURCES: SKY DATELINE: London, 1 Aug 2005 RESTRICTIONS: No UK/Ireland/CNNi SHOTLIST Crossford Street, Stockwell 1. Wide shot of police standing in front of Morell House 2. Mid shot of police 3. Pull out from tarpaulin covering entrance to one of the ground floor flats and also a vehicle to police 4. Wide shot of police 5. Tilt down on Morell House 6. Various of police at the front of Morell House 7. Tilt up from police tape to tarpaulin 8. Various of residents 9. Police talking to resident 10. Pan from police to tarpaulin Corner of Old South Lambeth Road and Heyford Terrace, Vauxhall 11. Wide pan from building to police inside cordoned off area 12. Various of police questioning residents 13. Tilt down from street sign saying "Heyford Terrace" to police 14. Various of police talking to residents STORYLINE Police investigating the failed July 21 bomb attacks in London say they've arrested two men during raids in south London. A police spokeswoman said the arrests were in connection with the failed attacks. The men were being held in a central London police station after being taken into custody during a series of raids on Monday. Police searched three properties in the Stockwell and Clapham areas of south London. Four bombs were planted on London underground trains and a bus on July 21, but they failed to fully explode. The four main bombing suspects are already in police custody in London and Rome. At Crossford Street, Stockwell, police cordoned off the front and rear of a block of flats. A tarpaulin covered the entrance to one of the ground floor flats and a vehicle which was parked in front of the flat.
++UK Olympic Drill
AP-APTN-1630: ++UK Olympic Drill Wednesday, 22 February 2012 STORY:++UK Olympic Drill- 2012 Olympics security drill evokes memories of 7/7 bombings LENGTH: 02:17 FIRST RUN: 1630 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: English/Nat SOURCE: AP TELEVISION/POOL STORY NUMBER: 729219 DATELINE: London - 22 Feb 2012 LENGTH: 02:17 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY POOL - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST AP TELEVISION 1. Firefighters bring out 'casualty' from Underground station during Olympic anti-terror drill 2. Wide of emergency services outside disused Underground station where drill is taking place 3. Various of 'casualty' being treated on stretcher 4. Man lying on ground being tended to by police 5. Wide of emergency services outside Underground station POOL 6. Interior of Underground station showing 'passengers' being evacuated while firefighters enter AP TELEVISION 7. Man with 'injury' to face 8. Man wrapped in protective blanket 9. Police tend to man lying on ground 10. Wide of emergency services putting 'casualty' on stretcher 11. Woman being taken away on stretcher 12. Wide of emergency vehicles outside disused Underground station 13. SOUNDBITE: (English) Howard Collins, Chief Operating Officer, London Underground: "I think we have, obviously since that event (the 2005 London bombings) learned a number of lessons. A lot of investment has happened, not only in the Tube, but (also) in those emergency services, new radio systems, new equipment. So we are going to see all those new things tested today. This is though, one of many test exercises that we've performed over a long period of time, and we continue to test and learn those lessons right up to the (Olympic) opening ceremony on the 27th of July." 14. More police vehicles arrive outside station 15. Bomb squad police officers arrive 16. Pan from police car to black-helmeted bomb squad officer 17. View of emergency services in street outside underground station 18. Intelligence analyst Christian Cullen (red tie) watching drill 19. SOUNDBITE (English) Christian Cullen, intelligence analyst: "We are very concerned at the lack of resources and the numbers of police allocated for the Olympic Games, given the thin spread we witnessed during the five days of huge upheaval and disruption of the riots in August." 20. Wide of emergency services outside Underground station STORYLINE British emergency services staged a huge pre-Olympics security drill on Wednesday, testing their response to a simulated attack on the London Underground system. Police, fire and ambulance crews converged on a disused station in the centre of London, where scores of volunteers played the part of passengers caught up in a bomb blast. For many of the participants, the test evoked memories of the London bombings in 2005 in which 52 commuters were killed. That attack came just one day after London was awarded the 2012 Olympic Games. An official investigation into the 2005 attacks criticised the response of the emergency services, in particular the state of their communications equipment. Howard Collins, chief operating officer of London Underground, said lessons had been learned. "A lot of investment has happened, not only in the Tube, but (also) in those emergency services, new radio systems, new equipment. So we are going to see all those new things tested today," he commented. "This is though, one of many test exercises that we've performed over a long period of time, and we continue to test and learn those lessons right up to the (Olympic) opening ceremony on the 27th of July," he added. However, Christian Cullen from the SIRS (Security Intelligence Resilience Strategy) security consultancy expressed doubt that the emergency services had sufficient resources to deal with a real terrorist attack during the height of the Games. "We are very concerned at the lack of resources and the numbers of police allocated for the Olympic Games, given the thin spread we witnessed during the five days of huge upheaval and disruption of the riots in August," he said. A total of two and a half thousand people took part in the drill, ranging from emergency services and volunteers to government officials and security chiefs. The two-day test, called "Exercise Forward Defensive", started at the Aldwych Underground station, which has been closed to commuters since 1994. The London Underground maintains the station so it can be used in movies and rented for parties. The security simulates an attack on one of the busiest days during the 2012 London Olympics. Authorities declined to reveal the exact scenario in advance, saying surprise is a key element of the exercise. The test was a part of efforts to create confidence ahead of the games, which open July 27 and end August 12. 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UK Underground - Station hit by July 7 bomb reopens for first time in three weeks
