Train crossing Madrid
A view from the train with Cuatro Torres Business Area Skyscrapers in the distance.
LONDON TRAIN BOMBING / BUS BOMBING TERRORISM CLIPREEL
TAPE #12 LONDON TRAIN BOMBING / BUS BOMBING TERRORISM CLIPREEL 8:38:24 LONDON TRAIN BOMBING / SUBWAY BOMBING / BUS BOMBING VICTIMS / WOUNDED / STRETCHERS 8:39:28 INVESTIGATORS IN HAZMAT SUITS 8:40:01 CCTV VIDEO OF EXPLOSION IN MADRID SUBWAY STATION IN 2004 8:40:07 MADRID TRAIN BOMBING WRECKAGE / STRETCHERS / WOUNDED IN 2004 8:40:42 STILL W/ MOVE BACKPACK 8:40:58 VOLUNTEER WORKERS 8:41:35 US PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH / BRITISH PRIME MINISTER TONY BLAIR AND OTHER EUROPEAN LEADERS AT ROUNDTABLE 8:42:05 BUS BOMBING AFTERMATH / WRECKAGE 8:42:47 STRETCHERS / WOUNDED / AMBULANCES 9:35:33 BUS BOMBING AFTERMATH / WRECKAGE 9:46:16 BUS BOMBING STILL AND MOVING VIDEO THERE ARE TIME CODE BREAKS BETWEEN V/OS ON THIS REEL WHICH MAY MAKE IT HARD TO COPY AND PASTE
2000s NEWS
NEWSFEED: 3/11/2004 MADRID, SPAIN TERRORIST TRAIN BOMBING, MADRID, RESCUE WORKERS HELP INJURED, DEAD, MEMORIAL ATTENDED BY OVER 50,000 PEOPLE; DX EXT ws people seize van in parking lot in Spain, van placed on tow truck, var shots of letter in Arabic; DX EXT aerial of bombed train, people carry victims from rubble, woman on stretcher, hand of corpse on train, injured man in pain; DX EXT rescue workers attend to victims, carry injured, corpse covered up, firemen on train, injured man sits by tree; DX EXt rescue workers attend to injured, carry injured person across street to car, carry injured woman; DX EXT more fortunate victims sit by tree, some talk on cell phones, fire engine rushes down street, teen boy on oxygen; NX EXT museum closed for mourning, pan across bombed train, Amtrak trains, Eiffel Tower, Pantheon in Greece; DX EXT President GW Bush speaks out in support of Spain, At an Al Queda terrorist training video, more rescue footage, seized van; DX EXT more rescuers carrying dead; NX EXT reporter wraps up segment in front of Capitol bldg, aerial of massive crowd gathering on street in Spain; DX EXT Spanish reporter speaks (in Spanish), mourners hold umbrellas in rain, more aerial footage of scene; DX EXT reporter interviews man (in Spanish), more aerial shots of scene, thousands of mourners hold umbrellas; DX EXT ws of thousands of mourners holding umbrellas in rain, ws pole waiting and conversing; DX EXT side of bldg, aerial pan from mourners to bombing site, mourners walk, ws street lit up orange, hundreds walk, hold signs; DUSK EXT mourner holds up sign 'por que?' thousands holding umbrellas, many people walk along street, cheering (not sure why); DUSK EXT 3 girls near fountain, aerial over crowd, aerial over train station, press gathers around Spanish president;DUSK EXT T/H Spanish female reporter, ws hundreds of peds walk along street, var shots, crowd chanting grows more intense; DUSK EXT more aerials of massive crowds gathering, var shots of people marching, chanting by the thousands; DUSK EXT z-out from fountain to thousands of mourners, many shots of mourners, seemingly endless; DUSK EXT pan across square with more mourners by the thousands, another aerial over and around entire scene; DUSK EXT z-out sign to thousands of mourners, thousands more cross at intersection, endless shots of mourners; NX EXT pan across hundreds of umbrella tops, ws mourners gather near bldgs, more aerials over crowd, which must be over 50,000; NX EXT hundreds march along street, hold up huge peace sign, hundreds march holding huge banner, Spanish flag, more peds marching; NX EXT still more shots of mourners, chanting grows in intensity, crowd holds up hands, more mourners walk; NX EXT and still more aerials of what must be over a mile of people gathering & chanting;
ANIMATED MADRID BOMBING GRAPHICS
Animated sequence details time and location of the terrorist bomb explosions aboard train cars in Madrid, Spain.