NAME: UK UNDERGROUND 290705N TAPE: EF05/0672 IN_TIME: 10:45:12:18 DURATION: 00:02:29:16 SOURCES: APTN DATELINE: London, 29 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. Wide shot of Edgware Road station 2. Staff opening the gates 3. Staff announcing that station is open 4. Commuters in station 5. Pan from Edgware Road sign to commuter in train 6. Train departing 7. Edgware Road sign 8. Commuter Julie Donabie walks past camera 9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Julie Donabie, Commuter: "Quite nervous but obviously you just have to get on and do things as normal as possible. Obviously they have done a fantastic job to get the tube working again so you just have to appreciate their services and get on with it I guess." 10. Shafidz Azhar gets onto train 11. Azhar reading the paper 12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Shafidz Azhar, Commuter: "I must say they opened it pretty quickly. I thought it would be longer so all credit to the engineers working here." 13. Pan from memorial to Howard Collins, service director for London Underground 14. SOUNDBITE: (English) Howard Collins, Service Director for London Underground: "A big occasion for us. I think a little solemn occasion because obviously this is a place where on the seventh of July a lot of people lost their lives and many were injured. My staff are back here. We are running a good District Line service from here - we are determined to get London running again and get the London's tubes working as normal." 15. Various shots of memorial 16. Steve Goszeka, Station manager, walks past camera 17. SOUNDBITE: (English) Steve Goszeka, Station manager: "I rode around on the first train from Paddington to come in here and it was a strange feeling, but really good to have some trains running back on the station." 18. Train departing STORYLINE Edgware Road Underground station in London reopened on Friday just over three weeks after a bomb ripped through a passing train, killing seven people. The terror attack was one of four bombings across the capital on July 7 in which 52 people died. Bomber Mohammed Sidique Khan, 30, was travelling west on the Circle line from King's Cross when he detonated explosives in a rucksack on his back. Since then, police investigators and forensic specialists have pored over every inch of the site, gathering vital evidence. The station showed no signs of the devastation caused by the blast, but at 8 a.m. (0700 GMT), normally the peak rush-hour, the platforms and trains remained virtually empty with only a handful of commuters stepping on and off. Howard Collins, Service Director for London Underground, said the reopening was a "solemn occasion" because people were killed at the site. "We are determined to get London running again and get the London's Tubes working as normal," he said. Julie Donabie, a commuter, said she was nervous taking the tube again but that it was important "to get on and do things as normal as possible." Donabie said one of her friends was killed on the No. 30 bus that was torn apart by a bomb blast at Tavistock Square on July 7.
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.
UK Blair - PM meets emergency workers
NAME: UK BLAIR 080705N TAPE: EF05/0607 IN_TIME: 10:42:52:13 DURATION: 00:01:35:00 SOURCES: POOL DATELINE: London, 8 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST 1. Wide of emergency services workers waiting for British Prime Minister Tony Blair 2. Various of emergency workers 3. Blair and wife Cherie Blair arrive 4. Various of Tony and Cherie Blair talking to staff STORYLINE British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his wife Cherie thanked emergency workers for their life-saving work on Friday following the series of blasts that hit London the previous day. Blair and his wife met staff at an ambulance call centre in south London's Waterloo area after arriving back from the G-8 summit in Gleneagles in Scotland. Many people treated in London hospitals on Thursday remain hospitalised as they recovered from emergency surgery or serious burns. Police said on Friday that 49 deaths have been confirmed in four bombings in London, but they expect the toll to rise. The police said that all 13 bodies had been recovered from the bus hit by one bomb. Police have yet to account for all the dead on one underground train. More than 700 were injured in Thursday's attacks on London - the worst attack in the city since World War II. London Terrorist Attacks
UK Brazil FILE - FILE Report says Brazilian mistakenly shot, walked into station