Madrid Bombing Surveillance 2004
The 11 March 2004 attacks consisted of a series of ten explosions that occurred at the height of the Madrid rush hour aboard four commuter trains (Cercanías in Spanish). Thirteen improvised explosive devices were reported to have been used, all but three of which detonated. The attacks were the deadliest assault by a terrorist organisation against civilians in Europe since the Lockerbie bombing in 1988 and the worst terrorist assault in modern Spanish history. The number victims in this attack far surpassed Spain's previous worst bombing incident at a Hipercor chain supermarket in Barcelona in 1987, which killed 21 and wounded 40; on that occasion, responsibility was claimed by the Basque armed terrorist group ETA:Euskadi Ta Askatasuna ("Basque Fatherland and Liberty") or ETA. Official statements issued shortly after the Madrid attacks identified ETA as the prime suspect, but the group, which usually claims responsibility for its actions, denied any wrong-doing. Later evidence strongly pointed to the involvement of extremist Islamist groups, with the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group named as a focus of investigations. As of early April 2004, fifteen people had been arrested, and seven more were detained in connection with the attacks.
THE MADRID TERRORIST BOMBINGS - 2
Rescue workers attempt to reach survivors aboard a bombed train car in the aftermath of the Madrid terrorist bombings.
TF1 20 hours: [broadcast of 21 May 2004]
Group of defocused people in a subway platform waiting for train
Group of defocused people in a subway platform waiting for train. Barcelona, Spain
Spain Suspects 2 - Stills of latest suspects, file of bombings
NAME: SPA SUSPECT2 010404N TAPE: EF04/0365 IN_TIME: 10:24:08:06 DURATION: 00:02:24:02 SOURCES: APTN/AP PHOTOS/TELE5/TVE DATELINE: Various - 1 April 2004/Recent RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST TVE Madrid - April 1, 2004 1. Still photo of six suspects, named as: Top left Moroccan Jamal Ahmidan, Top middle Moroccan Said Berraj, Top right Tunisian Sarhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, Bottom left Moroccan Abdennabi Kounjaa, Middle bottom Moroccan Mohammed Oulad Akcha, Bottom right Moroccan Rachid Oulad Akcha AP PHOTOS - (Spanish Interior Ministry Handout - No Access Canada/Internet) Madrid - April 1, 2004 2. Still of Sarhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet 3. Still of Said Berraj 4. Still of Jamal Ahmidan 5. Still of Abdennabi Kounjaa 6. Still of Mohammed Oulad Akcha 7. Still of Rachid Oulad Akcha TVE Madrid - April 1, 2004 8. Cars arriving at court 9. Policeman outside court 10. Exterior of court 11. Various of court exteriors 12. Judge arriving TVE Near Alcala de Henares - March 27, 2004 13. Various of house where police believe Madrid bombs were made Tele5 Madrid - March 11, 2004 14. Close aerial of bombed train at santa Eugenia station, zoom out 15. People carrying bodies away from train 16. Bodies covered with blankets on ground 17. Injured being carried away at El Pozo station APTN Madrid - March 11, 2004 19. Zoom in to bombed train carriage at El Pozo station, firemen searching wreckage STORYLINE A Spanish judge has identified a Tunisian as leader of the terrorist suspects in the Madrid train bombings and said the man had campaigned for "holy war" in Spain. Court documents released to the media on Thursday said Sarhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, sought along with five others under an international arrest warrant, was "leader and coordinator of the people allegedly implicated". But they do not suggest he was overall organisor of the March 11 attacks, which killed 191 people and injured more than 18-hundred others. The documents gave few details about Sarhane''s alleged role in the attacks. Police say they believe some of the chief terrorists are among the 19 people already in custody. Fourteen have been charged - six of them with mass murder. The court documents said Sarhane, 35, had been an active campaigner for "jihad", or holy war, among some of the suspects already in custody, and as early as mid-2003 had shown signs of preparing a violent act in Spain - specifically the Madrid area - "as a demonstration of the said jihad". The documents made no mention of the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group, which the government identified this week as the main focus of the investigation. It was the forerunner of Salafia Jihadia, which Morocco blamed for bombings in Casablanca in May that killed 33 people and 12 suicide bombers. Besides Sarhane, the other five named in the warrants were Moroccans Jamal Ahmidan, alias El Chino; Said Berraj; Abdennabi Kounjaa, alias Abdallah; Mohammed Oulad Akcha, and his brother Rachid Oulad Akcha. Del Olmo''s documents said Sarhane had helped arrange the rental of the house outside Madrid where investigators say the bombs were assembled and that four others among the six on the warrant list had been at the house. The documents made only one mention of the al-Qaida terrorist network. They said Berraj met with three al-Qaida suspects in Istanbul in October 2000. They said he also had ties with Basel Ghayoun, a Syrian who is already jailed on charges of mass murder and of belonging to a terrorist organisation in relation to the Madrid attacks. Berraj left his home March 9 and told people March 12 that he was leaving Spain reportedly to attend the funeral of a sister in Morocco, the documents say. Subsequent police investigations showed he does not have a sister. Two days after the Madrid attacks, police found a videotape in which a man claiming to speak on behalf of al-Qaida said the group carried out the bombings in reprisal for Spain''s collaboration with the United States and "crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan". The questioning of four suspects who were to have been brought before del Olmo on Thursday was postponed until Friday. The names of two people, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and Abdelkrim Mejjati, have surfaced in the past two weeks as possible top organisors of Spain''s worst terrorist attack. Neither was among the six whose international arrest warrants were issued by Judge Juan del Olmo on Wednesday. Respected French investigator Jean-Charles Brisard said last week that Spanish officials saw al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian linked to al-Qaida, as the brains behind the bombings. Spanish news media also have quoted Moroccan intelligence sources as saying Mejjati, a Moroccan, was the on-the-ground organisor and had been in Madrid three days before the train attacks. But Moroccan authorities told The Associated Press it was not clear what role he had played in the bombings. Jamal Zougam, a Moroccan already jailed and charged with mass murder in the case, had been seen as the prime suspect so far. Police traced a cell phone found attached to an unexploded bomb in one of the targeted trains to the shop he ran in Madrid. Zougam has been linked to members of an al-Qaida cell in Spain.
US Spain - US officials on suspected al Qaida link to Madrid blasts
NAME: US SPAIN 160304N TAPE: EF04/0310 IN_TIME: 10:30:30:10 DURATION: 00:01:16:21 SOURCES: APTN/ABC DATELINE: Washington DC - 15 March 2004/File RESTRICTIONS: Part No Access Internet SHOTLIST: APTN FILE- Madrid, 12 March 2004 1. Helicopter in sky and pan down to wreckage at El Pozo station ABC- No Access Internet Washington DC, 15 March, 2004 2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Asa Hutchinson, US Undersecretary of Homeland Security: "I''m satisfied there are connections to al Qaida. The depth of that connection and the total level of responsibility has not yet been determined." APTN FILE- Madrid, 12 March 2004 3. Train wreckage ABC- No Access Internet Washington DC, 15 March 2004 4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Dick Clark, Former CIA Counterterrorism Expert: "You need to connect the dots. There are a series of dots here that go in a straight line to Al Qaida." APTN FILE- Madrid, 12 March 2004 5. Pan across wreckage ABC- No Access Internet Washington DC, 15 March 2004 6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Vince Cannistraro, Former CIA Counterterrorism Chief: "I think the timing of this operation definitely leaves the general impression that they (the bombs) caused the outcome of the election." APTN FILE- Madrid, 12 March 2004 7. Flowers left at site of one of Thursday''s bombings STORYLINE: An international probe into the Madrid bombings sharpened its focus on Tuesday on al-Qaida terrorist cells. US authorities also believe evidence points to an al-Qaida tie, according to Asa Hutchinson, US undersecretary of homeland security, told ABC''s "Good Morning America" on Monday. Spanish police on Tuesday arrested another Algerian man, who allegedly referred to attacks in Madrid two months ago. And there were reports that police have identified five new Moroccan suspects in total and that two Indians detained in the attack were released. Last Thursday''s train bombings in Madrid killed 201 people and wounded over a thousand others. Investigators believe there may be a link between the Moroccan suspect Jamal Zougam and a spiritual leader of a clandestine Moroccan extremist group suspected of involvement in suicide bombings in Casablanca, Morocco, last year that killed 33 people and 12 bombers. The bombs were triggered by cell phones, and investigators were able to find and arrest the three Moroccans and two Indians on Saturday because a cell-phone card was found in an unexploded bomb and traced. A Spanish judge has identified Zougam as a follower of Imad Yarkas, the alleged leader of Spain''s al-Qaida cell, who remains jailed on suspicion he helped plan the September 11, 2001, attacks in the United States. A possible link between the Madrid and Casablanca attacks gained credibility on Tuesday after French investigator Jean-Charles Brisard said he had found a direct link between Zougam and Mohamed Fizazi, a spiritual leader of Salafia Jihadia, which allegedly was behind the Casablanca attack and which has been linked to Osama bin Laden''s al-Qaida terror network. Zougam also has connections that possibly lead to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Moroccan official said. Al-Zarqawi is a key operative working with al-Qaida who has been blamed in attacks in Jordan, Iraq and elsewhere. Authorities have been tracking Islamic extremist activity in Spain since the mid-1990s and say it was an important staging ground, along with Germany, for the September 11 attacks.