NAME: FILE UK BRAZIL 170805Nxx TAPE: EF05/0730 IN_TIME: 11:14:58:22 DURATION: 00:01:45:18 SOURCES: APTN/SKY/TV Globo DATELINE: FILE RESTRICTIONS: See Script SHOTLIST SKY - No Access UK/Ireland/CNNi London, UK - 24 July 2005 1. Various exteriors Stockwell underground station where shooting happened, police outside TV GLOBO Gonzaga, Brazil - 23 July 2005 2. STILL of Jean Charles with family SKY - No Access UK/Ireland/CNNi London, UK - 24 July 2005 3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sir Ian Blair, Metropolitan Police Commissioner: "I need to make clear that any death is deeply regrettable, but as I understand the situation the man was challenged and refused to obey police instructions." APTN Stockwell, South London - 25 July 2005 4. Wide shot exterior Stockwell underground station 5. Mid shot people leaving Stockwell underground station 6. Women kneeling next to memorial for Jean Charles de Menezes 7. Flowers at memorial outside underground station 8. Woman praying at memorial 9. Poster on memorial reading: "Jean Charles de Menezes - so sorry" 10. People looking at memorial 11. Picture of Menezes tilt down to banner reading: "5 bullets in our hearts. Who's guilty?" APTN Tulse Hill, South London - 25 July 2005 12. Police on the street in Tulse Hill with cordon 13. Mid shot police 14. Pull out from sign for Scotia Road, where Menezes lived, to police in cordoned off street SKY - No Access UK/Ireland/CNNi London, UK - 24 July 2005 15. Men holding Brazilian flag standing together outside Scotland Yard to protest against the death of Menezes 16. Banner reading "Sorry it's not enough" being held up 17. Man holding banner reading "Jean Charles de Menezes, so sorry" 18. Man in Brazilian hat TV GLOBO Gonzaga, Brazil - 23 July 2005 19. STILL of Jean Charles de Menezes on ID document STORYLINE The lawyer for the family of the innocent Brazilian man shot dead by British police who mistook him for a bombing suspect said on Wednesday that officers had little reason to believe he was a threat. Jean Charles de Menezes, a 27-year-old electrician, was shot eight times in an Underground train last month after police tailed him from a house that was under surveillance and believed linked to the failed July 21 bombings. British police had claimed that Menezes' clothing and behaviour aroused their suspicions and that he didn't obey an order to stop as officers tailed him into Stockwell subway station on July 22. Earlier witness reports said Menezes was wearing a heavy coat and vaulted the barriers at Stockwell station. But a British TV station reported on Tuesday, citing security footage, that Menezes entered the station at a normal walking pace, stopping to pick up a newspaper before boarding a train and taking a seat. The ITV News broadcast, citing an investigation report into the shooting, also said Menezes was wearing a light denim jacket when he was shot. The report obtained by ITV said while Menezes was shot eight times, a further three bullets were fired but missed. ITV said the documents came from an official investigation into Menezes' death. The Independent Police Complaints Commission, who have been charged with investigating the shooting, refused to comment on the veracity of the documents. Metropolitan Police said they could not make any comment while the police complaints commission investigation was ongoing.
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.
UK Video - CCTV pix showing some of the alleged 21/7 bombers
NAME: UK VIDEO 20070129I TAPE: EF07/0114 IN_TIME: 10:43:57:09 DURATION: 00:02:24:12 SOURCES: METROPOLITIAN POLICE VIDEO DATELINE: London, 21 July 2005 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST ++PLEASE NOTE: Clips are shorter than those shown in court. Sections have been removed to ensure members of the public/staff cannot be identified.++ 1. Various of CCTV footage purportedly showing Omar (purple circle), then Ibrahim (blue circle), and Mohammed (yellow circle) entering Stockwell Underground Station 2. Various of CCTV footage purportedly showing Mohammed (yellow circle) and Ibrahim (blue circle), heading towards platform at Stockwell Underground Station 3. Various of CCTV footage purportedly showing Ibrahim (blue circle) entering number 26 bus (high shots) 4. Various of CCTV footage purportedly showing Ibrahim (blue circle) entering number 26 bus, sitting down, later getting up and leaving bus (interior shots) 5. Various still images of yellow substance leaking from rucksack, photographed on the number 26 bus shortly after the events of 21 July STORYLINE: A UK court on Monday was presented with fresh CCTV images of three men accused of plotting a series of suicide bombings on the London public transport system on 21st July 2005, two weeks after the deadly 7/7 bombings in the capital. The jury was shown CCTV images of the moment suspect Muktar Said Ibrahim allegedly tried to detonate a mixture of hydrogen peroxide and chapatti flour on the top desk of a bus in east London, as well as other images showing part of the journey of three suspects. The accused Ibrahim, Hussain Omar, and Ramzi Mohammed can purportedly be seen arriving at Stockwell underground station. Ibrahim, in addition, is purportedly seen entering and leaving a number 26 bus. Muktar Said Ibrahim, 29, of Stoke Newington, north London; Ramzi Mohammed, 25, of North Kensington, west London, and Hussain Osman, 28, of no fixed address, are three of six men accused in the trial of what is commonly known as the "failed July bombings". The other defendants are Manfo Kwaku Asiedu, 33, of no fixed address; Yassin Omar, 26, from New Southgate, north London; and Adel Yahya, 24, of Tottenham, north London. They all deny charges of conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to cause explosions likely to endanger life.
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.
UK Brazilian - WRAP Vigil for Brazilian shot dead, still, Aldgate station reopens
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.
UK Tension - Right wing protestors clash with police, security alert at station
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