MADRID TRAIN DESTROYED BY BOMB
Investigators search through the rubble of a commuter train that was destroyed by a bomb planted by terrorists in Madrid, Spain on May 11th, 2004.
walking with cell phone in madrid with snow 360 vr equirrectangular
walking with cell phone in madrid with snow 360 vr equirrectangular in argüelles neighborhood
Spain Bomb - CCTV footage of Madrid bomb blast in March
NAME: SPA BOMB 191004Nx TAPE: EF04/1031 IN_TIME: 10:17:43:06 DURATION: 00:01:50:24 SOURCES: EFE DATELINE: Madrid - March 2004 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: CCTV footage Madrid - March 11 2004 MUTE 1. Interior of Atocha station, commuters walking up stairs and smoke on platform 2. Explosion in background, people running 3. Huge explosion, thick black smoke rising and people running 4. Train on platform and people running 5. Zoom in to flames in station Police Video Madrid - April 3, 2004 6. Three masked men standing, one man reading statement (they are reportedly among the seven men who blew themselves up in an apartment outside Madrid as police prepared to storm it. Police say the video was tape just minutes before they died) UPSOUND (Arabic) (Audio As Incoming) ???? UNAVAILABLE MUTE 7. One armed man reading statement (same video as shot 6) STORYLINE: Chilling security-camera footage of the Madrid terror attack, including at least one bomb exploding inside a train at Atocha rail station, was broadcast on a Spanish TV station on Tuesday. The Telecinco footage was believed to mark the first public broadcast of actual video images of the March 11 attacks. The Spanish newspaper El Pais last month published four still shots from a security camera. The video footage starts with dazed commuters milling about on a smoke-shrouded platform after one explosion. The time on the security camera said 0738 am. Then, smoke flows toward the camera and people on the platform are apparently knocked over by another blast. About five seconds later, a ball of orange flame erupts from a stopped train, filling the screen. The tape includes no sound, just images. The footage appeared to have been taken from atop an escalator, looking down onto the platform. The March 11 attacks killed 191 people and have been blamed on Muslim militants liked to al-Qaida. Telecinco also aired footage from a video - the existence of which had already been acknowledged by the government - of three hooded militants. The men are wearing belts loaded with dynamite cartridges and threatening more attacks against Spain unless it withdrew its troops from Afghanistan. One of the three is holding a gun, possibly a submachine gun. The three are now believed to have been part of the March 11 bombing cell and among seven suspects who blew themselves up in an apartment outside Madrid on April 3 as police prepared to storm it. Telecinco said the video was taped in the apartment just minutes before that suicide blast.
Metro stop in Madrid with the name of "la Latina", a famous central neighborhood in the city
Video for editorial use of the metro stop with the name "la Latina" in the city center of Madrid. It is a neighborhood known for being one of the most important leisure areas in the city.
SPAIN/ GOODMAN ELEMENTS
00:00:00:00 MS people walking to stirs inside bldg/ MS people walking into bldg/ MS Albert Ruiz-Gallardon and others sitting at table/ PAN Riay Tatary Bakry, Chief of Islami Center in Madrid and other ...
THE MADRID TERRORIST BOMBINGS - 3
Rescue workers attempt to reach survivors aboard a bombed train car in the aftermath of the Madrid terrorist bombings. A survivor is carried away on a stretcher.
SPAIN/ INTERIOR MINISTER PRESSER
00:00:00:00 (FONTED & BUGGED - CNN+) SOT Angel Acebes, Spanish Interior Minister speaking from podium (in Spanish no Engl transl)/ MS Angel Acebes leaving presser room (0:00) /
THE MADRID TERRORIST BOMBINGS
People react in horror at train stations, and security officials escort stunned riders away from a station after terrorists bomb several trains in Madrid, Spain.
Spain Suspects - STILLS of latest suspects, file from March 11 bombings
NAME: SPA SUSPECTS 010404N TAPE: EF04/0364 IN_TIME: 11:22:53:19 DURATION: 00:02:17:17 SOURCES: TVE/APTN/Tele5 DATELINE: Various - 1 April 2004/Recent RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: TVE Madrid - April 1, 2004 1. Still photos of six suspected terrorists 2. Still photo of Said Berraj 3. Still photo of Mohammed Oulad 4. Still photo of Rachid Oulad 5. Cars arriving at court 6. Policeman outside court 7. Still photo of Jamal Ahmidan "El Chino, Mowgli" 8. Exterior of court 9. Still photo of Jose Emilio Suarez Trashorras 10. Various of court exteriors 11. Judge arriving TVE Near Alcala de Henares - March 27, 2004 12. Various of house where police believe Madrid bombs were made Tele5 Madrid - March 11, 2004 13. Close aerial of bombed train at santa Eugenia station, zoom out 14. People carrying bodies away from train 15. Bodies covered with blankets on ground 16. Injured being carried away at El Pozo station APTN Madrid - March 11, 2004 17. Zoom in to bombed train carriage at El Pozo station, firemen searching wreckage STORYLINE: A Spanish judge has issued international arrest warrants for six more suspects in the Madrid train bombings that killed 191 people - a Tunisian and five Moroccans. Another suspect identified as Otman El Gnaout was arrested, a court official announced on Wednesday, giving no details of the nationality of the man or the place of his arrest. He said a Moroccan who had been released was also re-arrested. Also on Wednesday, Judge Juan del Olmo questioned two people in court, releasing one of them and ordering the other to return on Friday for more questioning. The Spanish Interior Ministry distributed the names and photographs contained in six international warrants issued by del Olmo. They included Sarhane Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet of Tunisia; and Moroccans Jamal Ahmidan, alias El Chino; Said Berraj; Abdennabi Kounjaa, alias Abdallah; Mohammed Oulad Akcha; and Rachid Oulad Akcha. The last two are brothers to Naima Oulad Akcha, the only woman charged in the case so far, a court official said. Interior Minister Angel Acebes on Tuesday identified the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group as the main focus of investigation in the March 11 bombings in Madrid, which killed 191 people and injured more than 1,800 others. That extremist group is a forerunner of Salafia Jihadia, which Morocco blamed for last year''s Casablanca bombings, which killed 33 people and 12 suicide bombers. At least five members of the Combatant group, including alleged leaders Nouredine Nfia and Salahedine Benyaich, trained in al-Qaida camps in Afghanistan between 1999 and 2001, Moroccan officials said. Spanish investigators have analysed a videotape in which a man claiming to speak on behalf of al-Qaida said the group carried out the Madrid attacks in reprisal for Spain''s backing of the United States-led war in Iraq. Moroccan Mustapha Ahmidam and Antonio Toro Castro, the brother-in-law of a Spaniard charged with supplying dynamite to the bombers, were questioned by the judge on Wednesday. Ahmidam was released, and Castro was ordered to return to court on Friday. Another Moroccan, Fouad Almorabit, was re-arrested on Wednesday. Del Olmo interrogated Almorabit among a group of five suspects brought before the National Court on Monday and ordered him released early on Tuesday. The reason for the re-arrest was not immediately clear. Spanish police have 19 people in custody including Almorabit and El Gnaout. Among them are 11 Moroccans or Moroccan-born Spaniards, two Indians, two Spaniards and three Syrians. Fourteen of the suspects have been charged with mass murder or collaborating with or belonging to a terrorist group.
CLEAN : Madrid bombings survivors' pain, fear linger 20 years on
During the morning rush hour of March 11, 2004, ten bombs exploded nearly simultaneously on Madrid’s commuter trains, killing 192 people and injuring almost 2,000 (Footage by AFPTV via Getty Images)